I don't see why Yudkowsky makes superintelligence a requirement for this.
Because often when we talk about 'worst-case' inputs, it would require something of this order to deliberately give you the worst-case, in theoretical CS, at least. I don't think Eliezer would object at all to this kind of reasoning where there actually was a plausible possibility of an adversary involved. In fact, one focus of things like cryptography (or systems security?) (where this is assumed) is to structure things so the adversary has to solve as hard a problem as you can make it. Assuming worst-case input is like assuming that the hacker has to do no work to solve any of these problems, and automatically knows the inputs that will screw with your solution most.
I don't think Eliezer would object at all to this kind of reasoning where there actually was a plausible possibility of an adversary involved.
Yep! Original article said that this was a perfectly good assumption and a perfectly good reason for randomization in cryptography, paper-scissors-rock, or any other scenario where there is an actual adversary, because it is perfectly reasonable to use randomness to prevent an opponent from being intelligent.
One of the most interesting debates on Less Wrong that seems like it should be definitively resolvable is the one between Eliezer Yudkowsky, Scott Aaronson, and others on The Weighted Majority Algorithm. I'll reprint the debate here in case anyone wants to comment further on it.
In that post, Eliezer argues that "noise hath no power" (read the post for details). Scott disagreed. He replied:
Eliezer replied:
Scott replied:
And later added:
Eliezer replied:
Scott replied:
And that's where the debate drops off, at least between Eliezer and Scott, at least on that thread.