turchin comments on [Link]: KIC 8462852, aka WTF star, "the most mysterious star in our galaxy", ETI candidate, etc. - Less Wrong

5 Post author: jacob_cannell 20 October 2015 01:10AM

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Comment author: JoshuaZ 24 October 2015 08:20:11PM 1 point [-]

What probability do you assign to this happening? How many conjunctions are involved in this scenario?

Comment author: turchin 24 October 2015 09:16:00PM 0 points [-]

I estimate total probability of human extinction because of SETI attack in 1 per cent. But much smaller in case of this star. There are several needed conjunctions: 1.ET exist but are very far from each other, so communication is wining over travel. 1 milion light years or more. 2. Strong AI is possible.

Comment author: g_pepper 24 October 2015 11:58:43PM 2 points [-]

ET exist but are very far from each other, so communication is wining over travel. 1 milion light years or more.

So, you see a SETI attack as primarily useful for intergalactic colonization/expansion? It seems to me that a SETI attack would be an efficient way for a civilization to expand within a galaxy as well. Why do you think it would be useful only at such great distances?

Comment author: JoshuaZ 25 October 2015 01:32:59AM 0 points [-]

Can you explain why you see a SETI attack as so high? If you are civilization doing this not only does it require extremely hostile motivations but also a) making everyone aware of where you are (making you a potential target) and b) being able to make extremely subtle aspects of an AI that apparently looks non-hostile and c) is something which declares your own deep hostility to anyone who notices it.

Comment author: turchin 25 October 2015 07:45:42AM 0 points [-]

It results from exponential growth of victims in case of successful SETI-attack. The new victims will send the signal further. It is like virus behaviour. a) we know only location of the previous victim, not the starter. b) not so difficult if sender is more advanced civilization and AI may looks like a helper or gateaway of space Internet. с) the same as a. We don't know who started it. We could see only victims.

Comment author: jacob_cannell 26 October 2015 05:57:41PM 0 points [-]

Anthropic selection effects make hostile expansive aliens improbable.

Assume that life is plentiful and hostile civs are common. If that was the case then most observers such as ourselves would find themselves on unusually early planets. Instead our planet is somewhate late in the order of all habitable planets to form in our galaxy, and is roughly in the middle for all habitable planets in the universe.

Comment author: turchin 26 October 2015 11:16:41PM 0 points [-]

But in fact last research said that our planet is in only first 8 per cent of all habitable planets in the Universe, so probably the opposite is true and future universe is full planet-colonizing alien civilizations.

But if SETI attack is only way of space colonization, no starships, in this case before-radio civilizations will be distributed randomly.

Comment author: jacob_cannell 27 October 2015 01:28:55AM *  0 points [-]

But in fact last research said that our planet is in only first 8 per cent of all habitable planets in the Universe, so probably the opposite is true and future universe is full planet-colonizing alien civilizations.

As I pointed out in the other thread, first 8% is not early at all - it is firmly in the middle, statistically speaking. Early would be first 0.000001%. 8% is much closer to the middle than uncertainty in the estimate - well within one std.

But if SETI attack is only way of space colonization, no starships, in this case before-radio civilizations will be distributed randomly.

Well yeah if there are SETI attacks but no colonization, then sure there could be lots of civs like ours that get snuffed out, and that scenario is still compatible with our observations. I think it's unlikely though for the same reasons any SETI broadcasts are unlikely, as SETI broadcasts don't have much of a purpose, and the scope is narrow. (attack or communication only makes sense between civs at similar development points, and such temporal encounters are unlikely - the number of civs in the galaxy that are within +- 100 years of our dev level is probably < 1, even if the total number of civs in the galaxy is large)

Comment author: turchin 27 October 2015 08:29:28AM 1 point [-]

I think that once a civilization fail victim of a SETI atack, it could broadcast for millions or even billions years, spending almost all its resources on it. It will build Dyson sphere and use all it energy to broadcast on maximum possible distance.

Comment author: jacob_cannell 27 October 2015 07:19:40PM *  0 points [-]

I think that once a civilization fail victim of a SETI atack, it could broadcast for millions or even billions years, spending almost all its resources on it.

The SETI attack civ can't touch civs more elder than it - they could prevent the SETI attack civ before it even forms. So it can only attack civs that come after.

But there are probably much easier attacks available for an elder civ. Dyson sphere broadcasting is a rather ludicrous waste of energy - the same energy budget could allow observation and then simulation of all other bio worlds at a lower level of dev. For a small energy budget the elder civ could launch small probes which could then intervene on each planet as necessary, arbitrarily influencing later civ development - accomplishing anything and more than any SETI attack (constrained to pure photons).

Comment author: g_pepper 27 October 2015 09:05:41PM 0 points [-]

Dyson sphere broadcasting is a rather ludicrous waste of energy - the same energy budget could allow observation and then simulation of all other bio worlds at a lower level of dev.

How do you figure that? A SETI attack can be launched simply by transmitting a signal. How is that a waste of energy compared with vehicular travel?

Comment author: turchin 27 October 2015 07:37:00PM *  0 points [-]

If civilization are rare in space, like one in a million light years, observation would be difficult. And if probe speed is 0.5 с, SETI attack will cover 8 times more volume of space during the same time interval. So SETI attack usefulness depends of two unknowns - civilizations density and probe speed. EY by the way said that he believes that StrongAI will be able to expand on almost speed of light so there is no need of SETI attack.