Worrying that all superintelligences will tend to wirehead seems similar to worrying that Gandhi would take a pill that would make him stop caring about helping people and be happy about everything, if such a pill were offered to him.
A reward-signal-maximizing AI would indeed tend to wirehead if it gets smart enough to be considering self-modifications, because at that point it will be more of an optimization agent whose utility function is based on the value of its reward signal and nothing else, but that doesn't mean we can't make optimization agents with less-simplistic utility functions.
Link: physicsandcake.wordpress.com/2011/01/22/pavlovs-ai-what-did-it-mean/
Suzanne Gildert basically argues that any AGI that can considerably self-improve would simply alter its reward function directly. I'm not sure how she arrives at the conclusion that such an AGI would likely switch itself off. Even if an abstract general intelligence would tend to alter its reward function, wouldn't it do so indefinitely rather than switching itself off?
If it wants to maximize its reward by increasing a numerical value, why wouldn't it consume the universe doing so? Maybe she had something in mind along the lines of an argument by Katja Grace:
Link: meteuphoric.wordpress.com/2010/02/06/cheap-goals-not-explosive/
I am not sure if that argument would apply here. I suppose the AI might hit diminishing returns but could again alter its reward function to prevent that, though what would be the incentive for doing so?
ETA:
I left a comment over there:
ETA #2:
What else I wrote: