I am no PR specialist, but I think relevant folks should agree on a simple, sensible message accessible to non-experts, and then just hammer that same message relentlessly. So, e.g. why mention "Newcomb-like problems?" Like 10 people in the world know what you really mean. For example:
(a) The original thing was an overreaction,
(b) It is a sensible social norm to remove triggering stimuli, and Roko's basilisk was an anxiety trigger for some people,
(c) In fact, there is an entire area of decision theory involving counterfactual copies, blackmail, etc. behind the thought experiment, just as there is quantum mechanics behind Schrodinger's cat. Once you are done sniggering about those weirdos with a half-alive half-dead cat, you might want to look into serious work done there.
What you want to fight with the message is the perception that you are a weirdo cult/religion. I am very sympathetic to what is happening here, but this is, to use the local language, "a Slytherin problem," not "a Ravenclaw problem."
I expect in 10 years if/when MIRI gets a ton of real published work under its belt, this is going to go away, or at least morph into "eccentric academics being eccentric."
p.s. This should be obvious: don't lie on the internet.
Serious replies DO NOT WORK. Eliezer has already tried it multiple times:
https://www.reddit.com/r/Futurology/comments/2cm2eg/rokos_basilisk/cjjbqv1
http://www.reddit.com/r/Futurology/comments/2cm2eg/rokos_basilisk/cjjbqqo
and his last two posts on reddit (transient link, not sure how to link to the actual replies): http://www.reddit.com/user/EliezerYudkowsky
A better way to stop people pointing and laughing is to do it better than them. Eliezer could probably write something funny along the lines of "I got Streisanded good, didn't I? That'll learn me!&qu...
Todays xkcd
I guess there'll be a fair bit of traffic coming from people looking it up?