I occasionally see a question like "what would FDT recommend in ....?" and I am puzzled that there is no formal algorithm to answer it. Instead humans ask other humans, and the answers are often different and subject to interpretation. This is rather disconcerting. For comparison, you don't ask a human what, say, a chessbot would do in a certain situation, you just run the bot. Similarly, it would be nice to have an "FDTbot" one can feed a decision theory problem to. Does something like that exist? If not, what are the obstacles?
The main obstacle is that these problems are almost always grossly underspecified. FDT depends a lot more upon the structure of a scenario than simpler decision theories.
A lesser but still valid obstacle is that there is no specification language for describing all the interrelations between the components of the scenario.
A third obstacle is that while FDT is relatively simple to define in mathematical theory, in practice it can result in enormous state spaces to search even when there is only one binary action to decide.
Hmm, that limits its usefulness quite a bit. For math, one can at least write an unambguous expression and use CAS like mathematica or maple and click "solve for ..." Would be nice to have something like that for various DTs.