Re: Nuke Weapon Mishaps--was Bill Joy on the CBS evening news

From: John Marlow (johnmarrek@yahoo.com)
Date: Sat Jan 06 2001 - 19:17:53 MST


Well to begin with, you specify nannites which work
only in vacuum. Living "products" we might wish to
construct cannot survive in a vacuum. Likewise, it
would be difficult to constrct, say, skyscrapers in a
vacuum.

And if the past is any indication, the bulk of the
funding will be for weapons research--and their goal
is, as you acknowledge, "wild" disassemblers.

john marlow

--
At 09:41 AM 1/6/2001 -0600, you wrote:
On Sat, 6 Jan 2001, John Marlow wrote:
> Oh this is beautiful; how to make nanotechnology
even
> harder! I agree that such precautions could be
taken.
> Will they be, by all parties? Not likely. Limiting
the
> things in such ways will drastically reduce their
> usefulness.
No, it makes design *easier*.  A broadcast
architecture is simpler than
designing all the computing power on-board.  Encrypted
instructions are
almost trivial...and help a company prevent reverse
engineering.  Relying
on special preprepared "nutrients" is *much* easier
than designing to
forage in the wild.
I've spoken with some of the top researchers about
this...it is *very
hard* to design wild replicators, and of very limited
use.  I can see,
myself, only two uses for a "wild" replicator: 
offensive military, and
possibly terraforming when you are unable to deliver
more than a few
milligrams of payload (say a distant start system). 
If anyone can figure
out some other use for *self-replicating nanoscale
devices* that cannot be
done with some other architecture, I'd like to hear
it.
steve 
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