From: Max M (maxmcorp@inet.uni-c.dk)
Date: Wed Jan 15 1997 - 04:44:38 MST
> From: Lee Daniel Crocker
> > No, simulating what would be a crime in meatspace doesn't necessarily
> > cause any harm to the software involved. It will probably be easier for
> > uploads to control the way they handle this kind of sensory input than
> > it will be to have a government define which simulations are bad.
>
> I don't think he meant to imply that playing the game itself would be
> immoral; that's just interacting with the sentient according to its
> nature. But what about after the sentient game has been played for a
> few hours, learned about its opponent and about itself, and is aware
> of itself and what it has learned? Wouldn't turning the machine off
> at that point be destroying a sentient being?
>
My posting was actually not about computegames at all. My intention was to
point at a possible moral/legal problem that will come. Probably sooner
than we think. I just found the computergame angle to be somewhat amusing.
MAX M Rasmussen
New Media Director
Private: maxmcorp@inet.uni-c.dk
http://inet.uni-c.dk/~maxmcorp
Work: maxm@novavision.dk
http://www.novavision.dk/
This is my way cool signature message!!
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