From: Anders Sandberg (asa@nada.kth.se)
Date: Mon Jan 11 1999 - 05:25:31 MST
"Eliezer S. Yudkowsky" <sentience@pobox.com> writes:
> Anders Sandberg wrote:
> >
> > But there will be a second group
> > doing the breakthrough fairly soon (helped by the knowledge that it is
> > possible and the hints they will get by looking at the first group),
> > and soon there will be many others with the same capabilities. Here
> > comes the assumption Eli and others seem to make, that the first group
> > will try to monopolize the technology totally.
>
> I explicitly said otherwise. I said that the naive people at Foresight
> will publish their breakthroughs and that someone else will try to
> monopolize the technology totally. Does the US embargo prevent Saddam
> from visiting Foresight's Web site?
OK. But monopolizing something that a lot of others may have also
downloaded is quite tricky. Just look at the Scientologists hunting
the Fishman papers - if their beliefs were actually true and they had
the aid of thetan powers, would they still be able to keep the lid on?
> The term "naive" is strong. I began using this term when, during a
> debate on red goo vs. blue goo, I pointed out nobody had proposed any
> sort of active shield that would stand up to nuclear weapons, and
> someone said, quote, "That's not fair." Fair? Whoa. "I never thought
> of that", says the Universe, and everyone comes back to life. I suppose
> that dropping 20 megatons on an undefended city is fair. Fact is,
> offensive technology is running far enough ahead of defensive technology
> to blast civilization right now, fair or unfair, and I think the problem
> will only get worse. An honest assertion that active shields can stand
> up to fusion weapons is one thing. Pretending that nobody will try to
> use nanotech for military attack and world domination is naive.
I think the problem is that you move the problem from a question about
how to counteract hostile nanosystems to a problem of counteracting
anything your enemy might throw at you. That is a bit like asking that
the security systems of an elevator should work against somebody
blowing up the building.
The important thing is to do a threat analysis, and try to see what
countermeasures (including the 36th stratagem, running away) are
useful in a hostile situation. But to do that you ned to understand
the different kinds of threats and the available countermeasures well,
and not claim that countermeasures against A are useless because they
do not work against weapon B. An active shield is useless against a
nuclear explosion, but a nuclear weapon is useless if you don't know
where to aim it or the political repercussions on you will be more
severe than you can handle. What is needed is a better understanding
of the threat matrix of weapons and countermeasures; where are the big
holes, where are one side at a noticeable advantage, and what
strategies can both sides take to maximize their utility.
-- ----------------------------------------------------------------------- Anders Sandberg Towards Ascension! asa@nada.kth.se http://www.nada.kth.se/~asa/ GCS/M/S/O d++ -p+ c++++ !l u+ e++ m++ s+/+ n--- h+/* f+ g+ w++ t+ r+ !y
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