Ownership is enforced by physical interactions, and only exists to the degree the interactions which enforce it do. Those interactions can change.
As Lucius said, resources in space are unprotected.
Organizations which hand more of their decision-making to sufficiently strong AIs “win” by making technically-legal moves, at the cost of probably also attacking their owners. Money is a general power coupon accepted by many interactions; ownership deeds are a more specific, narrow one; if the ai systems which enforce these mechanisms don’t systemically reinforce towards outcomes where the things available to buy actually satisfy the preferences of remaining humans who own ai stock or land, then the owners can end up with no not-deadly food and a lot of money, while datacenters grow and grow, taking up energy and land with (semi?-)autonomously self replicating factories or the like—if money-like exchange continues to be how the physical economy is managed in ai to ai interactions, these self replicating factories might end up adapted to make products that the market will buy. but if the majority of the buying power is ai controlled corporations, then figuring out how to best manipulate those ais into buying is the priority. If it isn’t, then manipulating humans into buying is the priority.
It seems to me that the economic alignment problem of guaranteeing everyone is each able to reliably only spend money on things that actually match their own preferences, so that sellers can’t gain economic power by customer manipulation, is an ongoing serious problem that ends up being the weak link in scenarios where AIs manage an economy that uses similar numeric abstractions and contracts (money, ownership, rent) as the current one.
Ownership is enforced by physical interactions, and only exists to the degree the interactions which enforce it do. Those interactions can change.
As Lucius said, resources in space are unprotected.
Organizations which hand more of their decision-making to sufficiently strong AIs “win” by making technically-legal moves, at the cost of probably also attacking their owners. Money is a general power coupon accepted by many interactions; ownership deeds are a more specific, narrow one; if the ai systems which enforce these mechanisms don’t systemically reinforce towards outcomes where the things available to buy actually satisfy the preferences of remaining humans who own ai stock or land, then the owners can end up with no not-deadly food and a lot of money, while datacenters grow and grow, taking up energy and land with (semi?-)autonomously self replicating factories or the like—if money-like exchange continues to be how the physical economy is managed in ai to ai interactions, these self replicating factories might end up adapted to make products that the market will buy. but if the majority of the buying power is ai controlled corporations, then figuring out how to best manipulate those ais into buying is the priority. If it isn’t, then manipulating humans into buying is the priority.
It seems to me that the economic alignment problem of guaranteeing everyone is each able to reliably only spend money on things that actually match their own preferences, so that sellers can’t gain economic power by customer manipulation, is an ongoing serious problem that ends up being the weak link in scenarios where AIs manage an economy that uses similar numeric abstractions and contracts (money, ownership, rent) as the current one.