If an em is running at 10x speed, do they get 10x the voting power, since someone being in power for the next 4 years will be 40 subjective years for them?
One vote for one person already seems suboptimal, given that not everybody has equal decision-making capabilities, or will experience the costs and benefits of a policy to the same degree. Of course, if we started discriminating with voting power incautiously it could easily lead to greater levels of corruption.
Solving the decision-making balance could be done with prediction markets on the effects of different policies, a la futarchy, but that doesn’t solve the other part of the problem. If we’re assuming prediction markets will be used for policy selection, the “voting on values” part still needs fixing. I don’t have any ideas on that, so we’re kind of back where we started.
If an em is running at 10x speed, do they get 10x the voting power, since someone being in power for the next 4 years will be 40 subjective years for them?
If ems can convert money to speed, this approximately means “more power to rich people”. Just saying.
Point. I imagine that increased speed will not be the most cost-effective way to turn money into political influence, however. There are plenty of ways to do that already, and unless it’s cheaper than other alternatives it won’t make much of a difference.
If an em is running at 10x speed, do they get 10x the voting power, since someone being in power for the next 4 years will be 40 subjective years for them?
One vote for one person already seems suboptimal, given that not everybody has equal decision-making capabilities, or will experience the costs and benefits of a policy to the same degree. Of course, if we started discriminating with voting power incautiously it could easily lead to greater levels of corruption.
Solving the decision-making balance could be done with prediction markets on the effects of different policies, a la futarchy, but that doesn’t solve the other part of the problem. If we’re assuming prediction markets will be used for policy selection, the “voting on values” part still needs fixing. I don’t have any ideas on that, so we’re kind of back where we started.
If ems can convert money to speed, this approximately means “more power to rich people”. Just saying.
In em scenario we set rich people as the first ems. Don’t know how broad this is, but Robin expect a small group of people with lots of copies.
Point. I imagine that increased speed will not be the most cost-effective way to turn money into political influence, however. There are plenty of ways to do that already, and unless it’s cheaper than other alternatives it won’t make much of a difference.