It’s not just Vassar. It’s how the whole community has excused and rationalized away abuse. I think the correct answer to the omega rapist problem isn’t to ignore him but to destroy his agency entirely. He’s still going to alter his decision theory towards rape even if castrated.
However, I gave you a double-upvote because you did nothing normatively wrong. The fact that you are being mass-downvoted just because you linked to that article and because you seem to be associated with Ziz (because of the gibberish name and specific conception of decision theory) is extremely disturbing.
Can we have LessWrong not be Reddit? Let’s not be Reddit. Too late, we’re already Reddit. Fuck.
You are right that, unless people can honor precommitments perfectly and castration is irreversible even with transhuman technology, Omegarapist will still alter his decision theory. Despite this, there are probably better solutions than killing or disabling him. I say this not out of moral ickiness, but out of practicality.
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Imagine both you are Omegarapist are actual superintelligences. Then you can just make a utility function-merge to avoid the inefficiency of conflict, and move on with your day.
Humans have an similar form of this. Humans, even when sufficiently distinct in moral or factual position as to want to kill each other, often don’t. This is partly because of an implicit assumption that their side, the correct side, will win in the end, and that this is less true if they break the symmetry and use weapons. Scott uses the example of a pro-life and pro-choice person having dinner together, and calls it “divine intervention.”
There is an equivalent of this with Omegarapist. Make some sort of pact and honor it: he won’t rape people, but you won’t report his previous rapes to the Scorched Earth Dollar Auction squad. Work together on decision theory the project is complete. Then agree either to utility-merge with him in the consequent utility function, or just shoot him. I call this “swordfighting at the edge of a cliff while shouting about our ideologies.” I would be willing to work with Moldbug on Strong AI, but if we had to input the utility function, the person who would win would be determined by a cinematic swordfight. In a similar case with my friend Sudo Nim, we could just merge utilities.
If you use the “shoot him” strategy, Omegarapist is still dead. You just got useful work out of him first. If he rapes people, just call in the Dollar Auction squad. The problem here isn’t cooperating with Omegarapist, it’s thinking to oneself “he’s too useful to actually follow precommitments about punishing” if he defects against you. This is fucking dumb. There’s a great webnovel called Reverend Insanity which depicts what organizations look like when everyone uses pure CDT like this. It isn’t pretty, and it’s also a very accurate depiction of the real world landscape.
Oh come on. The post was downvoted because it was inflammatory and low quality. It made a sweeping assertion while providing no evidence except a link to an article that I have no reason to believe is worth reading. There is a mountain of evidence that being negative is not a sufficient cause for being downvoted on LW, e.g. the OP.
You absolutely have a reason to believe the article is worth reading.
If you live coordinated with an institution, spending 5 minutes of actually trying (every few months) to see if that institution is corrupt is a worthy use of time.
I don’t think I live coordinated with CFAR or MIRI, but it is true that, if they are corrupt, this is something I would like to know.
However, that’s not sufficient reason to think the article is worth reading. There are many articles making claims that, if true, I would very much like to know (e.g. someone arguing that the Christian Hell exists).
I think the policy I follow (although I hadn’t made it explicit until now) is to ignore claims like this by default but listen up as soon as I have some reason to believe that the source is credible.
Which incidentally was the case for the OP. I have spent a lot more than 5 minutes reading it & replies, and I have, in fact, updated on my view of CRAF and Miri. It wasn’t a massive update in the end, but it also wasn’t negligible. I also haven’t downvoted the OP, and I believe I also haven’t downvoted any comments from jessicata. I’ve upvoted some.
It’s not just Vassar. It’s how the whole community has excused and rationalized away abuse. I think the correct answer to the omega rapist problem isn’t to ignore him but to destroy his agency entirely. He’s still going to alter his decision theory towards rape even if castrated.
I think you are entirely wrong.
However, I gave you a double-upvote because you did nothing normatively wrong. The fact that you are being mass-downvoted just because you linked to that article and because you seem to be associated with Ziz (because of the gibberish name and specific conception of decision theory) is extremely disturbing.
Can we have LessWrong not be Reddit? Let’s not be Reddit. Too late, we’re already Reddit. Fuck.
You are right that, unless people can honor precommitments perfectly and castration is irreversible even with transhuman technology, Omegarapist will still alter his decision theory. Despite this, there are probably better solutions than killing or disabling him. I say this not out of moral ickiness, but out of practicality.
-
Imagine both you are Omegarapist are actual superintelligences. Then you can just make a utility function-merge to avoid the inefficiency of conflict, and move on with your day.
Humans have an similar form of this. Humans, even when sufficiently distinct in moral or factual position as to want to kill each other, often don’t. This is partly because of an implicit assumption that their side, the correct side, will win in the end, and that this is less true if they break the symmetry and use weapons. Scott uses the example of a pro-life and pro-choice person having dinner together, and calls it “divine intervention.”
There is an equivalent of this with Omegarapist. Make some sort of pact and honor it: he won’t rape people, but you won’t report his previous rapes to the Scorched Earth Dollar Auction squad. Work together on decision theory the project is complete. Then agree either to utility-merge with him in the consequent utility function, or just shoot him. I call this “swordfighting at the edge of a cliff while shouting about our ideologies.” I would be willing to work with Moldbug on Strong AI, but if we had to input the utility function, the person who would win would be determined by a cinematic swordfight. In a similar case with my friend Sudo Nim, we could just merge utilities.
If you use the “shoot him” strategy, Omegarapist is still dead. You just got useful work out of him first. If he rapes people, just call in the Dollar Auction squad. The problem here isn’t cooperating with Omegarapist, it’s thinking to oneself “he’s too useful to actually follow precommitments about punishing” if he defects against you. This is fucking dumb. There’s a great webnovel called Reverend Insanity which depicts what organizations look like when everyone uses pure CDT like this. It isn’t pretty, and it’s also a very accurate depiction of the real world landscape.
Oh come on. The post was downvoted because it was inflammatory and low quality. It made a sweeping assertion while providing no evidence except a link to an article that I have no reason to believe is worth reading. There is a mountain of evidence that being negative is not a sufficient cause for being downvoted on LW, e.g. the OP.
(FYI, the OP has 154 votes and 59 karma, so it is both heavily upvoted and heavily downvoted.)
You absolutely have a reason to believe the article is worth reading.
If you live coordinated with an institution, spending 5 minutes of actually trying (every few months) to see if that institution is corrupt is a worthy use of time.
I read the linked article, and my conclusion is that it’s not even in the neighborhood of “worth reading”.
I don’t think I live coordinated with CFAR or MIRI, but it is true that, if they are corrupt, this is something I would like to know.
However, that’s not sufficient reason to think the article is worth reading. There are many articles making claims that, if true, I would very much like to know (e.g. someone arguing that the Christian Hell exists).
I think the policy I follow (although I hadn’t made it explicit until now) is to ignore claims like this by default but listen up as soon as I have some reason to believe that the source is credible.
Which incidentally was the case for the OP. I have spent a lot more than 5 minutes reading it & replies, and I have, in fact, updated on my view of CRAF and Miri. It wasn’t a massive update in the end, but it also wasn’t negligible. I also haven’t downvoted the OP, and I believe I also haven’t downvoted any comments from jessicata. I’ve upvoted some.
This is fair, actually.