I don’t see how that’s relevant. In the original problem, you’ve been placed in this weird situation against your will, where something bad will happen to you (either the loss of $100 or … death). If we’re supposing that the predictor is malevolent, she could certainly do all sorts of things… are we assuming that the predictor is constrained in some way? Clearly, she can make mistakes, so that opens up her options to any kind of thing you like. In any case, your choice (by construction) is as stated: pay $100, or die.
I don’t see how that’s relevant. In the original problem, you’ve been placed in this weird situation against your will, where something bad will happen to you (either the loss of $100 or … death). If we’re supposing that the predictor is malevolent, she could certainly do all sorts of things… are we assuming that the predictor is constrained in some way? Clearly, she can make mistakes, so that opens up her options to any kind of thing you like. In any case, your choice (by construction) is as stated: pay $100, or die.
You don’t see how the problem description preventing it is relevant?
The description doesn’t prevent malevolence, but it does prevent putting a bomb in left if the agent left-boxes.