Let’s suppose it’s 50 years in the future and you’re signed up for cryonics with, say, Alcor. How confident are you that you’d know if Alcor had quietly disposed of some of their patients from 50 years ago?
If your answer, like mine, is “not very”, then how strong an incentive do you think the fear of lawsuits from other signed-up people is, against any temptation to dispose of old patients to increase their profits?
(I am not suggesting that they do, or should do, that. Only that that particular incentive probably doesn’t change their behaviour much.)
That would be a good reason to be very public about having signed up with Alcor.
Unfortunately, being frozen has such strong connotations of weirdness that it probably doesn’t make sense for Alcor to be public about its whole client list.
Let’s suppose it’s 50 years in the future and you’re signed up for cryonics with, say, Alcor. How confident are you that you’d know if Alcor had quietly disposed of some of their patients from 50 years ago?
If your answer, like mine, is “not very”, then how strong an incentive do you think the fear of lawsuits from other signed-up people is, against any temptation to dispose of old patients to increase their profits?
(I am not suggesting that they do, or should do, that. Only that that particular incentive probably doesn’t change their behaviour much.)
That would be a good reason to be very public about having signed up with Alcor.
Unfortunately, being frozen has such strong connotations of weirdness that it probably doesn’t make sense for Alcor to be public about its whole client list.