Your irregularly scheduled reminder that FAI solves these problems just fine.
So does magic. One might adapt one of Arthur C. Clarke’s laws: Every sufficiently speculative technology is indistinguishable from magic. Even more so than ACC’s “sufficiently advanced technology”: the latter is distinguished from magic by actually existing. But nobody knows how to make FAI.
While I took your point well, FAI is not a more plausible/easier technology than democratised surveillance. It may be implemented sooner due to needing pretty much no democratic support whatsoever to deploy, it might just as well take a very long time to create.
Your irregularly scheduled reminder that FAI solves these problems just fine.
So does magic. One might adapt one of Arthur C. Clarke’s laws: Every sufficiently speculative technology is indistinguishable from magic. Even more so than ACC’s “sufficiently advanced technology”: the latter is distinguished from magic by actually existing. But nobody knows how to make FAI.
FAI is more plausible than magic to the point that we don’t have to desperately try to make society transparent.
While I took your point well, FAI is not a more plausible/easier technology than democratised surveillance. It may be implemented sooner due to needing pretty much no democratic support whatsoever to deploy, it might just as well take a very long time to create.