Yeah, you’re are right.
The closed-timelike-curve paper weakens the guarantee of the predictor, so instead of saying “A with 25% probability, B with 75% probability”, it will stochastically say either “A” or “B”. So the kind of fixpoint it considers is less impressive.
Yeah, you’re are right.
The closed-timelike-curve paper weakens the guarantee of the predictor, so instead of saying “A with 25% probability, B with 75% probability”, it will stochastically say either “A” or “B”. So the kind of fixpoint it considers is less impressive.