Accounting for the alien volition could outweigh our volition by their sheer number (e.g. if they are insectoids).
If we account for alien volition directly, then yes, this could be a problem. But if we only care about aliens because we’re implementing CEV and some humans care about aliens, then scope insensitivity comes into play and the amount of resources that will be dedicated to the aliens is limited.
Scope insensitivity is a failure to properly account for certain things. CEV is designed to account for everything. It is possible that some conclusions arrived at due to scope insensitivity will be upheld, but we do not yet know whether that is true and current human choices that we know to be the product of biases definitely do not count as evidence about how CEV will choose.
If we account for alien volition directly, then yes, this could be a problem. But if we only care about aliens because we’re implementing CEV and some humans care about aliens, then scope insensitivity comes into play and the amount of resources that will be dedicated to the aliens is limited.
Scope insensitivity is a failure to properly account for certain things. CEV is designed to account for everything. It is possible that some conclusions arrived at due to scope insensitivity will be upheld, but we do not yet know whether that is true and current human choices that we know to be the product of biases definitely do not count as evidence about how CEV will choose.
If we only implement CEV for people working for the SIAI and some of them care about the rest of humanity...what’s the difference?