I have two things I want to say, I’m not sure if this one is important (it’s a physics question, out of curiosity, and you don’t have to answer) so I’ll make two separate comments.
The question: Would an ASI in control of more matter have enough of an advantage to fully take over the lower amount of matter controlled by another ASI, or would the second ASI have other options, e.g things like “creating a black hole supercomputer that computes in ways it deems valuable”?
I don’t know and this is outside the scope of this post I guess. There are a few organizations like the Center on Long-Term Risk studying cooperation and conflict between ASIs, however.
I have two things I want to say, I’m not sure if this one is important (it’s a physics question, out of curiosity, and you don’t have to answer) so I’ll make two separate comments.
The question: Would an ASI in control of more matter have enough of an advantage to fully take over the lower amount of matter controlled by another ASI, or would the second ASI have other options, e.g things like “creating a black hole supercomputer that computes in ways it deems valuable”?
I don’t know and this is outside the scope of this post I guess. There are a few organizations like the Center on Long-Term Risk studying cooperation and conflict between ASIs, however.