Drescher then goes on to consider the case where you know that Omega has a fixed 99% chance of implementing this algorithm, and a 1% chance of instead implementing the opposite of this algorithm, and argues that you should still one-box in that case if you see the million.
Drescher then goes on to consider the case where you know that Omega has a fixed 99% chance of implementing this algorithm, and a 1% chance of instead implementing the opposite of this algorithm, and argues that you should still one-box in that case if you see the million.