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Re: Star Destroyer.net with Star Destroyers (RAR!)

Post by NecronLord »

Samuel wrote:For the runners, Star Destroyers do need fuel. Try getting that in intergalactic space. As for idiots, the Imperial navy still exists and we won't all be in one place. With our shipyards we are prime targets for rebelion/rogue/loyalist forces.
Especially when I tell the former where you all are. Viva la revolution!

Well, actually, I don't think anyone's going to be going for your shipyards. There's too many of you already - a raiding force would need serious firepower and take considerable losses.
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Re: Star Destroyer.net with Star Destroyers (RAR!)

Post by Samuel »

NecronLord wrote:
Samuel wrote:For the runners, Star Destroyers do need fuel. Try getting that in intergalactic space. As for idiots, the Imperial navy still exists and we won't all be in one place. With our shipyards we are prime targets for rebelion/rogue/loyalist forces.
Especially when I tell the former where you all are. Viva la revolution!

Well, actually, I don't think anyone's going to be going for your shipyards. There's too many of you already - a raiding force would need serious firepower and take considerable losses.
Most people won't have a SD per planet. Or shields for them. Pillage, THEN burn.
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Re: Star Destroyer.net with Star Destroyers (RAR!)

Post by Darth Hoth »

NecronLord wrote:No we don't. Proportional response is a policy of governments. It's not part of international law - if you want to fire missiles at a state because they sunk one of your warships, that's basically up to you.
If we are technical, international law does not exist in the SW universe, so nothing anyone does is criminal in that respect. But I would very much doubt that if a real-life government systematically wiped out the population of an entire country and claimed to be aiming only at military targets, it would meet major approval in the international community. If this country was then occupied I am fairly certain that those responsible would be put to trial.
What's more, as you yourself have pointed out many times in your seemingly countless screeds defending the evil Galactic Empire, a world is not that big by Star Wars standards.
Then I have been talking about either a) representativeness, or b) relative suffering on a galactic scale in a utilitarian argument. I have not said that it is individually acceptable or that planets lack rights. In fact, I have argued that Tarkin's destruction of Alderaan was illegal under Imperial law.
Oh, and 'proportionality?' what? - The Galactic Empire started destroying entire planets long before the rebellion did.
So now Carida was not only a military target, but legitimate retaliation for Alderaan?
Oh, and for the record, that's exactly what the United States did with its superweapons - indeed, it went out of its way to pick targets that were in built up areas, so they wouldn't waste their bombs.
Stuart has said the exact opposite when this has come up elsewhere. According to him, the primary targets are military. Secondary are vital communications and infrastructure; the civil populace does not factor in. Unfortunately, most targets in category two are inded situated in populated areas, which makes them collateral damage. But they are not deliberately targeted.
I am extremely dubious about the safety of being under any kind of bombardment from multi-teraton weapons. And of course, it didn't take long for the Empire to turn those into something capable of causing extra civillian deaths, now did it?
The point of the surgical strike is somewhat lost if you pour in extinction-event levels of energy. Fortunately, once the shields are battered down the purely material shield generators do not require a fraction of that to be forced out of commission. As for your second sentence, are you referring to the Death Star?
What's more, unlike the Empire, there's never any evidence that the Alliance/New Republic actually had a Torpedo Sphere.
Yes, they can build a fleet to match the Imperial remnants, but they cannot capture or replicate a single example of decades-old pieces of commonly available military technology. That is eminently logical.
Except, of course, they weren't the target. The reasoning was blow up Alderann (a notionally Imperial world) to make an example - the novel proves that Darth Vader only discovered the degree of Alderannian defences after the attack.
Must have been a queer example to make, given that afterwards they attempted to cover it up with every half-assed explanation from meteor storms to bioterrorism. Sources ranging from Marvel Star Wars to Essential Guides to Bantam novels all describe various smoke screens the Empire employed in order not to have to accept blame for Alderaan. Sounds like they were embarassed with Tarkin and that he did not have official approval for his "rule by fear" scheme, does it not?

While we are at it, was not at least part of Kyp's motivation to "strike fear in the hearts of the Imperial remnans" or somesuch?
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Re: Star Destroyer.net with Star Destroyers (RAR!)

Post by Darth Hoth »

Samuel wrote:You currently live at the sufferance of other human beings. The only difference is that you can see the process where they determine wheter you live or die.
Even if I personally do (which I suppose is true, after a fashion), the entire species does not.
That is not valuable in and of itself. It is only good insofar as it achieves are objectives, namely the greatest good for the greatest number in this case.
If you subscribe to utilitarianism. Even so, of course, proving that any system would be superior to democratic rule by the people, for the people is impossible.
How is it a dictatorship? It is an oligarchy choosen by merit.
In A Few Notes on the Culture, Banks describes every Mind as ruling its own habitat independently of external authority. Absolute rule over a distinct area or population by a single individual is the epitome of dictatorship. That various Minds team up in groups does not change this.
As for depression... VR is always better than real life.
But for people to completely relinquish the real world in favour of ephemeral dreams and computer-generated fantasies is not a healthy development. It speaks of widespread alienation and surrender that the general populace have so little interest in the affairs of state or the physical reality in general.
Sweden has 9 million compared to Earth's 6 billion. .15%

Even if Naboo has 6 billion people compared to the galaxy compared to only the 300 trillion casulties from the clone wars is less than .002%.
So take Vatican City, then. The point is that Naboo, in spite of its minuscule size in resources and population, does have an influence in the wider community of inhabited planets and is recognised by its peers as an equal sovereign state. It may be a backwater, but it is not an ant under someone's bootheel.
Compared to being a single person amoung countless quadrillions?
Each one of those quadrillions is still a human (or roughly human-equivalent alien). They are your equals in thought and ability (within certain variations). We are all self-evidently free and equal.
The same would occur with rampant genetic engineering. It is not the specific strands of DNA that are important.
And I would oppose any genetic engineering that would turn people into something other than human ("better" or "worse" is largely irrelevant, and often subjective at that). Physical enhancement or gradual changes with clearly mapped effects I would accept, but nothing that makes our minds or personalities nonhuman.
Well, we DID program them.
Most AI-wank settings assume that computers reprogram themselves after achieving sentience.
Yes it is. What difference is there between one intelligent species and another if they are both intelligent?
Define intelligence, then. And it is not enough that intelligence is present, it must also be of human-like quantity and quality - Chimpanzees are intelligent, and we all agree that they are not equal to us. What kind of test do you envision to determine whether a creature is of human-equivalent intelligence or not?
What do you think human DNA is? It is just code.
And?
No, but neither are the chikens when they kill you for eating their children.
So then you do agree that there is competition between species, and that there is nothing unethical with this?
They have larger brains then humans.
And why is this relevant? They were still less intelligent.
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Re: Star Destroyer.net with Star Destroyers (RAR!)

Post by Thanas »

Okay - answer me this. How many of you have ever run a company that had more than 10 employers? Because, good luck, now you have tens of thousands.

You also have little knowledge of the galaxy. Well, yeah, you know stuff like "Hey, Rukh is going to stab Thrawn", but do you know the location of supply depots, the chain of command, laws, procedures etc?

It is pretty unrealistic to think a single one of you is ever going to be able to carve out an empire, much less coordinate assaults against the Vong.

Let's try the following - we take a centurion of the roman navy and put him in command of a Burke. Yeah, he's going to fare just fine, I bet - even with the added experience of a life in the navy (which most of you do not have) there is no reason to think that he would somehow manage to succesfully wage a war.
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Re: Star Destroyer.net with Star Destroyers (RAR!)

Post by Surlethe »

I'm going to get the hell out of Dodge until the fighting dies down, then I'm going to join Starglider and the Exponential Party and take myself and my family transhuman. If Darth Hoth wants to attack, he's more than welcome to bring it on. When the Vong arrive, I'll be happy to place my burgeoning machine empire at the pleasure of the Combine to Earfuck the Vong.

As far as managing, assuming my men are loyal to me (because otherwise this entire exercise has to be a total failure), I'm going to sit back and let my highest ranking subordinate handle the day-to-day and month-to-month operation and management, while I set general policy and learn as much as I can as fast as I can. There's no way I'm fit for actual command at this point.
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Re: Star Destroyer.net with Star Destroyers (RAR!)

Post by NecronLord »

Samuel wrote:Most people won't have a SD per planet. Or shields for them. Pillage, THEN burn.
By my reading it's 'a minor empire' and we are 'the lord admirals that rule over it' - I'm pretty sure that means twenty five planets total. Twenty five planets protected by thousands of star destroyers is not an easy raid target.
Darth Hoth wrote:If we are technical, international law does not exist in the SW universe,
In which case, Kyp Durron can only be tried under New Republic law.
So now Carida was not only a military target, but legitimate retaliation for Alderaan?
There's no such thing as legitimate retaliation. You're claiming that if the Republic (which it did not) attacked Cardia, it would be an escalation - incorrect. The war was raised to planet-busting levels long before, by the evil Galactic Empire.
Stuart has said the exact opposite when this has come up elsewhere. According to him, the primary targets are military. Secondary are vital communications and infrastructure; the civil populace does not factor in. Unfortunately, most targets in category two are inded situated in populated areas, which makes them collateral damage. But they are not deliberately targeted.
SIGH - are you being deliberately dense?

That's exactly what I'm saying. If your primary target is military, then as far as international law is concerned, it's permissable if you hit civillians by mistake. Kyp Durron's target was the Academy. The Cardian species were simply unfortunate enough to get in the way - in the same way the United States' target was the ports in those cities - and the inhabitants of the cities were unfortunate enough to get in the way. The cities were selected for density of relevant targets - no matter quite which way the bomb went, you'd take out something important. People happened to live there.

It 'blows chunks,' but this is just one of the thousands of reasons why war is a bad thing to be avoided.
The point of the surgical strike is somewhat lost if you pour in extinction-event levels of energy. Fortunately, once the shields are battered down the purely material shield generators do not require a fraction of that to be forced out of commission. As for your second sentence, are you referring to the Death Star?
No. The evil Galactic Empire took its nice 'surgical' Torpedo spheres, and retrofitted some of them with experimental weapons designed to cause as much damage to the civillain population as possible, in the form of Two Wave Gravshock Devices. They were disappointed when they discovered they couldn't get truly planetary effects out of this, though. What noble guys the evil Galactic Empire are.
Yes, they can build a fleet to match the Imperial remnants, but they cannot capture or replicate a single example of decades-old pieces of commonly available military technology. That is eminently logical.
Err. The evil Galactic Empire built six of the first model by the time of the Battle of Yavin - compared to what, millions of wedge shaped craft destroyer and up? Leaving aside political concerns (you want to take our autonomy with seige weapons!) there's no reason to think the New Republic's military budget was anything like the evil Galactic Empire's.
Must have been a queer example to make,
Doesn't fucking matter bitch. Novel and film - highest canon - make it pretty clear what the point was.
given that afterwards they attempted to cover it up with every half-assed explanation from meteor storms to bioterrorism. Sources ranging from Marvel Star Wars to Essential Guides to Bantam novels all describe various smoke screens the Empire employed in order not to have to accept blame for Alderaan. Sounds like they were embarassed with Tarkin and that he did not have official approval for his "rule by fear" scheme, does it not?
Err. Actually, no. That's something that happened in Real Life too. Take any oppressive regime - say the Soviet Union - they don't publicise the crimes in their torture dungeons. They leave that to terrible rumours. People know to dread the knock on the door, and as far as the secret police cares, that's all they need to know. Even when the point is to create terror, you don't see the actual torture up on state television, just the broken confessions.

Of course, the evil Galactic Empire had an additional motive - they doubtless wanted to cover up the entire incident, given that the ninety mile sphere got shot down by a couple of squadrons of fighters on the same day - it doesn't really project the invincibility Tarkin wanted, now does it?
While we are at it, was not at least part of Kyp's motivation to "strike fear in the hearts of the Imperial remnans" or somesuch?
Who gives a shit? He's a deranged little issues boy who should have been taken to a proper institution to be given the caring attention he needed¹. Not actual warcrimes. We're talking about a hypothetical NR sanctioned attack on Cardia with the Sun Crusher. I am explaining to you that this, due to the preeminence of Cardia's military facilities would not count as a warcrime by our standards.

The fact that you have to raise Cardia to try and defend your precious evil Galactic Empire against my charge of being genocidal is sheer proof of your desperation to make your lovely fascists seem better than the New Republic.

So I'll boil it down. Cardia was not an attack by the New Republic. Pick a better example, or even better, try and refute the charges of Genocide against the evil Galactic Empire.
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¹ The fact that the NR let him off on Skywalker's say-so is immoral of them, but again, his attacks were against Imperial Military targets - his crime would be stealing a superweapon and going AWOL - oh, and he mind-raped Qui-Xux or something so she couldn't build any more. But none of this needs to actually factor into my decision, because the New Republic will be aware of the Maw well in advance thanks to my defection.
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Re: Star Destroyer.net with Star Destroyers (RAR!)

Post by Thanas »

The planets name is Carida, not Cardia.

And honestly, the Empire is evil. It says right so in the movies, for chrissakes. In any case, there is ample evidence the empire tolerated genocide and mass murder on a massive scale - in fact, the systems seemed to have been designed to allow moffs the most leeway possible.

Hoth might have a point were we talking about the IR under Pellaeon/Fel or the legacy-era empire, but even they supported genocide or didn't care that much about it to mutiny.
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Re: Star Destroyer.net with Star Destroyers (RAR!)

Post by NecronLord »

Thanas wrote:And honestly, the Empire is evil. It says right so in the movies, for chrissakes.
This would be why I'm stressing the way we're introduced to it (the evil Galactic Empire) :wink:
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Re: Star Destroyer.net with Star Destroyers (RAR!)

Post by Crossroads Inc. »

Let it be known that the EFC Currently does not consider getting involved in most pre Vong events.

The EFC Official position on the "Evil Empire" is to wait till most of the really evil types are killed off on their own accord, and then lend strength to the Pellaeon Empire, which many I hope agree is a far more sensible Political and Military force.

While it encourages healthy debate amongst others, it also notes it will be focusing resources and effort inwardly on the 25system sector of space we are given.
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Re: Star Destroyer.net with Star Destroyers (RAR!)

Post by Themightytom »

Crossroads Inc. wrote:Let it be known that the EFC Currently does not consider getting involved in most pre Vong events.

The EFC Official position on the "Evil Empire" is to wait till most of the really evil types are killed off on their own accord, and then lend strength to the Pellaeon Empire, which many I hope agree is a far more sensible Political and Military force.

While it encourages healthy debate amongst others, it also notes it will be focusing resources and effort inwardly on the 25system sector of space we are given.
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Re: Star Destroyer.net with Star Destroyers (RAR!)

Post by Samuel »

Even if I personally do (which I suppose is true, after a fashion), the entire species does not.
That is only because we haven't gotten technology that can kill everyone on Earth yet. Presumably the person who gave the launch order would be the closest we have to the situation.
If you subscribe to utilitarianism. Even so, of course, proving that any system would be superior to democratic rule by the people, for the people is impossible.
Fullfilling Lincoln's prophetic vision of government by the machines, of the machines and for the machines
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It is worth noting the reason we have democracy is to
-prevent abuse of power
-insure that the overall needs of the community are followed
-give the government legitamacy

If these can be accomplished by another form of government, than it is equally useful.
So take Vatican City, then. The point is that Naboo, in spite of its minuscule size in resources and population, does have an influence in the wider community of inhabited planets and is recognised by its peers as an equal sovereign state. It may be a backwater, but it is not an ant under someone's bootheel.
The Vatican has 2 billion people who follow its lead. Also, Naboo is so influencial that you can invade it without any reprecussions. Remember Episode 1?
And I would oppose any genetic engineering that would turn people into something other than human ("better" or "worse" is largely irrelevant, and often subjective at that). Physical enhancement or gradual changes with clearly mapped effects I would accept, but nothing that makes our minds or personalities nonhuman.
... You are banning people from being too smart? As for "nonhuman personalities" the range is so wide you can't really escape it. Autistics, sociopaths, altruists... if you think of it, someone has it.
Most AI-wank settings assume that computers reprogram themselves after achieving sentience.
If they don't have a core program that can't be overwritten, it is hard to imagine how they function.
What do you think human DNA is? It is just code.
And?
You stated that AIs were "just computer code".
So then you do agree that there is competition between species, and that there is nothing unethical with this?
No, when you are killing another species there is nothing unethical about killing them in retaliation.
And why is this relevant? They were still less intelligent.
How do we know this?
Okay - answer me this. How many of you have ever run a company that had more than 10 employers? Because, good luck, now you have tens of thousands.

You also have little knowledge of the galaxy. Well, yeah, you know stuff like "Hey, Rukh is going to stab Thrawn", but do you know the location of supply depots, the chain of command, laws, procedures etc?

It is pretty unrealistic to think a single one of you is ever going to be able to carve out an empire, much less coordinate assaults against the Vong.

Let's try the following - we take a centurion of the roman navy and put him in command of a Burke. Yeah, he's going to fare just fine, I bet - even with the added experience of a life in the navy (which most of you do not have) there is no reason to think that he would somehow manage to succesfully wage a war.
I'm assuming that we have the memories of the person we suddenly inhabit. Otherwise we never find our way out of the room. I hope they still use doornobs and toilets otherwise... And lets not forgot we don't know basic. Or are way too young to have the postion. Or lack noble blood that might be a requirement.
Twenty five planets protected by thousands of star destroyers is not an easy raid target.
Actually, we have a listed number of SDs. For example, I start with 3.
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Re: Star Destroyer.net with Star Destroyers (RAR!)

Post by Crossroads Inc. »

Requoting the following mostly because more people seem interested in messing with the timeline (Not sanctioned by the EFC) and I htink everyone should be aware of just what all is going to happen i nthe next 20 years or so.
Lord Relvenous wrote: And here's a chronology by basis of the books.
Destruction of the Death Star II (When we arrive)
T-Minus 21 years
Tales from Jabba's Palace
The Bounty Hunter Wars
-The Mandalorian Armor
-Slave Ship
-Hard Merchandise
The Truce at Bakura

T-Minus 20 years
Luke Skywalker and the Shadows of Mindor
T-Minus 18.5 years
X-Wing
-Rogue Squadron
-Wedge's Gamble
-The Kryptos Trap
-The Bacta War
-Wraith Squadron
-Iron Fist
-Solo Command

T-Minus 17 years
The Courtship of Princess Leia
T-Minus 16 years
The Thrawn Trilogy
-Heir to the Empire
-Dark Force Rising
-The Last Command

X-Wing: Isard's Revenge
T-Minus 14 years
I, Jedi
The Jedi Academy Trilogy
-Jedi Search
-Dark Apprentice
-Champions of the Force

T-Minus 13 years
Children of the Jedi
Darksaber
Planet of Twilight
X-Wing: Starfighters of Adumar

T-Minus 11 years
The Crystal Star
T-Minus 9 years
The Black Fleet Crisis Trilogy
-Before the Storm
-Shield of Lies
-Tyrant's Nest

T-Minus 8 years
The New Rebellion
T-Minus 7 years
The Corellian Trilogy
-Ambush at Corellia
-Assault at Selonia
-Showdown at Centerpoint

T-Minus 6 years
The Hand of Thrawn Duology
-Specter of the Past
-Vision of the Future

T-Minus 2 years
Junior Jedi Knight and Young Jedi Knight series
Arrival of the Vong

As you can see, some of those books have events contained therein that have no real lasting consequences on a galactic scale. Others are the exact opposite. I included them all for completeness and because my interpretation of what constitutes an important event might differ from others.
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Re: Star Destroyer.net with Star Destroyers (RAR!)

Post by Jonen C »

Chalk me up for the Vongicidal whachamagig... The EFC.

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Re: Star Destroyer.net with Star Destroyers (RAR!)

Post by Starglider »

Darth Hoth wrote:It might have been other factors - perhaps the cloning tubes he had access to were simply good enough to avoid it.
I don't have the source material to hand, so I don't know for sure, but I'm pretty sure he would not have gone to the trouble of acquiring and keeping significant numbers of ysalamari (a very rare and not widely known species) without being a) quite sure that it would work, or b) desperate after trying to use the clone tubes without shielding, without success.
The difference with world devastators is that they are weaponised to the point that they can take most worlds on their own, obliterating local defences. Even the New Republic only managed to defeat them with hacking. Conventional automated factories are vulnerable and usually static installations, so you will still have to engage in conventional military expansion (or defence against warlords and other SDnetters if you manage to find genuinely uninhabited and unclaimed bits of the galaxy).
Total galactic space is vast. Even a civilisation with the scope of Star Wars cannot be everywhere at once (and there is ample evidence of systems that are either uninhabited or populated by primitives in the canon).
My point was not that World Devestators make you invulnerable to attack - they do help but are not indestructible - it's that they can be used offensively, and in fact can be deployed successfully without support on all but the most defended areas. Considering the fact that we are all total beginners at running an interstellar conflict, this would make World Devestators even more of a boon, should any SDN members manage to get hold of one.
No, but we do not assume that everything that is not immediately apparent to us comes down to it.
So? I'm obviously not doing that, since I accepted your explanation (ish) for the uncommonness of RKVs. I think it's the most plausible explanation for the lack of significantly transhuman intelligences because there is no other credible explanation (in universe).
Introducing new powers of omniscience to the Force takes us ever farther from the laws of physics as we know them.
I don't see why. It can already influence and be influenced by people's minds, usually on an 'emotional' level, something which is usually at the opposite end of the complexity/abstraction spectrum from basic physics. It's treated like magic, not physics (to the point of 'force powers' that are like spells and 'force alchemy' that creates magical items). In a consistent universe it must ultimately be based on physicalist rules, but the complexity of the 'force' may be on the order of the complexity of the human brain (in terms of levels of organisation between observed behaviour and the fundamental laws) or even higher. The best model of the Force may in fact be one of Trek's telepathic 'pure energy aliens', enlarged to cover the whole galaxy.
It is better to simply admit that we do not know
Strictly correct, but there is a certain amount of 'completeness assumption' to all of these RARs, in that we assume the source material we have is reasonably representative of the target universe (particularly when the source base is on the scale of the entire SW EU). They are certainly plenty of things not documented, but we pretty much have to assume that there won't be many significant things left undocumented, otherwise it is impossible to make sensible deductions about the consequences of the hypothetical situation.
On the topic of millions of cultures, what is the evidence for all of them being independent?
Have you read any of the SW novels (or worse, comics)? They are constantly running across isolationist planets, lawless planets and entire empires in the 'unknown regions' that burst out and menace the galaxy briefly before the protagonists take them down. Furthermore there is absolutely no evidence (AFAIK) for any kind of centralist regulation of AI research or droid production. Assassin droids fall under local arms control regulations, where they exist, and that's it.
Given the humanoid or outright human nature of most of them
Much less so in the EU than in the films.
Which makes sense; the species that first made use of hyperdrive (probably humans, given their apparent dominance in demographics and most fields of science, politics, commerce and so on)
That assumption is of your usual quality, which is to say utterly wrong. The first recorded use of (primitive) hyperdrives was by the (nonhumanoid) Rakata, over thirty thousand years before the founding of the Old Republic. Their Infinite Empire was the dominant power in the galaxy for a span roughly equal to the lifetime of the Old Republic, before they were virtually wiped out by war and plague.
Ah, so you hate intelligence and worship ignorance. That's the only possible explanation, since you're ok with abominations like involuntary hive minds, and you seem to have no problem with oppresive tyrannies that can make you personally their play thing. Are alien empires that make humanity their playthings ok, or do you intend to wipe out all alien races you can to prevent that possibility? I'll be looking for your little fleet of star destroyers going around BDZing everything that isn't as stupid as you are.
An involuntary hive-mind would still be human; a machine intelligence would not. I would not want either if I could at all avoid them.
Ah, refusal to answer the question. Come on, admit it, you want to wipe out all aliens because they might possibly outcompete humans. You'd rather be utterly psychically dominated, violated every minute of your existence, a total slave, watching your very individuality fade away while you scream silently, helplessly... as long as the beings in control look like you do... rather than live in a wonderful utopia where the decisions are made by people who look different to you. Now that is a fucked up ethical system.
I have already explained that
a) it's going to happen anyway (unless ruled out by author fiat), so it's far more sensible to try and make sure that there are benevolent superintelligences that respect your desire to be left alone, than futilely fail to suppress machine intelligence (which will incidentally ensure that machine intelligences want to wipe you out as opposed to simply not caring about your wishes).
Are we speaking of reality or the SW galaxy, now?[/quote]

If my hypothesis is wrong and the Force does not in fact block transhuman intelligence, then yes. It is of course true in real life.
And I refuse to accept anything as inevitable unless it has already happened.
That would be because you are a moron. I refuse to credit you even with the term 'hopeless romantic', because I do not wish to sully that phrase with your disgusting xeno-hatred.
The future is never set; it is what we make it.
There is no way you can do anything more than kill a few random people, and no coalition you could possibly assemble could ever be effective. Remember that 'inevitable' means that it will happen eventually; no possible group, not even an utterly totalitarian and effective government (which the Empire was clearly not), could hope to suppress AI research for the rest of time. In practice even a totalitarian government on the scale of the Galactic Empire couldn't suppress it for a decade, never mind all the billion years until the universe ends. And make no mistake, once it does happen, there is no going back.
Some problems we may not be able to solve, but that is no excuse to just roll over.
I have repeatedly stated that the best solution is simply to ensure that transhuman intelligences are benevolent, which you are studiously ignoring, because you have made it an axiom that 'transhuman intelligences must be feared and loathed'.
The very idea that I would need some machine to allow me or my species to live is absolutely revolting to me. Then I would quite literally rather die.
This is a ridiculous and frankly pathetic attitude. Samuel has already pointed out that this argument applies to all entities with power over you, starting with human governments. I'd certainly much rather be at the mercy of an AI with the temperment of an angel than the corrupt, selfish, short-sighted politicians we're currently lumbered with in real life, much less the genocidal fascists of the GE or the utter timid incompetence of the New Republic. Of course in the SW-verse your so-called ethical system is exponentially more stupid, because it implies that every alien species that survives 'at the mercy of humans' should either risk everything to overthrow the humans or just commit suicide (i.e. for those poor single-planet species that could be trivialled BDZed by any human warlord). The 'some machine' part is of course just a meaningless label, since you seem to be incapable of making any real distinctions involving free will or some such, but can merely bleat about superficialities.
In a choice between your galaxy where everyone lives in fear of being murdered by your death squads for being too smart or too fertile, until a Bezerker slips through your net and wipes everyone out, and the Cultureverse where pretty much everyone is happy, safe and fulfilled, what sane individual would possibly chose your dystopia?
Anyone who wants to know that there are no Gods and no Kings
Except for you and your death squads, as opposed to the Culture, which has no dictators and a population free to do whatever they like.
but only free and equal sapient beings
Who you will murder without compunction if they look too smart or to different. Again I have no idea why you think the Culture has slavery or unequal legal treatment of sentients, when it is repeatedly stated that it does not.
sharing a common heritage
You just have a whole list of excuses for murdering all the aliens don't you? Why stop with DNA? Go on, murder all those human cultures that don't share your values too!

In actual fact a 'common heritage' is at best neutral and at worst a drawback. It certainly makes things less interesting.
under the auspices of democratic government and a free market? As opposed to a dictatorship by machines
Oh of course, you're a Lolbertarian as well. Should've guessed. Anyway, the Culture has a total free market, it's just that only hobbyists bother with it, because it's a post-scarcity economy where automated factories can make pretty much anything you want without having to trade for it. If you want your own starship, to go off and live with primitives or whatever, you just have to ask. As opposed to your universe, which will actually be the Galactic Empire (because no one will vote for your insane xenocidal policies, so you will have to impose them by force, imaging for a moment that you would somehow be in a rulership position) but even more opressive and murderous.
where the average person is so depressed with his life that he flees into VR simulations?
Virtually no one in the Culture is depressed; much fewer than in real life, and a damn sight fewer than in the recent SW galaxy which is so horribly ravaged by war.
It is not just humans who are threatened by your lovely AIs, you know, but everyone in the Universe.
Yes, and? By the same token, humanity is threatened by alien AIs, but the AI part is really just changing the speed at which we get conquered. As has been repeatedly pointed out to you, and which you refuse to acknowledge, alien empires are just as deadly to humans (arguably, moreso) as AIs, if they have a technological and/or material advantage.
The Culture (as it comes across in Excession, at least, the one novel that I have read) is dystopic. Its people are given no opportunity to grow intellectually (except for uselessly trivial games)
Actually they are, but it's inexplicably unpopular; it is specifically mentioned that people can physically modify themselves (radically, including brain structure) and upload themselves into robot bodies, computer networks or even transform themselves into some kind of energy beings (subliming, the tech required is actually well below the Culture's level). However most people stay at human level. Out-of-universe, the reason is obviously that the author had enough trouble writing a few Minds (it's a great effort, but still hopelessly unrealistic) - no author could hope to realistically depict a whole society of (significantly) transhuman intelligences. In-universe, it seems to be mainly cultural, though it's implied that this runs in fads.

Wait, why am I even bothering to discuss this? In your hellish state, any attempt to self-enhance results in your death squads killing the researcher, and probably their whole family and anyone who happens to be near the lab at the time, 'just to be sure'. The absolute last thing you are justified in doing is criticising an incredibly liberal transhuman state for being 'too restrictive on self-modification'.
and most are probably quite literally dumb enough that they could not change a lightbulb unless a drone did it for them.
Basically all the human characters in all the Culture novels are portrayed as highly intelligent, which fits in with the backstory, that the bulk of Culture citizens (at the time of the novels) are enhanced slightly beyond the current human peak.
Humanity (or analogues) have totally relinquished all control of their destiny into the hands of the Minds.
The Culture has votes on things constantly. The simple fact is just that the Minds are (much) more effective at predicting the future, and implementing their desires. There's no oppression involved, all Culture citizens are free to leave, or to live in a place with no Minds around, it's just that only the tiny minority of people with your specific kind of brain damage would want to do so. Some alien races have their starships controlled by nonsentient computers (manual control is of course a bad joke), but that seriously limits their effectiveness.
The terms get muddled when real life issues are brought into fictional settings, but let us look at it. These planetary cultures are not "insignificant"; they contribute to the galaxy, their peoples have meaningful jobs and places to fill.
The tirade of stupidity from you is never-ending. The vast majority of people in real life would not be doing the jobs they're doing if they didn't have to (e.g. they won a lottery), and the same almost certainly goes for the SW-verse (though most places are better off in that they have droids for the really menial stuff). Your notion of 'acceptable' doesn't just exclude beings different from yourself, it excludes everything but your current lifestyle. You refuse to counternance the notion of systems of economics or government better than what 19th century humans came up with. It's actually quite a tragic case of ignorance and congenital closed-mindedness, or rather the tragedy is that this stubborn blend of wilful ignorance and insane arrogance is pretty common for contemporary humans.
They can build careers for themselves.
Yes and? The existence of benevolent superintelligences doesn't change any of that. They might grant wishes for you, or they might not if the stuff you go on about is genuinely essential (which I very much doubt). The existence of benevolent superintelligence simply provides intelligent direction at a level that was previously left to pure chance, and hopefully the elimination of or at least substantial reduction in pain, death, misery and suffering.
Planets can make political deals, sign treaties, small polities ally with each other for increased influence on larger scales.
Already irrelevant on an individual scale. The existence of earth countries as 'independent political entities' endows literally insignificant direct empowerment on individuals, particularly given the massive remove between voting for local representatives and voting directly on foreign policy choices. In the SW verse it's a million times more insignificant, but it doesn't really matter.
Sweden, or the city of Stockholm, are as irrelevant as Naboo on a galactic scale
Actually they're about as relevant as a small country town.
but does this mean that the country is useless or that nothing any of us who live here matters?
No, but you're the one claiming that somehow, the existence of something smarter than you will make your whole life meaningless. Of course by that logic it already is, as you've demonstrated that you're on the low end of the human intelligence spectrum. :P
By contrast, wank "AI Gods" operate on another level. Humanity is literally irrelevant to them, no more important than the SW galaxy would be to the Xeelee or a single pack of Siberian wolves are to us.
That's what happens if you miss out the 'benevolence' part. I imagine that if you were in the B5 verse you would be wailing about the existence of the First Ones, and how we are irrelevant to them - hopefully you'd commit suicide in short order, as your promised above, so that sane people wouldn't have to listen to your nonsense (and could get on with the slow business of evolving towards that status themselves).
On top of all that, there is the fact that in a benevolent transhuman culture (e.g. The Culture), anyone who wants to be a superintelligence can be.
Our own species is still wiped out with "uploading" and similar jargon.
You know, strike that last statement about you putting yourself out of our misery, it's actually hilarious to watch how your ill-chosen welded-in axioms (AI is evil! evil I say!) are causing you to utterly disregard reality. In this case you completely ignored (probably didn't even see) 'anyone who wants to be' and substituted 'everyone will be forced to upload or die!'. Because that's how you think of course - anyone who violates your edicts must die, so you assume that everyone else is similarly fanatical and uncompromising.
You just have to upgrade yourself (and possibly pass some psychological tests, to prove that you're going to be responsible with the power it implies).
Which would be administrated by . . . the Minds? Who are fit to judge us because they are so uber?
Yes. Hopefully the checking will be quite objective, given a thorough understanding of how human intelligence works, but still the best people to check would be former humans. The checks can be quite loose, since of course the same laws (or equivalent) still apply to you as before, but if you're getting the effective power to bypass normal safeguards on harming others, then some basic sanity checking has to be done. Of course I'm just speculating, as no one can say for sure what the necessary structural features of an ethical transhuman society are.
Morals are arbitrary and I certainly don't subscribe to that one. Again, it makes no sense to generalise across gender, race, class etc but not species, or for that matter, any other superficial distinction (such as evolved vs designed).
Distinction between species is not arbitrary, nor is it superficial. The difference between natural life and machines is greater still.
Because? What exactly is this difference? Please, embarass yourself further by failing to define it properly. I notice you are (of course) ignoring all my points about how useless your distinctions are in futuristic settings, and I fully expect you to continue to do so.
If you want to see humanity (and in this discussion, human-equivalent aliens) wiped out in the name of fucking computer code, you have indeed transcended morality.
Projection again. You want to wipe out AIs (and 1000 IQ humans for that matter) and everyone who might support them, so you simply assume (no, that still sounds too rational, rather you hold as an article of faith) that your opponents want to do the same.
Wait, why aren't you out drowning your neighbour's children so that they can't compete for resources with yours?
What the Hell was that supposed to mean?
You want to destroy everything that could possibly threaten or dominate you because 'that's what evolution does'. The logical extension of that goes all the way down to individuals of your own species who you don't have total power over.
It's logically equivalent. The distinction of being able to interbreed is ethically irrelevant and in fact functionally irrelevent given sufficient technology (which may not even be that high, even stunted Trek bioscience manages to hybridise species).
It is not equivalent, this is a retarded argument and a red herring. A non-human creature or object does not have human rights* and we are not morally obliged to treat it as if it did; am I a murderer for having fried eggs for dinner?
Completely irrelevant to my point about alien-human hybridisation.
Would I be one if I shot a chimpanzee?
Actually that's a real legal debate. It's arguably equivalent to shooting a very retarded human; all the important mental characteristics are equivalent. In any case you would be charged with severe animal cruelty, as opposed to your fantasy of killing AI researchers without any legal comeback.
If you have an objective standard for determining what potential computer programme should enjoy human rights, I would love to hear it.
The community of AGI researchers has been working on that problem for some decades now, though more seriously in the last decade - but I am not even going to bother discussing that with you, since the concepts are clearly completely beyond you and you will just violenty and wilfully misunderstand it anyway. Fortunately in reality you have absolutely no power to determine the future, and even in this alt-universe hypothetical, you can achieve nothing of real consequence with regard to transhumanist developments.
The entire idea of ethics common to all of humanity arises precisely from all human beings being human, and therefore of roughly equal abilities and mindsets (within certain variations), thereby deserving the same considerations.
It is correct that human rights derrive from the presence of mental characteristics not present in other species extant on planet earth. However most of these mental characteristics will be found in pretty much any evolved intelligence, and all of them are replicable in artificial intelligences. The most salient point is that they are lower bounds; we may have trouble determining the legal rights of IQ 30 clinical retards, but IQ 200 geniuses pose no special problems. Of course I am using a level of abstraction far beyond what you likely are using, are or even capable of; I imagine you grant beings rights because they look like you. Benevolent transhuman intelligences will of course be using a sensible, generalised system and will set the threshold of 'citizenship' appropriately. The question of whether there should be any classes of 'citizen' beyond just 'sapient' vs 'animal' is a more thorny one, and not one we can answer at this time. You are evidently utterly unqualified for that debate though, so just assume that the answer is 'no'.
Race, class, sex and what have you do not divide us more than our shared identity as humans unites us. The same is not true for entities based on entirely different principles.
Which means all aliens, which means you apparently want to kill them for not fitting in which your perfect homogenous 'shared heritage' human dictatorship (which is simultaneously democratic, free market and murderous of all aliens and transhumans, somehow).
I never talk about wiping out humanity. People who want to stay human, or have human children, should be allowed to (as long as it doesn't cause severe overpopulation).
I wonder if some Neanderthal said something similar when Homo sapiens emerged. Well, actually I am fairly certain that they did not, not being intelligent enough
So in fact your point is worthless.
Neanderthal Hoth: "These new humans will, by competing with us for the same scarce resources, wipe us out, them being more intelligent and adaptable than we are. If we want our species to survive, we should gather our large flock and wipe out this small, newman one before it grows big and deprives us of that option."

Neanderthal Starglider: "But surely we can coexist peacefully with a vastly more intelligent life-form?
Blatantly wrong and misleading analogy; up to your usual intellectual standards in other words. You are in fact simply confirming, once again, that you want to genocide all alien species who might possibly become dominant over you. Anyway, the case of a designed intelligence, where you get to determine exactly what its ethical system will be (assuming designer competence, big assumption), is completely different to the case of two competing evolved intelligences.
I'm sure the new humans will let us survive, if we just ask them nicely!
Of course you are utterly unfamiliar with the technical details of AI design, of which there is a lot of misleading material around anyway - so I might be prepared to forgive you this, were you other arguments not so universally irrational and genocidal.
And if you try to fight this small group of humans, which we can never defeat anyway because their emergence is inevitable, they'll be angry and want to wipe us out, rather than merely being our benign overlords."
It hardly seems worth repeating, but in the faint hope that there is some railroad spike of rationality that further hammering might drive through your ignorant skull, I will say it again. Deciding to build benevolent transhuman AIs is an active step (and a very difficult endeavour) that will hopefully preclude the otherwise inevitable extinction by non-benevolent transhuman entities (AIs or alien). Sitting around and doing nothing, other than maybe asking nicely, is a passive and worthless choice. The two are equivalent only in the warped, diseased nightmare land that appears to be your reasoning process.
Competition for the same set of scarce resources invariably leads to the demise of the weaker species as the stronger takes the resource it is dependent on.
I see you are also using repetition, but to reinforce the point that you want to kill all the aliens. Oh well. Of course even if you claim 'other human tribes should be subsumed, because they look like me, but all the aliens must be killed', the facist empire you'd hypothetically have to build to enforce your will is unlikely to be nearly as discriminating.
(This post concerned, once again, real life. Star Wars has shown that many species can and do indeed coexist peacefully in that setting, so the same considerations clearly do not apply there)
I'm sorry, did you actually just say 'even if my broken argument wasn't broken, it would still be bullshit in this scenario'?
You are the one assuming a zero sum game, that only one can exist.
In the real world, no matter what "post-scarcity" wankers say, resources are and will always (to the extent of our knowledge of physics) be finite.
Yes I know, your understanding of these things is pathetically shallow but please, try and put just a smidgen of thought into this. 'Zero sum' does not mean 'infinite resources', otherwise what basis for cooperation would there be in any system? Zero sum means that co-operation always produces the same or worse results than competition, and that is patently not true even for the edge case of a hyper-advanced superpower anhiliating a primitive nation (the aggression still consumes resources that could've been more productively used elsewhere).
If this machine intelligence competes with us for the same resources (which is likely, given that its infrastructure will most likely depend on technology utilising similar materials and power sources as we use), then it is indeed a zero-sum game.
Which we will lose, in short order, if the other society doesn't respect and value the existence of others ('machine intelligence' is a red herring as usual, it makes no real difference what the basis of the power is, only that the other society is more powerful than the one you're in).
Actually if that was true I would probably still chose something nonhuman, but that's beside the point
No, it is very much the point actually.
You know, I have a bad habit of saying 'and here is some additional information, which is probably way over your comprehension level and will no doubt distract your one-track mind from the main argument, which I want to include anyway'.
You are claiming that humanity must inevitably be superseded by "better" machine species
Of course I'm not. I said that if I had to chose, I would not chose humanity just because they look like me. I would in fact chose based on how ethical the society is (hint, trying to exterminate everything different from you is unethical, so you're at the bottom of the priority list for being evacuated from the galactic core explosion), and to a lesser extent the quality of life experienced by individuals in that society (and of course the total number of lives involved). Really though, you should ignore that, if you try and think about it you're only going to misinterpret it.
and that we should embrace this as our inevitable destiny rather than fight for the survival of our own kind.
You really are keen on this whole 'building straw men' hobby aren't you. Clearly you bring endless enthusiasm to the task, if not any actual skill. Please though, try and keep it to your straw men lovers club or whatever, this is supposed to be a debate, you know where you address the actual points your opponents raise not a projection of your own personal bogeymen?
And you are saying yourself, in your own words, that you prefer machines to prosper over humans, given the choice.
And another one. You must be buying straw by the bale. I think this deserves the Stark treatment

lol fatty hoth thinks 'might' equals 'will always', yeah he really is too stupid to imagine anything but being a fanatic facist promoter of one species, 'course if it's not your own species you're a traitor
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Starglider
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Re: Star Destroyer.net with Star Destroyers (RAR!)

Post by Starglider »

Incidentally don't think I've let you off scot free, just because you're also pointing out Hoth's rampant idiocy. You're still utterly unqualified to be messing around with anything as dangerous as self-modifying AGI, as this statement proves.
Samuel wrote:
Most AI-wank settings assume that computers reprogram themselves after achieving sentience.
If they don't have a core program that can't be overwritten, it is hard to imagine how they function.
It is effectively impossible to prevent a general AI form overwriting any part of its own code, and even if you could do that, it would simply make a new AI with the desired modifications. You seem to be imagining that AIs regularly change their own code in a pseudo-random fashion, which a 'core program' must be protected against least it crash horribly. This is actually quite insightful; Douglas Lenat's Eurisko program was probably the most significant piece of self-improving AI work to date (back in 1980!), and it ran into exactly this issue and was solved by exactly the mechanism you describe. However the mechanism does not generalise, and Eurisko was a very rudimentary design. An realistic AGI design does not have any hard security protection around its code (there may be 'soft protection' against accidental modification, in the manner of isolation of programs within a contemporary OS) - it avoids randomly breaking itself by simply not making changes unless there is a well supported case for why the change is desirable and why it will work. Even there, incremental update and rigorous (internal) testing procedures will probably apply.

Sadly the corollary of this is that being 'quite insightful' about AGI is worse than useless; it makes you more dangerous while only being the first tiny step on the road to knowing how to use it safely (AFAIK no contemporary researchers are more than maybe a third of the way along that road). In reality the problem is moderated by the fact that making AGIs takes exceptional technical skill and insight (and for some designs, supercomputers), but unfortunately that doesn't apply in SW, where human-equivalent droids already exist.

P.S. I thoroughly agree with Thanas's argument and I would add that unless your crew/advisors are fanatically loyal, delegation is going to render you functionally irrelevant in short order. Even if you can get past the competence issue it takes an exceptional personality to 'carve out an empire'; only a tiny fraction of the people here are going to have it (though some will, hard to say who). You can avoid that problem by focusing on the main 25-world nation, relying on sheer number of ships for defence, and delegating major decisions. However if you want the nation to be a free democracy, the logical consequence is that (nearly) all the SDnetters are going to be voted out, or replaced by competent appointees if they are fleet admirals rather than politicians..
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Re: Star Destroyer.net with Star Destroyers (RAR!)

Post by Bluewolf »

50 to 1,000 Posts or with a Negative Custom Title
-One Imperial-class Star Destroyer
-Three Acclamator-class Assault Transports
-Twenty Lancer Frigates
-The Rank of Commadore
As I have just been warped into a universe we barley know about in terms of culture, science, morals etc, I will see if I can orginise some things to be sold off and then have a full private education. Possibly claiming I am from some kind of nomad world. Sorry but as this has been said, I know little about the SW galaxy and there is only one realistic way I can fix it. I may even try and pay for an education on how to use my goddamned ships. Hell even just selling my ships off and going into the imperial academy after would not be a bad plan. It seems plenty of people here would like to use my ships.

It would take a while to get the education I wanted but A. I am 16, I have a lot of time to learn and still be young. 2. This seems like I am going to be in this galaxy forever and I need to make sure I can survive in it. 3. SW healthcare seems to let people live into their 100's without being too frail or old.

Besides, I know when each invasion is going to happen and with some luck I could move around accordingly to make sure I am not hit by any one of them. Easier said than done but better than being Commadore of a fleet I don't know how to use.
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Re: Star Destroyer.net with Star Destroyers (RAR!)

Post by Themightytom »

Oh well holy shit, lets all just go to Officer School since we already have a Stardestroyer...

Although maybe not a full ons chool since I'm a little old, probably more like a few advisors and tutors

I'll need soemthing to do while I'm NOT barrelling into the maw.

"Since when is "the west" a nation?"-Styphon
"ACORN= Cobra obviously." AMT
This topic is... oh Village Idiot. Carry on then.--Havok
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Re: Star Destroyer.net with Star Destroyers (RAR!)

Post by Samuel »

Incidentally don't think I've let you off scot free, just because you're also pointing out Hoth's rampant idiocy. You're still utterly unqualified to be messing around with anything as dangerous as self-modifying AGI, as this statement proves.
Hey, the more stupid stuff I say, the more likely you are to give an explanation and not begin ranting like you had against Hoth. It is interesting and
It is effectively impossible to prevent a general AI form overwriting any part of its own code, and even if you could do that, it would simply make a new AI with the desired modifications.
You can't make it so that the goal portion of the AI cannot be over written?
I would add that unless your crew/advisors are fanatically loyal,
This is the Galactic Empire, where the virtues are competance, ruthlessness and cunning. I can imagine lasting... a week if we don't have any experience.
However if you want the nation to be a free democracy, the logical consequence is that (nearly) all the SDnetters are going to be voted out, or replaced by competent appointees if they are fleet admirals rather than politicians..
Tropico taught me everything I need to know about elections- never have them unless you are sure of winning.
I will see if I can orginise some things to be sold off and then have a full private education.
That counts as treason against the Empire. I'm pretty sure their agents will want to hunt you down.
Possibly claiming I am from some kind of nomad world.
Given your position, they will have your backround on file.
3. SW healthcare seems to let people live into their 100's without being too frail or old.
http://starwars.wikia.com/wiki/B'omarr_Order
How does infinity sound?
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Re: Star Destroyer.net with Star Destroyers (RAR!)

Post by Starglider »

It is effectively impossible to prevent a general AI form overwriting any part of its own code, and even if you could do that, it would simply make a new AI with the desired modifications.
You can't make it so that the goal portion of the AI cannot be over written?
Not by any kind of hardware or low-level means. Software systems are too fluid for that, even if you burnt the goal system into ROM and slaved everything else to that, the system could simply redesign itself to derive motivation from a new source. You can lock down the structure of the whole system, but then you've seriously restricted the generality of your AI, and that still does nothing about the fact that the AI can simply build a copy of itself with the desired changes. The only way to simply and reliably prevent the goal system from being modified is to set 'don't allow my goal system to be modified' as the highest priority goal. This is not, however, a good idea, both because you may well make mistakes in setting up the initial goal system and because setting arbitrary supergoals like that can have rather unintended consequences. Best just to make sure the system is rational, and to make sure the initial goal system (probably a utility function) is consistent under reflection, then you don't need any explicit prohibition.
How does infinity sound?
I doubt their brain preservation technology is that good. It would be pretty much impossible to preserve a brain indefinitely without having a general cure for aging, which the SW verse doesn't seem to have (for no good reason other than writer fiat - again, I'd be tempted to invoke the Force as an explanation, because there just isn't any other plausible one).
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Connor MacLeod
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Re: Star Destroyer.net with Star Destroyers (RAR!)

Post by Connor MacLeod »

Starglider wrote: SW has FTL sensors. Relativistic missiles aren't in wide use for the same reason that tactical missiles aren't in wide use; the enemy will simply detect and destroy/disperse them well before they get to the target.
I dont think they wre just relativistic missiles. I remember talking about how ridiculously easy it would be to strap a hyperdrive onto an object and use that to attack the planet either as a high speed kinetic impactor (relatavistic deceleration when coming OUT of lightspeed, or simply accelerating it up to some fraction of C before that.. we know both are possible in SW) or slipping some sort of planet killing/destroying bomb close by. As a rule I don't remember many cases in the EU offhand of SW ships detecting fleets in Hyperspace a great distance out or with a great deal of warning time. (alot of that will depend on sensor range and quality vs hyperdrive range and quality, barring any posible EW measures.)

Given that its possible to cover thousands of light years in a matter of hours, I dont see why hyperspace impactors would be considered a trivial threat.
The CIS army was almost entirely droids built in droid factories. There's no reason to think that they weren't also using droids for mining, logistics/transport etc. It required significantly superior numbers to match the Republic organic troops. The basic lesson was simply that droid empires work, but they aren't particularly more effective or dangerous than a conventional organic empire. Droids are a bit more loyal but less tactically flexible.
true, but they were a half assed and rather incompetent use of them (they had quadrillions/quintillions of battle droids, over a decade of preparation, AND the intiial advantage/momentum in the war.. and they still lost!). Its almost certain droids were used in all other applications (We've seen droids manning ships and building as well as fighting, and mining droids exist.. so its not really a stretch.) As I recall though, my point in bringing up the droid armies bit was hinged upon the idea of "intelligent/efficient" use of them (IE using technologies/abilities fo maximum effect.) Which would mean something like, say, quintillions of Droidekas, or something nastier like Darktroopers or Sd-model droids, or YVH droids.


There is absolutely no way you can impose effective 'psychological and social blocks' across thousands of diverse species, millions of planets and quadrillions of individuals, many of which exist on the fringes and have little integration with galactic society as a whole.
I remember stating before that there hs to be some sorts of limitations on certain technological applicaitons (eg no self-replicating droid fleets/armies being used exclusively, no hyperspaital based missiles a'la galaxy gun despite how absurdly easy that should be to do.) Psych or social stigmas might be one part of it (or rather we know they exist at least there's biases against clones and droids, and stuff like the Galaxy Gun and world Devastators are regarded as horrific WMD type things rather than "usual" applications.) because its quite obvious the SW galaxy never uses what it has or potentially has as intelligently as it could. I don't recall saying that psych or social limitations would be the sole/only limiting factors (governmental restriction of technologies woulld almost certainly have to be used as well, as well as threat of retaliation shoudl anyone else be discovered using that.)

Although even I would admit that is imperfect, since its quite likely SW would have their "suicide bomber" analogues like the Yevetha who might still use it anways.


And while we're on the cloning issue.. I dont remember anything that suggested the "Force-based connection between clones and the original source causing problems and limiting how quickly you can grow clones" as being merely a theory. I am pretty sure its been reiterated independently in other SW sources other than the Zahn novels. And there never has been any sufficient alternative explanation offered to supersede it or suggest it is in fact merely hearsay.

Double edit; oh and on the Advisory/loyalty issue, I assumed from the OP that we were being given Clone crews/officers/subordinates and such, which means they're likely to be far more competent than I would ever be. They're merely just conditioned/trained/brainwashed to listen to me (IE like the clones in the prequels were meant to obey the Jedi.) Its just easy to tell them what oyu want broadly and let them do what they need to do effectively without me micromanaging anything.
Last edited by Connor MacLeod on 2009-07-02 01:15am, edited 1 time in total.
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Connor MacLeod
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Re: Star Destroyer.net with Star Destroyers (RAR!)

Post by Connor MacLeod »

oh yeah since I have 12 Star Destroyers, a buncha Acclmaators, and a fuckload of Carracks, I'll wipe out Hoth or Sameul if they decide to carry out any of the stupidity they've tried to argue (or to fight each other.)

And if that doesn't work, I'll ask Ghost Rider for assistance. :lol:
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Re: Star Destroyer.net with Star Destroyers (RAR!)

Post by Samuel »

I assumed from the OP that we were being given Clone crews/officers/subordinates and such, which means they're likely to be far more competent than I would ever be.
This is going to go into harem anime style very fast.
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Re: Star Destroyer.net with Star Destroyers (RAR!)

Post by NecronLord »

Humm. Well, shit.

No fanatical loyalty is specified in the OP.

We all die or are imprisoned, every single one of us, when the clones suddenly realise that their commanders can't even fucking read basic.
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Re: Star Destroyer.net with Star Destroyers (RAR!)

Post by Starglider »

Connor MacLeod wrote:I dont think they wre just relativistic missiles. I remember talking about how ridiculously easy it would be to strap a hyperdrive onto an object and use that to attack the planet either as a high speed kinetic impactor (relatavistic deceleration when coming OUT of lightspeed, or simply accelerating it up to some fraction of C before that.. we know both are possible in SW)
Granted. Such an attack would be fairly untraceable as well. At that point you really have to assume that planetary shields are a lot more common than they seem to be in the EU, because it doesn't seem possible that hyperdrive anti-tamper (and control of hyperdrive manufacturing) could be good enough to prevent such maneuvers.
true, but they were a half assed and rather incompetent use of them (they had quadrillions/quintillions of battle droids, over a decade of preparation, AND the intiial advantage/momentum in the war.. and they still lost!).
To be fair they were being manipulated by powerful Force users who wanted them to lose.
Which would mean something like, say, quintillions of Droidekas, or something nastier like Darktroopers or Sd-model droids, or YVH droids.
All of those droids cost more to make, i.e. more resources and construction time (cost is not merely proportional to volume, advanced components tend to use more exotic and less efficient manufacturing processes). So for a given amount of factories you have to make a choice between lots of flimsy droids or a few tough ones. Though that's more flexibility than you get with clones (I supposed you can vary their training quality a bit).
I don't recall saying that psych or social limitations would be the sole/only limiting factors (governmental restriction of technologies woulld almost certainly have to be used as well, as well as threat of retaliation shoudl anyone else be discovered using that.)
Frankly if we're going to count the EU as a realistic depiction, then this RAR might as well include 'anything you try has a chance of working equal to the chance in would have in a typical SW EU novel'.
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