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Aug 31, 2016 at 16:45 comment added rm -rf slash @Daerdemandt The crime might not be specific to the AI society itself. Perhaps the AI society knows it is not trusted by most organic life by default, and their physical platforms are very life-like. Any actions that reveal their existence or organic mimicry could be dangerous to the AI species. For that reason, it would make sense to upload the platform to the network and make use of its information but prevent it from disclosing sensitive information to other species again.
Aug 31, 2016 at 16:30 comment added Daerdemandt That depends on how smart the AI is. Agreeing on some code of conduct and maintaining service that punishes misbehaviour is a well-tested and working solution for tragedy of the commons. However, if AIs are not confined with our tradition, they have a lot of options for punishment, I suppose some forms of commitment trade that are incomprehensible to human observer can take place.
Aug 31, 2016 at 16:20 history answered rm -rf slash CC BY-SA 3.0