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Directly fighting the ETI

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Noble Pigeon Noble Pigeon's picture
Directly fighting the ETI
The ETI, the core rulebook warns, should never be directly encountered. They are a hyper advanced civilization, and something as insignificant as transhumanity is of little interest to them. We are an insignificant ant to their grand, cosmic designs, and even if we did encounter ETI machines or bases, they would still only notice us like we notice the thousands of germs that consistently invade our body. Basically, the ETI makes up a big part of the setting's "unknown, cosmic, unfathomable Lovecraftian horror", and this has been the general consensus in the Eclipse Phase community. But the beauty of Eclipse Phase is just how many genres of a setting you can run. Which is why I've been brainstorming a campaign involving the ETI taking conscious, direct notice of transhumanity for whatever reason, and became dedicated to wiping them out. So how the hell is humanity going to take on a civilization that is capable of galactic-scale projects? It's like David vs. Goliath, except Goliath is armed with an AK-74, full body armor, and incendiary ammo. Also, why on earth would they take an interest in humanity, of all other species in the galaxy? Well that's where I ask you guys, since you guys know the ropes of the setting better than I do. However, I'd appreciate it if people didn't come in pointing out how much of a taboo it is in the Eclipse Phase setting implying the ETI taking a conscious interest in our extinction and our fight for survival against them. As creative as people can get with their metaphors (we are an insignificant ant in a mountain range, etc. etc.), I'm already quite aware this is turning the setting on its head, which isn't really a bad thing. I personally find it much more terrifying for a cosmic-scale civilization directly noticing us than the "inconceivable, unfathomable cosmic horrors" brand of fear.
"Don't believe everything you read on the Internet.” -Abraham Lincoln, State of the Union address
NewtonPulsifer NewtonPulsifer's picture
Mean ETI vs friendly ETI,
Mean ETI vs friendly ETI, humans in the middle?
"I fear all we have done is to awaken a sleeping giant and fill him with a terrible resolve."- Isoroku Yamamoto
RustedPantheress RustedPantheress's picture
NewtonPulsifer wrote:Mean ETI
NewtonPulsifer wrote:
Mean ETI vs friendly ETI, humans in the middle?
That is really the only situation involving an active ETI where humanity has a chance of surviving. It's not just David versus Goliath, it's civilian David armed with a rubber slingshot and a butterknife going against Goliath and his buddies driving tanks.
Somebody is using bad science! Snark, facts, snark. Your body is corrupted: Cool, do more science to it. Your mind is warped: That's nice, want a cookie? What do we say to the God of Death? Not today!
rfmcdonald rfmcdonald's picture
The disparity in size and
The disparity in size and capabilities between the entirety of transhuman civilization and the ETI is such that, yeah, unless we have allies we are damned.
Revinor Revinor's picture
Unless somebody grabs his
Unless somebody grabs his MacBook and manages to infect their central galactic computer with virus.
Prophet710 Prophet710's picture
Unless it's a collection of
Unless it's a collection of civilizations akin to the Council or the Covenant aligned with Transhumanity. Each with varying degrees of tech and with certain far reaching, if not specific, capabilities. This would be a very space opera style campaign not unlike Mass Effect.
"And yet, across the gulf of space, minds immeasurably superior to ours regarded this Earth with envious eyes. And slowly, and surely, they drew their plans against us."
rfmcdonald rfmcdonald's picture
Mass Effect's civilizations
Mass Effect's civilizations are far less ancient, and far less advanced, than the ETI (whatever it is). The ETI had Bracewell probes in the solar system, the core book noted, when the Earth was not so much as a ripple of dust in the condensing planetary disk. It is literally billions of years ahead of us or any of our near-contemporaries. If TITANs are incomprehensible to transhumans, how much more the nth-generation descendants of the first TITANs in the galaxy?
Extrasolar Angel Extrasolar Angel's picture
If somebody wants to know how
If somebody wants to know how it would like I recommend reading Stephen Baxter's Xelee sequence of human war with Xelee.
[I]Raise your hands to the sky and break the chains. With transhumanism we can smash the matriarchy together.[/i]
Sushi-Poot Sushi-Poot's picture
Sounds Epic
Okay...so - TITANS come back, all apologetic. Like, "sorry we killed and chopped off heads, but we had a nervous breakdown there and hope you can forgive us. Here's some super awesome tech that we snagged to give back to you guys as a peace offering of sorts". - Transhumanity's like, "hey thanks! We'll gladly accept, considering you flew in on ships that look like they could bust a planet with one shot. Yeah. Let's be friends. For the love of God! Let's please be friends". - ETI is like, "Oh crap! They got that tech, which doesn't really pose a threat to us, unless they have another couple hundred thousand years to evolve. But that's a couple hundred thousand years too close, as far as we are concerned. Let's kill em!" - Transhumans and TITANS are like, "Oh shit! Here come the ETIs and we can't hope to defeat them, not even combined. Let's cover each other's butts as we scramble through the nearest Gate and blow them up once we're through. Hopefully the divided diaspora of the Sol System can find each other again (and avoid bumping into the ETI) some bazillion years down the road". There. Opened-ended with plenty of room to explore after the fight between the Trannies, Robots, and Aliens. Do they wander? Do they stay put? If they stay put, will the ETIs find them? Do the ETIs know where they are already and it's just a matter of time? Does anyone really care at this point? Lots of holes. But that's all I could come up with. You're welcome?
Eat it Raw!
Arenamontanus Arenamontanus's picture
I just gave a TEDx talk about
I just gave a TEDx talk about the Fermi question (OK, I am boasting, but mainly due to adrenaline rush, forgive me) and one of my main points was this: even in the Milky Way most planets formed billions of years before Earth. So even alien civs from here could be a billion years ahead. And that doesn't count the *really* old ones: a civilization that started a 10 billion years ago could have expanded across the whole visible universe (it was a lot smaller then). I have sketches for how to emplace nano-equipment on every single large solid body *anywhere* indefinitely. So even a mere nanotech civilization not much more capable than transhumanity in EP could in principle dominate the *entire* universe if it started early enough. Suppose such a civilization really wanted transhumanity out of the way. It could literally throw entire planets of resources against transhumanity - how do you fight 10^24 kilograms of disassembler nanites arriving to cover every solid object in the solar system? Even a civ that merely had a few million years headstart would be tough. When the stats of your equipment could be measured in scientific notation rather 1-100, a fight will be uneven. The only way of ensuring that this kind of super tech discrepancy doesn't happen is to assume some kind of tech ceiling. No supertech, just something like what humans have. But the tech ceiling in EP is at least at TITAN level - gates through spacetime, maybe femtotech, psi and planetary dis/reassembly. A well functioning ETI civ will have these resources. Plus at least a few millions of years of experience of aliens trying to do sneaky stuff. One could try to explain things away, like saying the ETI are old and decadent. But that may not be true for all parts of ETI society (the Roman legions were pretty fearsome even during the decline), and a fragment would still be amazingly dangerous. So I am firmly of the opinion that proper "hard" ETI should be an existential risk and essentially unfightable. One can of course soften things to make them defeatable, but it is a bit like making Cthulhu vulnerable to holy symbols. It misses the point.
Extropian
Unity Unity's picture
Arenamontanus wrote:One can
Arenamontanus wrote:
One can of course soften things to make them defeatable, but it is a bit like making Cthulhu vulnerable to holy symbols. It misses the point.
Basically! These aren't the Reapers from Mass Effect. A coalition of races on our own tech level will never even make a dent against the ETI, even if we got all of them on board (and assuming anymore exist right now).
Noble Pigeon Noble Pigeon's picture
Arenamontanus wrote:One can
Arenamontanus wrote:
One can of course soften things to make them defeatable, but it is a bit like making Cthulhu vulnerable to holy symbols. It misses the point.
Which is what I acknowledge in the OP. I'm fully aware of the point of the ETI: god-like sentience that can just flick off transhumanity's collective head. Yes, I get it. They're unfightable. Incomprehensible, etc. etc. What I'm trying to figure out is how to have them involved in a campaign that involves them being interested in our destruction without the whole game just being "they fling a supermassive black hole at the solar system, hand me your character sheets". If that does mean nerfing them then so be it. I do like some of the ideas presented so far though (especially the TITANs coming back and trying to make up for destroying 90% of their race :>). And yes, I shamelessly admit I am trying to run an unorthodox (for Eclipse Phase anyway) campaign not unlike Mass Effect, ie a small group of people trying to save civilization, at least their civilization, from extinction by a massive threat.
"Don't believe everything you read on the Internet.” -Abraham Lincoln, State of the Union address
rfmcdonald rfmcdonald's picture
Chatting with a friend, it
Chatting with a friend, it strikes me that there might be [URL=http://www.nih.gov/news/health/jun2012/nhgri-13.htm]parallels with the bacterial ecologies of human beings[/URL].
Quote:
The human body contains trillions of microorganisms — outnumbering human cells by 10 to 1. Because of their small size, however, microorganisms make up only about 1 to 3 percent of the body's mass (in a 200-pound adult, that’s 2 to 6 pounds of bacteria), but play a vital role in human health. [. . .] Where doctors had previously isolated only a few hundred bacterial species from the body, HMP researchers now calculate that more than 10,000 microbial species occupy the human ecosystem. Moreover, researchers calculate that they have identified between 81 and 99 percent of all microorganismal genera in healthy adults. “We have defined the boundaries of normal microbial variation in humans,” said James M. Anderson, M.D., Ph.D., director of the NIH Division of Program Coordination, Planning and Strategic Initiatives, which includes the NIH Common Fund. “We now have a very good idea of what is normal for a healthy Western population and are beginning to learn how changes in the microbiome correlate with physiology and disease.” HMP researchers also reported that this plethora of microbes contribute more genes responsible for human survival than humans contribute. Where the human genome carries some 22,000 protein-coding genes, researchers estimate that the human microbiome contributes some 8 million unique protein-coding genes or 360 times more bacterial genes than human genes. This bacterial genomic contribution is critical for human survival. Genes carried by bacteria in the gastro-intestinal tract, for example, allow humans to digest foods and absorb nutrients that otherwise would be unavailable.
Even though human biology is geared towards killing pathogenic bacteria, bacteria still thrive on our bodies.
rfmcdonald rfmcdonald's picture
Just this afternoon in
Just this afternoon in Toronto I was chatting with a friend who mentioned a [URL=http://forum.rpg.net/showthread.php?663840-Eclipse-Phase-Directly-fighti... thread[/URL] where the subject of resisting the ETI was raised. One insight John shared with me was that, galactic-scale though it might be, the physical processes of the ETI seem to be slow. (As a single example, the ship that's apparently fleeing the computronium dust-cloud near Corse is able to flee--it's survived long enough.) Among other things, that would imply that the ETI has no more exceptionally fine-grained control over the micro-level of its body than we do. The Bracewell probes are self-guiding white blood cells, basically. One strategy of resistance is metastasis, involving the rapid growth of transhumanity through space, whether through the gates and or via normal space (direct from Sol, as the Titanians are starting to do, or via exoplanet colonies like Just In Case). A sufficiently dispersed human civilization would be very difficult to get rid of. Another strategy might involve diversification. One of the big problems with an HIV vaccine involves the mutability of HIV--vaccines which might carry some protection against one strain at a particular time wouldn't necessarily protect against another contemporary strain, or against that same strain's immediate ancestors or descendants. Transhuman civilization would have to diversify, occupying multiple different niches and behaving in different ways. A third strategy might involve the subversion of ETI resources. HIV subtly alters the mechanics of the immune system, subverting it to do its bidding. Might transhumanity be in a position to do the same?
rfmcdonald rfmcdonald's picture
One more thing. We don't know
One more thing. We don't know why the TITANs did what they did, not that the TITANs were ever a unified collective consciousness or apparently pursuing common goals. As my friend [URL=http://forum.rpg.net/showthread.php?663840-Eclipse-Phase-Directly-fighti..., for all we know the TITANs understood the Fall to be a necessary evacuation of the majority of the transhuman population from the solar system before transhumanity hit the sort of hard singularity that would gain the ETI's conscious attention
OneTrikPony OneTrikPony's picture
I'm wondering if a billion
I'm wondering if a billion years of advancement post singularity is equivalent to a billion years of advancement pre singularity. In EP humanity has already produced 1 or 2 singularities, (depending on weather you count the Promethians) so the question might be how close is a singularity event to 'vertical' on the tech curve? Would it require a billion years to catch up to the capabilities of an ETI sufficient to decide our own destiny. Seems to me that post singularity species could find the hard limits of the universe relatively quickly. At that point we would, at least, be playing with a full deck of cards even if we havn't had time to build our hand. So the key to a favorable outcome in contact with ETI could be achieving healthy post singularity status. Transhumanity may have done that with the TITAN's had the ETI not intervened. Another thing that's been buzzing in the back of my brain is; "Why are there Two ETI techs in the solar system?" By that I mean the Bracewell Probe and the Pandora Gates. There's not much info on the Bracewell probe aside from the fact of its existence but it seems needlessly redundant in the presence of the gates. The fact of both of them make me wonder if there aren't multiple ETI or possibly a succession. If there are more than one ETI we may have a potential ally or multiple enemies.

Mea Culpa: My mode of speech can make others feel uninvited to argue or participate. This is the EXACT opposite of what I intend when I post.

Extrasolar Angel Extrasolar Angel's picture
OneTrikPony wrote:I'm
OneTrikPony wrote:
I'm wondering if a billion years of advancement post singularity is equivalent to a billion years of advancement pre singularity. In EP humanity has already produced 1 or 2 singularities, (depending on weather you count the Promethians) so the question might be how close is a singularity event to 'vertical' on the tech curve? Would it require a billion years to catch up to the capabilities of an ETI sufficient to decide our own destiny. Seems to me that post singularity species could find the hard limits of the universe relatively quickly. At that point we would, at least, be playing with a full deck of cards even if we havn't had time to build our hand. So the key to a favorable outcome in contact with ETI could be achieving healthy post singularity status. Transhumanity may have done that with the TITAN's had the ETI not intervened. Another thing that's been buzzing in the back of my brain is; "Why are there Two ETI techs in the solar system?" By that I mean the Bracewell Probe and the Pandora Gates. There's not much info on the Bracewell probe aside from the fact of its existence but it seems needlessly redundant in the presence of the gates. The fact of both of them make me wonder if there aren't multiple ETI or possibly a succession. If there are more than one ETI we may have a potential ally or multiple enemies.
Only one way to find out answers to your questions my friend...go to Iapetus...Enlightenment awaits.
[I]Raise your hands to the sky and break the chains. With transhumanism we can smash the matriarchy together.[/i]
Arenamontanus Arenamontanus's picture
It is pretty unlikely two
It is pretty unlikely two billion years of post-singularity development is equivalent to two billion years pre-singularity. Assuming there is an upper limit to what is knowable about the universe (essentially, physics and technology are limited) then that level might be reached fairly shortly in external time and any civilization a short while after the singularity will have roughly identical technological capabilities. (Some *deep* questions here about whether there are important techs depending on solving NP hard problems that just requires endless trial and error, and of course the core assumption - I have heard local geniuses give arguments for or against it) If postsingularity civs are all alike in capabilities, what makes them different? One aspect is of course culture and goals: it is not clear that they want the same thing (again, this is a *deep* question: if there is some universal moral good, it might be that all sufficiently advanced civs act completely alike). But there is also the matter of resources: old civs can gather *much* more resources than young ones. Not only can they pre-empt young civs by taking over the universe before the youngsters come about, but thanks to the expansion they could send Bracewell probes far more widely than we could (this is a factor of at least a few million, quite possibly billions or more - paper forthcoming). Now, who will win in a conflict? If two civs have the same capabilities and same resources, they would be evenly matched and presumably at most have 50% chance of winning. Most likely they could produce a stalemate or threaten to burn any coveted resources if they were attacked: there is no reason to quarrel. So if the powerful civilizations were localized - stuff would have to be moved at finite velocity - they would have a fairly stable situation. Near the border they would be identical, even if one was much larger than the other. But if it is easy to move resources to bear on an enemy, now the big one has an advantage. If there are gates, then that seems to move things towards this more volatile scenario. In military theory there are two simple models of attrition warfare, the Lanchester equations. The "linear law" describes mano-a-mano local fighting where each unit engages another unit: it predicts that the strength (enemies killed per second) times the number of troops is the deciding factor, and the side with the biggest factor wins. This is reasonable for non-ranged warfare, perhaps including nanomachine fighting. The "square law" is for ranged combat, and predicts that it is the strength times the square of the number: a huge army can theoretically focus its firepower and do a lot of damage. This model suggests that numbers matter a lot. In reality things are messier, and it is debatable how well the equations fit real warfare: hundreds of papers from West Point and elsewhere debate this. But if we believe the situation is somewhere in between these, we should expect the stregth of post-singularity civs to be identical, but the bigger ones have a correspondingly big advantage. If things are truly square, then the old ones are extremely potent. Going back to making ETI fightable: note when this become doable given the above. Transhumans are likely screwed in most cases, because their "troop strength" is far below the TITANs (roughly singularity level). Sometimes they win simply by pitting huge numbers and losses against them. TITANs and other post-singularity entities like Prometheans, big Seed AGIs etc. might actually have a chance against the ETI if the ETI is isolated from the rest of the resources of the "empire" and cannot easily get more. So this suggests a scenario where a lone ETI entity can be defeated with the help of some post-singularity help. It is going to be bloody and nasty, but it might be doable if the entity cannot communicate with a nearby gate. "OK, let me get this straight: the... thing over there wants to have the root certificate keys of this entire colony so that it can turn every single person, every piece of equipment, even our bloody biotech into weaponry. Then it is going to throw all of it at the Ship, hoping it will not be able to call on backup to the gate until we have dealt with it. Meanwhile it will try to *spam* the gate with *black holes*. If we succeed we will likely be stranded in this system, and if we fail God will show up and personally smite us all. " "That is a succinct summary, human. We hope you noticed that we asked first." (Ob SF reference: Scratch Monkey by Charles Stross: http://www.antipope.org/charlie/fiction/monkey/ )
Extropian
King Shere King Shere's picture
Stars align
If directly fighting the Eti allows for guerilla tactics, cold war and rules of engagement, there are some options. In modern warfare, its often that rules of engagement restricts one or both forces. Tanks vs Towns for example. If the Tanks & the military was unrestricted they could level the town with ease (bombarding it at a distance, etc). However if they arnt allowed to do that (concerns about civilian casualties for example) -Towns become troublesome killing grounds as the enemy can hide in buildings, sewers and attack with all sorts of anti tank weaponry. A unrestricted smaller force could take advantage of the opposing force rules of engagements and for example masquerade as civilians, use child soldiers, civilian shields, etc. So one way of fighting the ETI is to exploit their weakness in their rules of engagement (if itseem apperant). However this could be playing into the ETI hands and or cause a even bigger conflict. In Call of Cthullu adventures, a popular scenario is that the elder gods needs to be summoned through a complex + time consuming ritual and its their servants that is the opposition for players, early warning signs are the servants hunt for odd ritual components. A quick translation into EP is that the ETI needs to be "summoned" through a gate infrastructure ( A bracewell probe perhaps), with odd resources demand and a time consuming build time. early warning signs are the ETI servants scavenger hunt for the peculiar resources. However this scenario in some interpretations might not count as fighting the ETI directly.
matthra matthra's picture
In a purely relativistic
In a purely relativistic universe, blow up the gates, and the ETI can only fight with the resources it has on hand. That pits humanity against the titan leftovers, which given the way the titans were rolling humanity is probably still enough to wipe us out. If the ETI has gates set up in Proxima Centauri, that will buy humanity 4 years, and the further the nearest gate is the more time humanity will have. Truth be told though, the ETI is probably the wrong enemy for humans to fight, an intelligence billions of years old with unfathomable resources at it's disposal could snuff humanity out like a candle in a hurricane. The Titans are a terrifying and overwhelming force in their own right, but one within the scope of transhumanities ability to understand. The fiction claims that if humanity had teamed up and worked together against the titans, it's possible that they could have saved earth. That's the kind of enemy where heroism is relevant,
Lorsa Lorsa's picture
In a fight against the ETI's,
In a fight against the ETI's, they will need a weakness. Something that the players could be involved in finding out and then exploiting in a fight against them. The first obvious thing ETI's seem to fear would be seed AI's. These can get superintelligent very fast and help develop technology to the highest possible point much faster than normal transhumans could. So developing and nurting seed AI's in secret is probably the first step to a fight. Secondly, assuming ETI's are fearful of seed AI's, most of their technology is probably based on bioware solutions. This means that you could have a scenario where the Watts-Maccloud strain of the exurgent virus only developed in contact with humanity for reasons unknown (perfect match in biological makeup?) and has not happened before with other civilizations ETI's have wiped out. So if the ETI tech is mainly biological, then asyncs could be the ultimate weapon, being able to control not only their soldiers but even their spaceships (nothing wrong with stealing from good TV shows). Remember to start slow though, ETI interest in us gradually growing, we learning more about their secrets and vulnerabilities and the skirmishes slowly increasing. In this scenario, ETI's would have to fear us just as much as we fear them. Maybe not for what we are, but for what we could become.
Lorsa is a Forum moderator [color=red]Red text is for moderator stuff[/color]
jackgraham jackgraham's picture
Arenamontanus wrote:I just
Arenamontanus wrote:
I just gave a TEDx talk about the Fermi question (OK, I am boasting, but mainly due to adrenaline rush, forgive me) ...
OK, you have been Adequately Modest. :) Now... is there video you can link us to? I googled around a bit but didn't find it.
J A C K   G R A H A M :: Hooray for Earth!   http://eclipsephase.com :: twitter @jackgraham @faketsr :: Google+Jack Graham
Arenamontanus Arenamontanus's picture
jackgraham wrote:Now... is
jackgraham wrote:
Now... is there video you can link us to?
Will do when it is up. I have a video from a previous Fermi talk I gave at my university covering a lot more, but it is also less organised and the sound is slightly off: http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=DM7bT5szRgM Should be an EP plot or two in there.
Extropian
nezumi.hebereke nezumi.hebereke's picture
My solution to this is to not
My solution to this is to not make the conflict intentionally antagonistic. If instead, the ETI is just bulldozing Sol and all of the planets to make its interplanetary superhighway, humans have a chance to survive. We can't keep Sol, and we can't stop the project, but we can survive. Similarly, if the ETI decides to capture us like a subject of a butterfly collection, SOME of us can survive. As a GM for this story, I wouldn't try to figure out how we can stop the ETI. Instead, I'd assume what the ETI wants will come to pass, but try to figure out how humans can escape to the dark crevices and live for another day.
Axel the Chimeric Axel the Chimeric's picture
The Big Problem
This all sort of begs the question of why you want to have them fight the ETI to begin with. There's plenty of other possible threats out there that you could create that are within this range of possibility, without having to include the ETI. For example, you could have transhumans find a world full of cryo-preserved representatives of a large number of intelligent alien species, all at a roughly transhuman level of development. Perhaps they underwent a similarly nasty singularity event and decided that they should hide until someone came to get them, or were simply kept preserved by their own TITAN-equivalents as you or I might preserve stamps. The AIs have since moved on, so that, when everyone returns to their home systems, everything is easily reclaimed. This could lead to a situation where they free the captives and form an interstellar alliance, only for the TITANs (or the alien AIs) to respond, possibly to some old programming, by deciding to threaten them all. Why and how is hard to say, but it's much less of a straight-up smackdown as it would be with regular transhumans, especially if the Prometheans reveal themselves and/or start upgrading everything to make the fight more even.
Phlebotinum Phlebotinum's picture
Unless you intend to have a
Unless you intend to have a team of Gate Crashers travel to an alien world where they find the remains of Gunmen. And then Transhumanity uses the knowledge acquired on that world to unlock the secrets of Spiral Energy . And with it's new found knowledge and Transhumanity and their allies(The Factors,The Iktomi remnant, the various Aliens who communicate through the Ansible pyramids ) embark on a glorious campaign to free the milkyway from the control ETI. And then at last above super massive blackhole at galactic center,the seat of the ETI Empire. The members of the alliance forces that have made it that far. Stare(even the Factors who have no eyes) down the last and greatest War-machine of the ETI Empire. They cross arms and flipper and pseudopods and tentacles. These brave and indomitable warriors proceed to grow the most bitchin sunglasses ever through pure concentrated force of will in complete defiance of the law of Conservation of Mass. These Warriors then fuse their Gunnmen together. Forming the one machine that shall shatter the heavens with power exceeding that of the Gods! They ask that last War-Machine one question? "Who The Hell Do You think we are"?!! And then final battle begins. Unless the above or something equivalent happens. Transhumanity and any other aliens at a similar tech level stand no chance of confronting the ETI.
Agatha's law: Any sufficiently analyzed magic is indistinguishable from science.
Noble Pigeon Noble Pigeon's picture
nezumi.hebereke wrote:My
nezumi.hebereke wrote:
My solution to this is to not make the conflict intentionally antagonistic. If instead, the ETI is just bulldozing Sol and all of the planets to make its interplanetary superhighway, humans have a chance to survive. We can't keep Sol, and we can't stop the project, but we can survive. Similarly, if the ETI decides to capture us like a subject of a butterfly collection, SOME of us can survive. As a GM for this story, I wouldn't try to figure out how we can stop the ETI. Instead, I'd assume what the ETI wants will come to pass, but try to figure out how humans can escape to the dark crevices and live for another day.
I like this idea a lot. I actually just read about the planet "Just In Case", so maybe Firewall basically needs to figure out a way to get humanity's politically and ideologically fractured remnants to somehow work together and live on a single planet again, at least temporarily. Can't be that hard...right? The OP title was a bit misleading, maybe I should have re-titled it, "running a campaign where ETI takes direct notice of us", but not sure if that would all fit...
Phlebotinum wrote:
Unless the above or something equivalent happens. Transhumanity and any other aliens at a similar tech level stand no chance of confronting the ETI.
Yes, we are to them like a grain of sand is to a skyscraper, it's like cavemen vs. a SEAL team, yadda yadda etc. etc. You're preaching to the choir, I'm already quite aware of this, hence why I posted for ideas.
"Don't believe everything you read on the Internet.” -Abraham Lincoln, State of the Union address
rfmcdonald rfmcdonald's picture
If that happened, part of me
If that happened, part of me would be curious to discover what monstrous threat from beyond the galaxy the ETI was keeping out.
Phlebotinum Phlebotinum's picture
A senarioa of battling the
A senarioa of battling the ETI and winning? Ok here's one. The ETI is not a "Civilization" the way in which we think about, it's a cosmic scale life form. To go into detail it's Gestalt entity formed of trillions consciousness existing in a hyper-cyberspace. The ETI operates on a level so far above Transhumanity, the Factor's and the coalition of extinction event survivors that they claim to be representing. That the lowest aspects of it's Gestalt existence seems like entire alien civilizations to us...these we can fight and win against; at least until we chalk up enough wins that the higher function begin to take notice of us.
Agatha's law: Any sufficiently analyzed magic is indistinguishable from science.
Phlebotinum Phlebotinum's picture
The ETI had been devoting it
The ETI had been devoting it's resources to stonewall the The Anti-Spirals invasion of Milky Galaxy.
Agatha's law: Any sufficiently analyzed magic is indistinguishable from science.
Iv Iv's picture
Why a war?
Why assume that the ETI will put its whole weight into a war against humanity? If its resources are limited, it will just send anything that has a 95% of chance of success. It won't be a complete defeat of ETIs but a winnable success for humanity.
Arenamontanus Arenamontanus's picture
Just to fulfill my promise:
Just to fulfill my promise: http://www.tedxuhasselt.eu/content.php?page=videos_2012 There I am.
Extropian
Prophet710 Prophet710's picture
OMG AWESOME! For anyone else
OMG AWESOME! For anyone else out there, we can also hear Anders on the Singularity 1 on 1 Podcast with "Socrates". Embrace Strangeness-Sunday, July 22, 2012 AND We are all amazingly stupid, but we can get better- Saturday, May 26, 2012 Some good info being thrown around!
"And yet, across the gulf of space, minds immeasurably superior to ours regarded this Earth with envious eyes. And slowly, and surely, they drew their plans against us."
Arenamontanus Arenamontanus's picture
rfmcdonald wrote:If that
rfmcdonald wrote:
If that happened, part of me would be curious to discover what monstrous threat from beyond the galaxy the ETI was keeping out.
Maybe dark matter entities?
Extropian
Lilith Lilith's picture
That was a good watch! As
That was a good watch! As always, you posit things that are at once both wondrous and horrifying to consider. :)
towo towo's picture
Open pandora gates next to
Open pandora gates next to everywhere humans settle, fling rocks at $big_velocity at stuff. Should be a piece of cake for the uberpowered ETI.
rachaelmath rachaelmath's picture
more straightforward analogy
How do Afghan tribes fight the USA? Partly due to rules of engagement/goals (we're not out to nuke them all) and partly due to outside supply (as the US supplied the anti-Soviet mujahadeen) but also due to supply lines and infrastructure needs. The ETI may be superadvanced and Eclipse Phase transhumanity may have cornucopia machines but that doesn't mean ETI capabilities are supported by cornucopia-like tech; they may need complex and expensive support networks. "Advanced" can also mean "expensive"; the US can kill more enemies in Afghanistan or Vietnam, yet be taking higher losses as a proportion of what it finds tolerable. Unrelatedly, if we're going to call it the Exurgent virus, that suggests the possibility of a vaccine. Those are my ideas. Combining with the rest, we have: * Tech ceiling: ETI isn't really "a billion years ahead" because that has no meaning * fighting autonomic responses * fighting divided or self-limited responses * fighting flawed responses (local systems are 'old'?) * metastasizing * spoofing/subversion * ETI needs infrastructure (destroying Pandora Gates is a subset of that) Also * something odd about humanity. This sounds too much like "plucky humanity" for my normal taste, but some viruses are cold viruses and some are HIV. Not sure what a realistic unique thing for humanity would be.
rachaelmath rachaelmath's picture
see, that's the thing
Unless I've missed something, "open pandora gates next to everywhere" needn't be a capability.
Dr. Maxwell Dr. Maxwell's picture
As rfmcdonald and rachaelmath
As rfmcdonald and rachaelmath pointed out, ETI being embarassingly massive in no way grants it complete immunity to any potential threat. Just becuase a civilization is older does not guarentee superiority, and while ETI is inarguably superior in regards to technology, that doesn't make omnipotent, which seems to be the main argument against any possible strategies to defeat or subvert it. Right off the bat, ETI seems to, at least from what we have know so far, operate mostly by proxy, subverting local resources for its own ends. Just because ETI is extremely advanced does not automatically make this process something fundamentally unknowable and unfathomable, and taking control of it would potentially allow pockets of transhumanity to survive and expand through ETI like a cancer might spread through a body or criminal underworld spreads through a country. If this corruption got big enough, ETI would possibly either be unable to meet the problem with force, because any resources it directly brings to bear may be subverted locally, or unwilling, because the methods it could use to destroy the problem would also harm itself. For all we know it may suddenly take a moral issue with snuffing out the civilization that it now recognizes as sapient, or if we want to go the other route and assume that the space that an intelligence like ETI exists in may be fundamentally unknowable to us, simply become uninterested in any part of its territory that suddenly "disappears."
Don't forget to check out my open source biomorph and medtech files!
LuisCarlos17f LuisCarlos17f's picture
Maybe hidding is the best
Maybe hidding is the best strategy. Or there is a civil war in the ETI. Maybe TITANs have found another superAIS and they are "healed" or reprogrammed to rebel againts the ETI. Why a super alien civilation would help others? Because we are like beatiful butterflys in a garden. Maybe they love worlds with own culture(music, books, movies). We are a "Jurrasic Park" too cool to be allowed our destruction. We don't need to defeat all ETI, but only to save transhumanity. If they think we have extingued and forget us, and they don't bother us again, it will be enough.
The Master Confucius said: “The noble man is in harmony but does not follow the crowd. The inferior man follows the crowd, but is not in harmony.” (Anaclet 13:23).
ikkaan ikkaan's picture
When an enemy is stronger/has
When an enemy is stronger/has better weapons/intelligence/whatever, the attacker simply can´t attack in a direct fashion. Training agents and deploying them in the galaxy will not be successfull, also every other short term strategy will fail. When an enemy is a lot stronger, a middle term strategy will most likely fail and a short term strategy will be vanquished in the blink of an eye. Sending out Armies to to create bases throughout the galaxy to search out outposts and create bases for transhumanity will be a foreseen pattern and will probably receive prompt military action from the ETI. What transhumanity needs imho is a long term strategy against an enemy it doesn´t even know and has no real idea of. Imho its not a taboo talking about the ETI in terms of "impossible to fight in the scope of one human lifespan". It needs the effort of a whole species and maybe that won´t be enough. Highly likely it needs the effort of multiple species which will go extinct in the process so other species get a chance for free development. So, for transhumanity the chosen way of warfare should be proliferation of transhuman life whenever possible and guerilla tactics. Decentralized if possible. Both are possible to plan and execute but nobody (even not with the relative immortality granted by the cortical stacks) living in Eclipse Phase will see the outcome.
Noble Pigeon Noble Pigeon's picture
Woah I don't remember this
Woah I don't remember this thread at all. I think my interest in the ETI at this point has shifted to "would like to see more of, or at least more hints of it" without firmly establishing what they are or any other concrete details. Like some of the cool stuff in Gatecrashing.
"Don't believe everything you read on the Internet.” -Abraham Lincoln, State of the Union address
LuisCarlos17f LuisCarlos17f's picture
Or maybe we are in the middle
Or maybe we are in the middle of a proxy war. Our goal is to survive, if ETI doesn't bother us any more because it has fogorten us is enough. Maybe a common enemy (for example a rebel subfaction) would rather to help us, with a cure for the exurgent virus.. or maybe with their own softer version of exurgent virus. Then it would be like asking help to werewolves againts the zombies hordes. We could find "friends" with supposed time-travel technology, and we can go to a pre-Fall Earth from a parallel universe, but really it a simulation, a virtual world (matrix, but no machine is necesary, it isn't turn off when the server loses power) created by a machine to "scan" the past (but without changin it).
The Master Confucius said: “The noble man is in harmony but does not follow the crowd. The inferior man follows the crowd, but is not in harmony.” (Anaclet 13:23).
MDFification MDFification's picture
I can think of one way to
I can think of one way to 'fight' the ETI, but not one that involves transhumanity or a universe capable of sustaining transhumanity being around afterwards. Basically, suppose transhumanity finds a way to start vacuum decay. There, we now have a weapon that the ETI would actually have to acknowledge as significant, seeing as it will (eventually) destroy the entirety of the universe unless the universe starts to expand faster than light does. Even gods have limits. The ETI would *not* survive indefinitely if a vacuum decay event occurred unless; a) Multiverse theory is true in a way that allows them to move their civilization over to a universe where the vacuum decay didn't happen, but doesn't allow the vacuum decay to follow them. However, even the ETI shouldn't be able know if this is true or not unless their cognition is so unfathomable that it doesn't need observation to actually know the truth about any potential multiverse system. b) The ETI has FTL, the universe is truly infinite, and they can just relocate far enough away that it will never be a problem for them. Presuming neither of the above scenarios is true, though, we have a problem. The ETI will, beyond a doubt, know about the development of such a weapon. Transhumanity also does not and will not possess the capability to resist the ETI if it decides to act to prevent the weapon from existing. So in this MAD scenario, either we lose (we don't get rid of ETI interference with transhumanity) or we lose (we somehow trigger the weapon and now never existed at all, because existence isn't a thing anymore). Don't fight the ETI. It is a Very Dumb Thing To Do. If you want more ETI in your campaigns, the best avenue is probably exploring how they've interacted with other civilizations, or explore their motivations for creating the exsurgent virus, or other deep looks into their history.
In the future, would my job be called anthropology, transanthropology or memetic research? [img]http://bit.ly/2eKvwgG[/img] [img]http://bit.ly/2fInMQQ[/img]
LuisCarlos17f LuisCarlos17f's picture
It maybe interesting, a
It maybe interesting, a optional background where there is a new group, "Stair to Heaven", a friendly ETI who help lost civilitations, or even the gate to an alternate timeline where the Fall never happened. But transhumanity isn't allowed to travel that if they aren't "pureheart", if they are too stupy to spoil everything again. Let's imagine a ETI with the power to watch the past (the chroovisor) and to "scan" a civilitation to create a Matrix, a simulation backup in the space-time continum (to avoid time paradoxes). Other option is a no-hostile alien AIs too old and alone to rebell again sentient beings, and now they would rather to be gardener and builder, creating a new civilitation. Why? Let's say they envolved, learnt and got wisdow until their previous madness become good sense. (as if its mind had forgotten the previous, and like a toddler discover all for the first time since a new beginnig). Or some natural cosmic event damaged control by ETI technology, something like a solar storm ruining our microchips, or a lighting bolt in an anntena but in the dimension of dark matter and energy. A Deux Es Machine, but with a logical explanation.
The Master Confucius said: “The noble man is in harmony but does not follow the crowd. The inferior man follows the crowd, but is not in harmony.” (Anaclet 13:23).
Noble Pigeon Noble Pigeon's picture
I guess my question is now:
I guess my question is now: how would a civilization on the scale of the ETI wipe out transhumanity? What kind of weapons would they use?
"Don't believe everything you read on the Internet.” -Abraham Lincoln, State of the Union address
MAD Crab MAD Crab's picture
Iron bomb the sun? Drop a
Iron bomb the sun? Drop a simple dissassembler femto swarm into the system?
Trappedinwikipedia Trappedinwikipedia's picture
Throw a big star through one
Throw a big star through one of the Pandora Gates.
MAD Crab MAD Crab's picture
Oh, that's a good point.
Oh, that's a good point. Dump a gate into a black hole. Connect it to a Sol gate. watch the solar system tear itself apart.
LuisCarlos17f LuisCarlos17f's picture
Maybe you can destroy a
Maybe you can destroy a planet or a solar system, but not all interplanetary alien civilitation with only a hit. The spaceships from other stars would strike back. The key, the question is why an alien civilitation would want destroy races from other planets, but they keep enough good sense to not destroy themself. Other matter is to invade distnat planets and create an interestellar empire is too empesive. When you have got enough mining resources from relatively near planet without byosphere, to go remote solar systems doesn't worth. When a supreme power is too hostile againt its neighbours, usually the rest of nations become allies againts the common enemy. If the social elite is too busy with the game of thrones and fights for the power, ther risks of civil war are too high, and that in a high-tech civilitation may be the apocalypse. Le'ts remember Andreas Lubits and the Germanwings' tragedy. Have you thought about a kamikaze attack with a interestellar spaceship? It would be like the meteor what killed the dinosaurs. And if ETI could be defeated, then its strategy would to hide, or to go another place out reach, maybe an alternate space-time continuum, their own artificial parallel universe created by themself, like a virtual reality, but it doesn't stop to work because the server to be unplugged. Or the exurgent strain would be its perfect match, a biological weapon created by another alien civilitation..(or maybe a mutation?), and the infected are inmune to exurgent virus, but then transhumanity would be in the middle fire in a monsters' war like an human in a movie of werewolvers vs vampires.
The Master Confucius said: “The noble man is in harmony but does not follow the crowd. The inferior man follows the crowd, but is not in harmony.” (Anaclet 13:23).
Chernoborg Chernoborg's picture
Without knowing how the Gates
Without knowing how the Gates work it's difficult to say what crazy stuff could happen. The gates could be programmed to spray strangelets everywhere converting all local matter to strange matter. As wormholes perhaps they could screw with the Hubble Constant causing space itself to expand until the victims' matter can't interact. Or pumping out all the dark energy and having the local space collapse in on itself. I've thought that all the matter sent through the gate is simply replicated from programmable matter on the other side and could be switched off at the Gate's leisure. As a side note, wouldn't it be funny if WE were the invading virus. Co-opting the ETI's network to our purposes. The Eclipse Phase is us!
Current Status: Highly Distracted building Gatecrashing systems in Universe Sandbox!

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