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posted by Fnord666 on Tuesday February 27 2018, @12:05AM   Printer-friendly
from the ET-phone-home dept.

Two astrophysicists warn that passive SETI could be dangerous due to malicious code, blueprints, or ultimatums sent to Earth by aliens or alien AIs:

With all the news stories these days about computer hacking, it probably comes as no surprise that someone is worried about hackers from outer space. Yes, there are now scientists who fret that space aliens might send messages that worm their way into human society — not to steal our passwords but to bring down our culture.

How exactly would they do that? Astrophysicists Michael Hippke and John Learned argue in a recent paper that our telescopes might pick up hazardous messages sent our way — a virus that shuts down our computers, for example, or something a bit like cosmic blackmail: "Do this for us, or we'll make your sun go supernova and destroy Earth." Or perhaps the cosmic hackers could trick us into building self-replicating nanobots, and then arrange for them to be let loose to chew up our planet or its inhabitants.

But don't worry?

Although it may be rational for us to engage trade with this alien AI, the researchers ponder the consequences if the cure for cancer involves, say, building an army of nanobots from blueprints provided by the AI. In a sort of reverse-Contact scenario, the researchers imagine a scenario in which the machine blueprints turn out to be malicious. Perhaps humans build these cancer-curing nanobots and they are actually programmed to deplete Earth of certain vital resources.

The scenarios offered by the researchers are pretty far out, but are worth taking seriously in the event we ever establish contact with an extraterrestrial intelligence. Still, that's not necessarily a reason to refrain from opening the message. "Our main argument is that a message from ETI cannot be decontaminated with certainty," Hippke and Learned conclude in their paper. "Overall, we believe that the risk is very small (but not zero), and the potential benefit very large, so that we strongly encourage to read an incoming message."


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  • (Score: 2) by Freeman on Tuesday February 27 2018, @05:22PM (1 child)

    by Freeman (732) on Tuesday February 27 2018, @05:22PM (#644679) Journal

    We have the capability to cross space and infect other systems. It just costs too much money to do it. It would mean creating a space ship / station / colony that can survive in space for some hundred or more years. We could probably do that. The thing is we don't have a group of people with enough money that would want to risk such a journey. Unlike the very first ocean explorers. They didn't know, if there was anything beyond or that there wasn't an edge they would fall off.

    --
    Joshua 1:9 "Be strong and of a good courage; be not afraid, neither be thou dismayed: for the Lord thy God is with thee"
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  • (Score: 2) by Snow on Tuesday February 27 2018, @06:02PM

    by Snow (1601) on Tuesday February 27 2018, @06:02PM (#644709) Journal

    I don't think we do have the technology even if we pooled all our resources to try.

    Chemical rockets do not have the efficiency required to get anything (let alone anything with significant mass) to a star in a reasonable amount of time. If Voyager 1 were pointed at Alpha Centuri, it would take 80,000 years to get there.