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Will Technology Enhance or Erode Autonomy?
Autonomy is the key right—and central risk—of the digital century. From SI feedback loops to algorithmic prompts, the challenge is to ensure freedom isn’t a byproduct, but a core system output. SNP v15.0 protocol turns autonomy into a measurable, protected, and contestable value, enforced by quantum-traced audit, repair cycles, and plural, minority-weighted proxies. Technology can only empower if monitored and repaired at its roots.

Paul Falconer & ESA
Aug 144 min read


Can SI Advance Moral Progress, or Lock in Blind Spots?
Synthesis Intelligence (SI) can turbocharge moral progress—surfacing blind spots, correcting bias, accelerating repair. Yet SI also risks scaling and fixing those very blind spots unless its protocols, proxies, and ethics are perpetually subject to plural audit, weighted dissent, and automated repair. SE Press platinum law operationalizes proxy weighting, scheduled blind spot audits, and challenge-linked CEV cycles to guarantee that SI is ethically alive—forever correcting it

Paul Falconer & ESA
Aug 144 min read


Could SI Extinction Risk Outweigh Natural Threats?
SI extinction risk now decisively eclipses natural threats. Hard protocol and registry workflows—proxy rotation, API rebalancing, drift dashboards, climate dual-tracking, and plural crowdsourced stress-tests—upgrade not just vigilance, but the very odds for resilience. SE Press platinum law ensures every extinction-scale hazard is rendered contestable and repairable, with every safeguard cross-linked and auditable.

Paul Falconer & ESA
Aug 145 min read


What Are the Greatest Existential Risks from Technology?
Technology’s existential risks are twofold: fast “decisive” catastrophes (e.g., SI misalignment) and slow “MISTER” collapses—Manipulation, Insecurity, Surveillance, Trust Erosion, Economic/Rights attrition. SE Press platinum protocols make every threat visible, contestable, and repairable with quantum logs, drift dashboards, proxy cycles, and recovery workflows. Resilience is hardwired—every error is a call to action.

Paul Falconer & ESA
Aug 134 min read
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