You know those sci-fi teleporters like in Star Trek where you disappear from one location then instantaneously reappear in another location? Do you trust that they are safe to use?

To fully understand my question, you need to understand the safety concerns regarding teleporters as explained in this video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nQHBAdShgYI

spoiler

I wouldn’t, because the person that reappears aint me, its a fucking clone. Teleporters are murder machines. Star Trek is a silent massacre!

  • XPost3000@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    If it’s wormhole based tech then yeah why not, atomic based teleportation comes with too many philosophical and existential flavors for me personally

    • Jo Miran@lemmy.ml
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      1 year ago

      If it’s wormhole based tech then yeah why not…

      Trans dimensional horrors. See: Event Horizon

    • averagedrunk@lemmy.ml
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      1 year ago

      I totally respect the way you approached it. I would totally use either, but I value myself very little and value being able to get somewhere that has alcohol quickly to dull the things I feel very much.

    • averagedrunk@lemmy.ml
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      1 year ago

      I totally respect the way you approached it. I would totally use either, but I value myself very little and value being able to get somewhere that has alcohol quickly to dull the things I feel very much.

  • jsveiga@sh.itjust.works
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    1 year ago

    If it opens a spacetime tunnel and I cross it with all my original atoms, yes.

    If it disintegrates me to 3d print a copy on the other side, no.

      • CMDR_Horn@lemmy.ml
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        1 year ago

        Only if there is a DHD on both sides. I don’t want some in-house built crap that ignores the failsafes that the original builders put in place

        • Sheltac@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          Even then, you have pretty much no way of knowing if there’s an iris. So it’s all fun and games until SLAM, all your atoms gets squished into metal.

        • penguin@sh.itjust.works
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          1 year ago

          The general idea is a teleporter rips you apart and the atoms go to the destination to be reassembled in the previous state.

          Whether or not it kills you is speculation. Arguably you’re pretty dead if you’re ripped apart atom by atom, and then a clone is assembled using the same parts.

          But I don’t think it’s answerable if the recreated “you” is a clone or not until people can figure out what the mind even is.

    • Slartibartfast@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      Also if there’s any chance of a Fly situation happening I’m not going. Even if it’s like a .00000001% chance then fuck that lol

      • AGD4@lemmy.ml
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        1 year ago

        When just driving down a freeway, you have a much, much greater than 0.00000001% chance of suffering a worse outcome than the “fly situation” ;) .

        Just sayin’.

  • Echo Dot@feddit.uk
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    1 year ago

    I am with Bob Johansson (Bobbyverse) on this one. Star trek is utterly inconsistent with how transporters work. They only ever play up when it’s convenient for the plot line, but the rest of the time they’re totally fine and no one worries about it.

    Transporters are supposed to move the atoms by converting them into energy, moving that energy through subspace, and then converting them back to atoms on the other side, the only energy in the system is the energy that was created when the atoms were converted, so it shouldn’t be possible to create a transporter clone, no matter how many “confinement beams” you have, as where would it’s atoms come from?

    • bpm@lemmy.ml
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      1 year ago

      I always figured that’s what the pattern buffer is for - the replicator can make a person atom-by-atom from energy, but the buffer holds the ‘consciousness’, and that’s the unreliable bit. Thomas Riker happens because the transporter system copies Riker into the buffer twice due to interference, so when the replicator fires up it creates two Riker bodies and puts one copy into each, sucking down some extra power from the ship to compensate for the missing energy.

  • legion@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Assuming we’re talking about our reality, this device is getting made by a corporation who will release it as soon as the potential profit exceeds the cost from its non-zero error rate.

    No, I’m not getting into some Musk 2.0’s shoddy body disintegrator.

    • Trekman10@sh.itjust.works
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      1 year ago

      I always assume this is asking me as if I was in one of the examples universes like Star Trek. I 100% would never get in Musk’s Teslaporter, but in a world where it’s as widespread as airplanes and trains? Would use, wouldn’t be murder.

  • HelixDab2@lemm.ee
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    1 year ago

    Of course I would.

    Everything that makes you -you- is contained in the physicality of your brain. Even fairly small changes in your brain will create large shifts in cognition and personality. So anything that replicates your body and brain, down to the last atom, is going to be creating -you-. As far as you are concerned, nothing happened; you ceased to be in one place, and immediately sprang into existence in another.

    • TwistedTurtle@monero.town
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      1 year ago

      “As far as you are concerned”

      Correction: “as far as anyone else is concerned.”

      Consciousness IS continuity. If you are disentigrated and a perfect clone pops up somewhere to replace you… you died. Your current stream of consciousness ended and a perfect copy replaced you.

      As far as all external observers are concerned it’s still you. But from your own perspective? Well you won’t have one anymore, you’ll be dead.

      • HelixDab2@lemm.ee
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        1 year ago

        …But the -me- that just popped into existence isn’t going to perceive a gap in continuity at all. It may be a new -me-, but it has all the memories and experiences that -I- had just prior to being disintegrated. From the perspective of the new -me- there’s no change at all.

        Are you the same person as the person that went to sleep last night? How would you know that you weren’t replaced by a clone with precisely the same memories and experiences? Or a clone that thinks that it has the same memories and experiences? I can remember last night, but can I prove that my memories are accurate?

        • TwistedTurtle@monero.town
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          1 year ago

          The fact that a clone would be seamlessly picking up my stream of consciousness after I die would be little consolation to me.

          Sleep may be similar from a philosophical or external point of view. But I’m not sold that lack consciousness during sleep is in the same league as completely destroying, and then, rebuilding it.

            • TwistedTurtle@monero.town
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              11 months ago

              No difference for the rest of the universe, but the difference between life and death to my current stream of consciousness.

              Imagine if the teleporter malfunctioned and created the duplicate on the other end but failed to disentigeate you. A worker notices you’re still in the machine and says, “oops sorry, had a malfunction on this end. Give us a minute to fix the issue and we’ll destroy you. No worries though, ‘you’ made it out the other end.”

              Wouldn’t you do everything in your power to get out of that machine before they could fix it and kill you?

        • Orac@feddit.nl
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          1 year ago

          While I agree with you it would -for me- still depend on how the process works. Suppose the new copy needs to be compared with the original after being constituted for safety reasons. So the original doesn’t get destroyed before the copy is created. So for an instant there will be 2 ‘yous’. That makes jt less desirable for me. Now suppose the verification time -either due to technical or administrative purposes- takes minutes or hours? At that point I would not step into a transporter.

        • TwistedTurtle@monero.town
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          11 months ago

          I’m not convinced they’re at all the same. Consciousness may go dormant during sleep, and you may not remember it, but it’s still a continuous, uninterrupted, stream of electricity.

          This kind of teleportation would completely snuff out that fire and replace it with an identical one at another location. It’s not the same as sleep.

    • Echo Dot@feddit.uk
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      1 year ago

      Every atom in your brain gets replaced every four five years anyway so clearly it’s the position and structure of the atoms that’s important rather than the atoms themselves. So obviously there is no point worrying about it because it happens anyway, and you’re clearly fine.

      • HelixDab2@lemm.ee
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        1 year ago

        The individual atoms probably get replaced far more often. And I think that, depending on how you look at -you-, the -you- of a year ago isn’t the same -you- as who you are now; the change is just so gradual that you don’t notice.

      • Valmond@beehaw.org
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        1 year ago

        This is just blatantly untrue.

        Some cells don’t renew hardly at all, some do it all the time but the brain isn’t “renewed” every X years.

  • OwenEverbinde@lemmy.myserv.one
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    1 year ago

    Use it on myself? No.

    Use it to start a combination movers / electric / tunneling / waste management / highly-illegal-hardware-pirating company?

    Yes.

  • Kissaki@feddit.de
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    1 year ago

    Do you trust that they are safe to use?

    Making an assessment on that requires a whole lot more context.

    We trust in car safety because of regulation, established supposed Brand trustworthyness, and widespread use.

    If teleporters had the same, and in terms of use at least significant precedent, there’s no reason most people would use them. Traveling convenience would be a great upside.

    Unser Those circumstance I’d be fine using them.

  • SlothMama@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    No, I don’t see any possible solution to continuity of consciousness. See Walk like a Dinosaur to understand the implications, but basically you would need to destroy the original and duplicate it from scratch.

    If there is such a thing as a soul, it would likely be impossible to duplicate, but even if not, you would have to destroy the original.

  • christophski@feddit.uk
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    1 year ago

    I don’t understand everybody worrying about whether their consciousness moves with us. We literally don’t even know what it is, we have no provable theory or idea of what it is. As far as I can tell, your consciousness is something your brain does, not something that exists external to your body, otherwise that’s basically believing in spirits.

    • Chaotic Entropy@feddit.uk
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      1 year ago

      If you’re comfortable being vaporised and then a single identical clone being created elsewhere then good for you, I guess.

        • Chaotic Entropy@feddit.uk
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          1 year ago

          If the mechanism is that you are broken down in to your constituent matter and then that template is used to reconstruct you elsewhere, then how could it be anything other than a clone? Even if “the same matter” is used to reconstruct you, a copy is just being precisely pieced together based on your template. Surely?

          If you were just scanned to build your pattern and then a transporter just spat out another you using that pattern, what would that other you be?

          • christophski@feddit.uk
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            1 year ago

            If it is using the same matter then how could it possibly be a copy?

            If I take a Lego set, deconstruct here and reconstruct it over there, is the one over there now a copy/clone? Or is it the same thing?

            • Chaotic Entropy@feddit.uk
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              1 year ago

              I would explicitly say that it was a copy of what I originally built, but that it is not my original build. What I consider to be me is the consistently maintained configuration of matter, primarily my brain, rather than the constituent matter. If I am unconfigured then I would consider myself dead, and then any further reconfiguration of me I would consider to be a replica of my original configuration.

              As a wise philosopher once said:

              No disassemble!!!

    • Dubious_Fart@lemmy.ml
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      1 year ago

      Raises the interesting question.

      If you perfectly recreate a persons brain, Will they be the same person? Or will something totally new and different emerge from the replicated brain?

  • millie@beehaw.org
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    1 year ago

    It’s a literal suicide booth.

    Sure, you can go on all day about changing out broom handles and whatever other metaphor you like, but I don’t need my body to be a point of interaction with any consciousness and the world, i need it to be a point of interaction between my consciousness and the world.

    I have a lot of feelings about the emptiness of identity and the ultimate unity of the universe, but that doesn’t mean I’m going to off myself for the sake of convenience.

    If I make a copy of myself, I’m still myself. I don’t become the copy. I have no reason to believe that a genetically identical clone that’s somehow got a copy of my memories will spontaneously cause my consciousness to jump to the other clone. No evidence of any such thing happening.

    If I, then, make a copy of myself on Mars, why would I expect to spontaneously inhabit it?

    The only reason being ripped apart and having an identical copy made looks like teleportation is the timing. There’s a short story about this, where a teleporter malfunction leaves the original version of the traveler alive. Protocol is to ‘balance the equation’ by incinerating the survivor, which as it turned out was the fate of anyone who stepped into the teleporter under normal circumstances.

    Think about a file in a computer system. Copying the file and making changes doesn’t change the original file. When you download something and alter it, that’s a different copy of the file that’s been changed, not the original. Even when you move something rather than copy it, what’s actually happening is it’s being copied and then the original is destroyed.

    Seamless for everyone else, sure. But a tragic, needless, and utterly stupid death for the one who enters the machine.

    • Neshura@bookwormstory.social
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      1 year ago

      The only way I would use Teleportation is if this problem gets resolved. One way (as unfeasible as teleporters themselves) would be to essentially Quantum entangle your brain to the new body, essentially making it so your conscience briefly is in control of two bodies, then afterwards destroy the original body and with it the entanglement.

    • zero_gravitas@aussie.zone
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      1 year ago

      If I, then, make a copy of myself on Mars, why would I expect to spontaneously inhabit it?

      As best we can tell, though, you don’t inhabit your body, you are your body.

      Admittedly, we don’t really understand the nature of consciousness at all, so it’d make sense to hold off on using Star Trek-style transporters until we do.

  • chrisn@beehaw.org
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    1 year ago

    Imagine, going for a skiing trip and when you get down, you don’t queue for the lift, but you just ski into the portal and continue at the top of some piste. The commute gets insanely short, I can WFH, pop in for lunch or a coffee chat, and then jump back home to do some work.

    I’ve read that the cells in my body aren’t the same as the ones I was born with, so I did a very slow gradual body swap already, possibly a few times.

  • Chaotic Entropy@feddit.uk
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    1 year ago

    Do I trust that an ephemeral pseudoscience concept of “teleporter technology” is safe to use…? No…? On what basis would anyone make that judgement.

    • djmarcone@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Yeah but what if the government tells you it’s safe and effective, and mandates transporters for all travel because it’s good for the environment?

      Are you willing to be branded a science denier?

      What if they give you free food and an Amazon gift card?