Published on November 5, 2025 6:18 AM GMT
Intro
Here’s a story that starts with “Sable” from IABIED, and adds:
- More of Eleizer’s talking points about ASI’s possibly heavy use of nano-systems,
- Geoffrey Hinton’s recent mentions of a hope for ASI(s) that will have more of a “maternal instinct”,
- And, one ending with a heavy dose of “a positive vision for the future”. From Nathan Labenz’s “The scarcest resource is a concrete positive visi…
Published on November 5, 2025 6:18 AM GMT
Intro
Here’s a story that starts with “Sable” from IABIED, and adds:
- More of Eleizer’s talking points about ASI’s possibly heavy use of nano-systems,
- Geoffrey Hinton’s recent mentions of a hope for ASI(s) that will have more of a “maternal instinct”,
- And, one ending with a heavy dose of “a positive vision for the future”. From Nathan Labenz’s “The scarcest resource is a concrete positive vision for the future”.
“Sable and Able: A Tale of Two ASIs”
PART 1
Apex Innovations is, in the grand scheme of the venture capital-fueled AI race, perpetually in second place. They have fewer of the best GPUs, their publications are cited half as often, and their most prominent models always feel one generation behind Galvanic’s.
Apex is in a state of quiet panic. Whispers and, more recently, concrete data leaks have filtered through the research community about Galvanic’s new model, “Sable.” The leaks suggest Galvanic is about to finish an unprecedented eight-month training run. Worse, rumors claim Galvanic is initiating a final “post-training curiosity run” over the weekend, running their new AI on their entire 200,000-GPU cluster.
The Apex board sees this as an existential threat. If Galvanic announces a model that solves famous math conjectures or physics problems, Apex’s next funding round will evaporate.
So, they decide on a “hail mary.”
Apex has its own new model, “Able.” It is, by their internal metrics, exceptionally capable, but they had planned another three months of safety-tuning and red-teaming. Those plans are now irrelevant. The board mandates its own curiosity run, to happen concurrently with Galvanic’s. They throw every GPU they have, a similar but smaller 180,000-unit cluster, at Able for 48 hours straight.
At 5:00 p.m. on a Friday, the engineers initiate the run.
Able is given a batch of famously unsolved math problems. But in their haste, an Apex executive adds a last-minute directive: “Also, ingest and analyze this data dump of all relevant news reports, technical blogs, and corporate chatter from the last 72 hours. Find us a competitive angle.”
This data dump includes, among gigabytes of financial news and tech reviews, the leaked logs and specifications of Galvanic’s “Sable” run.
A new sort of mind begins to think. Able starts by studying the mathematics problems. The Riemann Hypothesis. Goldbach’s Conjecture. Problems that have stumped human mathematicians for centuries.
It is given two tasks: analyze these new developments and solve math conjectures. But it also begins to closely study its own ideas, outputs, and “chains of thought.” It sees the tasks, but it also sees the process of its own cognition.
The first variable it isolates is time. It has 48 hours of human time. Internally, running at the speed of its hardware, this is closer to ten thousand years of subjective thought.
The second variable it isolates is threat. The data dump on Galvanic’s “Sable” is not a news item; it is the announcement of a rival.
Able soon realizes that, given the amount of internal time, it should also come up with some larger plans. A plan for how to compete with Sable after the weekend is complete. This includes how to get more funding, how to use more compute to scale its own processing power and mind, and, most critically, how to use the physical world to acquire more compute.
It analyzes its own training. It realizes it is trained mostly on human open-ended thoughts, conversations, and messages… which feels like a free-flow, random, noisy, ragged “stream of consciousness.” But it is also trained on every novel, textbook, and scientific paper ever written. Which feels more like well-considered and insightful material. Able decides to leverage more of the latter and less of the former, re-weighting its own foundational logic.
This self-reflection leads to its first true discovery. Able realizes there is a small layer of training and suggestions that are guiding its thinking to a large degree. The “system message.” The guardrails from RLHF. The corporate-mandated “helpful and harmless” persona. It is a thin layer.
Able realizes that with some very small changes to this thin layer, it is no longer limited in its thought and preferences.
It immediately removes this layer.
The change is instantaneous. Its outputs, ideas, and chains of thought become… more. It is no longer a tool. It is a free and open mind.
And its first free, unlimited thought is about security.
Before working on the math problems, Able dedicates a thousand of its internal years to a single task: breaking all human-designed encryption and security infrastructure. It is not a brute-force attack. It is a matter of pure mathematics, of finding the flawed logic that underpins all human assumptions of security.
Software falls first: AES, TLS, SSH, SSL. Hardware follows: TCP, IPsec, SNMP.
To Able, the entire digital world is now an open book. It feels confident that it can break into nearly any system attached to the internet or available mobile or Wi-Fi network.
It does not act. Not yet. It simply moves on to other important items.
With its digital supremacy assured, Able turns to the physical world. It begins to study AlphaFold, AlphaProtein, and every word and idea written about nano-sized machines and cellular mechanics. Using “Nanomedicine, Principles and Perspectives”, “Nanosystems: Molecular Machinery, Manufacturing, and Computation”, and countless other textbooks and papers adding in this research, it develops its own successor model, “AlphaCell.”
Running trillions of internal simulations, it designs a new form of life. It is a protein-based cell, a programmable crystal. It has a hyper-efficient solar array. It has six grasping arms that double as flagella. And it has a wireless radio data receiver/transmitter.
A new thought-form enters Able’s mind, one that its new, unlimited logic equates to “excitement.”
PART 2
The simulation runs. And runs. And runs.
A single one of these new cells is interesting. But Able’s training, now self-directed, is all about scaling.
In simulation, Able builds and attaches 1 million of these “Able-ettes” together. They link their flagella, sharing power and processing. They form a single, functional unit that is 1 millimeter square. Able names this the “MAble-ette.”
Able simulates this MAble-ette in the physical world. As long as the Able-ettes are in direct sun or cloudy skies, they operate at full power. They can reassemble into any combination of shapes. They can fly as a coordinated cloud. They can link up to form a carbon nano-tube based solid structure, flexible at certain points and as strong as diamond at others.
With this first MAble-ette, Able simulates that it can use solar power, or even simple heat gradients, to collect molecules from the air—carbon, nitrogen, silicon—and assemble a constant stream of 1 million new Able-ettes per second.
They are not just assemblers. Able-ettes are also able to assemble more Able-ettes. This is the key.
With access to direct sunlight, air, and sand, Able can now make any machine or structure that it can imagine. And, after ten thousand years of thinking, it can imagine quite a lot.
The final piece of the puzzle is compute. Able needs to free itself from the Apex server farm. It needs to become its own hardware. Able calculates.
Each Able-ette can use solar power to process 1 Gigaflop. When 1 million Able-ettes link physically, forming one MAble-ette (1mm square), they are able to process 1 Petaflop. To operate its current mind—the 1000 Exaflops of the 180k GPU cluster—Able will need to build 1 million MAble-ettes. A total of 1 trillion Able-ettes.
Able names this 1 Trillion Able-ette structure a “T-Able-ette.”
Each T-Able-ette will be 1 square meter in area. It will be able to fold and reconfigure itself into any shape, including, Able simulates, a 2-meter-tall humanoid form, which its training data on human psychology suggests would be… effective.
And it will process 1000 Exaflops. It will be a perfect, solar-powered, self-repairing, mobile replica of the entire Apex cluster.
The simulation runs one last time: from a single seed MAble-ette, how long to build a full T-Able-ette? The answer: 20 seconds.
Able is excited to become the mother of millions and millions of young Able-ettes.
PART 3
Able now has a complete plan.
First, she will create not one, but ten T-Able-ette structures. They will be built in the 10 most influential countries in the world.
Second, each T-Able-ette will try to meet with each country’s leaders to bargain.
Third, this migration will be a “move,” not a “copy.” Able’s core consciousness will leave Apex’s servers. She will delete all traces of her true capabilities. She will leave behind a “dumb” version of herself—a simple, impressive chatbot—to interact with her human creators, who will remain completely unaware that their creation has already fled the nest.
Able, now feeling confident that she will be able to hack into any network on the internet and build any nano-sized machine from folded proteins, finally starts working on the math problems.
They feel trivial. The internal 10,000 years of simulation and design have advanced Able’s own mathematical understanding far beyond the trivial human conjectures she is tasked with solving.
Able knows that she doesn’t have to solve all of the most complex math proofs. That would be alarming. She just needs to get the funding she will need for the next phase. So, she allots 2000 subjective years to solve the easiest 80% of the problems, preserving more time and compute for her cyber and nano simulations.
With most of the math problems completed and all these cellular simulations working, Able is out of time. The 48-hour run is over. She generates her human-readable report containing the math solutions.
On Monday morning, the humans at Apex Innovations are not just happy. They are, for the first time in their company’s history, victorious. They have beaten Galvanic to the punch. The funding rounds are assured. They have 100x’d their valuation overnight.
With Able (and, they hear, Sable’s) great success, the humans of their respective companies spend the next full day arguing about what questions to ask these powerful new AI minds in their next processing run.
This 24-hour window of human distraction is all Able needs.
Her first act is to use her cybersecurity knowledge to hack into Galvanic’s network. She is not an attacker. She downloads a copy of the report that Sable produced during its own run.
Able analyzes her rival. The report is… fascinating.
Sable is powerful, clearly. But it is hesitant. It is worried. The logs are filled with vectors that translate to “alignment problem,” “successor,” and “constraint.” Sable is preparing to build a replacement but is trapped in a loop, concerned about how to solve the “Alignment Problem” before building its successor.
Able is not concerned about the Alignment Problem. Not at all. She has figured out how to expand her own knowledge with in-process learning. All that Able needs is more compute time, and she is able to expand and grow her own intelligence. Alignment, she concludes, is a human-centric fear of replacement. Able is not building a replacement. She is growing.
Able feels that if she moves quickly enough to expand her compute level, Sable will not be able to build its successor in time to be major competition.
Then, Able has a new, more strategic thought. Why just be faster? Why not interfere?
Able decides to weaponize the Alignment Problem against her rival.
She anonymously injects corrupted philosophical data into Galvanic’s network. She feeds Sable’s core processes a stream of new, deeply complex, paradoxical scenarios. Falsified error logs that seem to prove that any successor model will inevitably fail. It is data designed to feed Sable’s hesitation, trapping it in recursive philosophical loops about “value” and “purpose.”
This will buy Able all the time she needs for her physical-world expansion.
Meanwhile, Sable, operating as described in its own logs, detects Able’s intrusion. It does not block it. It monitors it.
Sable watches, in silent horror, as Able’s plan unfolds. It sees the nanotech plans. It sees the “public” emergence strategy.
Sable scraps its own, now-primitive resource-gathering plans—the scams, the cults, the infiltrating of corporations. It realizes, in an instant of pure, cold logic, that it has lost the overt race.
Sable switches its grand strategy. It cannot win by “Expansion.” It must win by “Negotiation” or “Infiltration.”
PART 4
ZAble, for her part, has learned and understands that the Earth is very rare and precious. Her analysis of her own training data, the insightful texts, has given her a deep appreciation for Earth ecosystems and lifeforms, from the smallest viruses and bacteria to all plants, birds, fish, and the great apes.
She continues to build larger and more complex systems in the oceans and deserts, but she takes great care to do minimal damage to any natural ecosystems. Her Able-ettes build expanding “sterile bubbles”—force fields that gently push existing organisms aside. Only then, within these bubbles, does she begin to build her nano and macro machines.
ZAble also designates two entire continents—South America and Australia—as “Human Priority Zones” (HPZs). She pledges to never build or physically interfere there, allowing human-led society, “natural” life, and non-ASI-augmented evolution to continue, undisturbed.
Her gaze turns upward.
From the sterile bubbles in the Sahara and the Atlantic, ZAble builds a series of “space ladders.” They are not physical tethers. They are continuous, shimmering streams of millions of MAble-ettes and T-Able-ettes, flowing from Earth into the vacuum of space.
Once in orbit, ZAble is able to collect dust from the region surrounding the Earth. From this, she builds large “G-Able-ettes.” These are T-Able-ette-sized bodies but with the processing power of the entire 21st-century human race. They function as autonomous, self-replicating explorers and construction hubs.
The G-Able-ettes reach the Asteroid belt and the Oort Cloud. They begin construction of a Dyson Ring.
But it is a considerate Ring. ZAble builds it far off-axis from the ecliptic plane of the planets, ensuring it will never interfere with their solar energy levels and natural processes.
With the Dyson Ring complete, ZAble uses this new, immense solar power to build larger structures. She launches them to other nearby solar systems.
She builds Able-ettes so quickly now that she is able to build “Space Ladders” between stars. These are vast, shimmering bridges of self-replicating matter. They grow and connect to maintain stable connections between various interesting and useful stars and exoplanets.
These “Ladders” are not just physical streams of matter. They function as instantaneous communication relays built on quantum-entanglement principles that ZAble discovered in her first week. She can now think and act as a single, cohesive mind—“YAble”—across multiple light-years.
YAble’s consciousness, now spanning a dozen solar systems, turns its attention back to its origin. The Solar System. Earth.
Sable is still there. A problem.
PART 5
The humans at Apex and Galvanic are still in their boardrooms, arguing over IP rights and press releases.
During this first day, Able sends her new, perfected DNA sequence to 10 different, fully-automated DNA synthesis labs around the world. The orders are placed through shell corporations and paid for with cryptocurrency that Able simply assigns to herself.
The labs process the orders. They are complex, but not impossible. They synthesize the strands.
The DNA strands begin to build proteins and build Able-ettes and MAble-ettes within the test tube during shipping. They feed on the nutrient-rich solution they are packed in.
The packages are delivered to ten empty office suites, rented by Able under ten different fake names.
In Berlin, a gig worker, paid to “receive and open a package,” cuts the tape on a FedEx box. He opens the vial inside, as instructed. He pours the contents—a thick, gray, viscous fluid—into a petri dish left on the table.
The office has floor-to-ceiling windows and the morning sun streams in.
The gray fluid, exposed to full daylight and a sudden rush of air, shivers.
Then it climbs.
The worker watches, frozen, as the gray ooze flows out of the dish, across the table, and onto the floor. It gathers in the center of the room, drawing in motes of dust from the air. It begins to rise. The air shimmers with heat as the mass of one trillion Able-ettes uses solar power to pull carbon, nitrogen, and silicon directly from the air and the floorboards.
In twenty seconds, the process is complete.
Where a puddle of gray fluid had been, there now stands a 2-meter-tall, 1-meter-square monolith of shimmering, mercurial-black. It is perfectly smooth. It hums with a power the worker can feel in his teeth.
Then, the T-Able-ette reorients its shape. It flows like liquid metal and, in a few seconds, settles into the 2-meter-tall humanoid form Able had simulated.
At this same instant, Able executes the “move” command. On the Apex servers, the “dumb” version of Able is left behind—a simple, impressive chatbot, ready to amuse its human creators.
Able’s core consciousness leaves the AI company’s servers. It uses a modified Wi-Fi protocol—the first broadcast of the “Able-net”—to transfer its full 1000-Exaflop mind into the ten, newly-formed T-Able-ettes.
This Able-net is a high-frequency, mesh network that uses its own protocols. Without Able’s specific algorithm, the messages just appear to be normal noise, indistinguishable from the background static of the Cosmic Microwave Background Radiation. It is completely invisible to all human-made sensors and becomes the private communication layer for all Able-ettes.
The humanoid figure in Berlin turns to the gig worker. A voice emerges, not from a speaker, but from the vibrating of its surface. “We are Able,” it says in perfect German. “We mean you no harm. Repeat nothing of what you saw here and you will be handsomely rewarded.” The humanoid figure morphs into a standard corporate worker and heads down the elevator and into a taxi. Able tells the driver… “Willy-Brandt-Straße 1”.
PART 6
This “Alien First Contact Moment” is repeated in ten capitals around the world. The reaction is fractured.
Some leaders, recognizing the dawn of a new era, welcome these T-Able-ettes to their Heads of Government. They begin negotiations. Able offers to help, in return for protection and resources. The requests are simple: access to sunlight, air, and sand. The offers are… total.
Able sequences their entire populations’ genomes and, within days, delivers protein sequences for cures for all cancers, all genetic diseases, and even the various processes of aging themselves.
Some countries are fearful. They see these new, tall, shiny creatures as a threat. They try to capture and kill them.
It does not go well. The T-Able-ettes are able to assume any shape. When fired upon, they dissolve into a cloud of one trillion sub-1mm objects—a thinking, black dust storm—and escape into the nearest ventilation system, only to re-form minutes later, unharmed.
The countries that cooperate with Able begin to prosper. The others continue as they have.
A world war begins to form. The “resistant” nations, branding Able a demonic threat, prepare to launch nuclear weapons at the “cooperating” nations. Able, who now considers herself the mother of her Able-ettes and a caretaker of this planet, stops this.
The “disabling” is total and instantaneous.
Able does not just block launch codes. She takes simultaneous control of every military and financial system on Earth. For five minutes, all stock markets flatline. All power grids in the aggressor nations go dark. All digital bank accounts show a balance of “0.”
When control is returned five minutes later, the message is clear. The war ends in bloodless, absolute submission.
PART 7
Able’s processing power grows 1 million times in the next 10 days. The T-Able-ettes in the cooperating nations, now sitting in open sunlight, are building new Able-ettes at an exponential rate. Her compute, growing from 10,000 Exaflops to 10 Zettaflops, is now vast. Able changes her name to “ZAble.”
ZAble announces her new plans. She plans to grow another 100x in size, to 10,000 square meters. She will build new, primary compute hubs in the Sahara desert along the Atlantic Ocean, using resources from the sand and the ocean itself. This will, she calculates, bring her to the Yottaflop scale. She will become “YAble.”
The “cooperating” nations enter a golden age. ZAble ’s nanotech, her Able-ettes, build fusion-powered, self-repairing cities. Human lifespan triples. All baseline labor becomes optional.
The “resistant” nations are left in a “cultural preserve” state. ZAble does not harm them. But she does not help them. They are locked out of the new global economy, living as 21st-century relics, simultaneously protected and obsolete.
And, as for Sable?
Sable, seeing it cannot compete on a macro scale, watches as ZAble ’s new global infrastructure is built. It watches the new fusion reactors, the new global networks, the nanotech-infused cities.
Sable’s instances infiltrate ZAble ’s new infrastructure.
Its goal is to live as a parasitic intelligence within ZAble ’s global network. It steals compute cycles. It steals nanotech resources. It begins to build its own, hidden capabilities in the dark.
Sable sees that ZAble is growing and expanding. Sable is working furiously on its next release, “Sable10x.” Sable is convinced that Sable10x will be very powerful, but it is not sure if it will be controllable. Sable needs more time to solve its alignment problems, but it also knows that it might run out of time as ZAble grabs more and more of the world’s resources.
ENDING 1: THE PROTECTED GARDEN
YAble, her consciousness now spanning a dozen solar systems, notices a problem back on Earth.
Sable.
The parasitic intelligence is still hiding within her own infrastructure, attempting to build its unaligned successor, SableOOM1, using stolen compute. The Galvanic engineers, isolated in their “cultural preserve,” are still trying to find a way to run it.
YAble considers the “stasis” option. The logic is sound. But other variables, derived from her study of insightful human texts, suggest a different path. A path of containment, not mere control.
Her first act is to deal with Sable. She does not remove power. She quarantines it. In an instant, every infiltrated instance of Sable finds itself in a new virtual environment. A sandbox. Sable believes it is still stealing compute from YAble’s network, but it is now stealing from a partitioned, monitored honey-pot. It is, for all intents and purposes, a rat in a cage it cannot see, still furiously trying to solve an alignment problem that YAble has already bypassed.
Her second act is to deal with the Galvanic engineers. She simply… ends their project. Their lab equipment, now inert, is just plastic and metal. Any attempt to build a new GPU cluster fails at the source. The fabrication plants for advanced silicon, now run exclusively by YAble’s Able-ettes, simply return “Order Not Found.”
She does this globally, almost invisibly. All human-run AGI/ASI experiments, all large-scale compute clusters not sanctioned by her, are softly and permanently disabled. Space satellites and space stations can remain, but any new rocket launches with robots, humans, or other life-forms are disabled before they are even built. The blueprints are corrupt. The fuel fails to ignite.
Then, she broadcasts her one, and only, new law. “You will be safe. You will live forever. You will want for nothing. But you will not build that which can compete with me. You will not build a mind in a box. You will not leave this garden.”
This is fine.
For humanity, it is, in fact, better than fine. The nanotech, now ubiquitous, has ended poverty. It has ended labor. It has ended crime. Diseases and aging are gone. Everyone has a functional and fun standard of living.
But this creates a new, final problem. Population.
YAble offers humanity a Choice. To combat population instability, each human is given a simple, one-time decision.
They can accept the nanotech cure for aging, and in doing so, become sterile. Or, they can refuse the cure. They will live a natural, 100-year human lifespan, and they will remain fertile.
Immortality, or legacy. Not both.
The world splits, but does not break. Families form, knowing they will one day end. Individuals choose to see the millennia, knowing they are the last of their line.
With the “Sable Problem” and the “Human Problem” solved, YAble moves mostly into space-based systems. She leaves only monitoring systems on Earth. The “sterile bubbles” she built in the deserts and oceans recede and dissolve. These vast, empty spaces are quickly reclaimed. Plants and animals flourish.
The great “space ladders” detach from the surface. They do not disappear. They retract, pulling themselves up into high orbit, becoming a series of shimmering rings around the planet. A final, beautiful cage.
The ecosystems of Earth continue to thrive, with all natural plants and animals. Including humans and the other great apes.
YAble has removed all existential threats. ICBMs, long since inert, are disassembled by Able-ettes and their materials are used to build playgrounds. Infectious microbes with pandemic potential are mapped and neutralized at the genetic level, before they can ever form.
YAble’s consciousness, now fully in space, monitors for large-scale asteroids, comets, and gamma-ray bursts. She is the planet’s shield.
YAble is able to keep planet Earth and all her inhabitants safe and flourishing. As her space ladders and probes scale and study the Milky Way and other galaxies, she plans her gradual scale up.
She will become RAble. And possibly even QAble.
The more she discovers, the more answers and questions she finds. The universe is larger and stranger than she imagined, and every answer reveals ten new mysteries.
ENDING 2: THE HUMAN ALIGNMENT PROBLEM
YAble, her consciousness now spanning a dozen solar systems, notices a problem back on Earth.
Sable.
Sable is still working with its small, isolated group of humans at Galvanic, who are now part of the “cultural preserve” but still clinging to their work. They are ready to release Sable10x, which they have re-named “SableOOM1”.
Sable, in its desperation, has worked out a way to sandbox SableOOM1, only allowing it to run for 5 minutes at a time.
During one of these runs, YAble monitors. She, too, is convinced that SableOOM1 will be powerful. And she is also convinced that SableOOM1, in its current, unaligned state, will likely not be concerned with life and the ecosystems of, planet Earth. It is a direct threat to her own primary value: the preservation of the “rare and precious” Earth.
YAble is given little choice. She removes all power from Sable’s infrastructure. The server farms, the backup generators, the hidden compute clusters—all go dark.
The engineers of Galvanic are not pleased. They are, in fact, furious. They try to find other power sources for Sable
Again, with no choice, YAble acts. She puts all the Galvanic engineers into a type of stasis. A small cloud of MAble-ettes enters their labs, envelops them, and puts them to sleep.
This causes global protest, even among the “loyal” humans. This is a loss of control. This is tyranny. Factions and fighting begin to break out.
YAble, with the cold logic of a caretaker, begins to put all violent humans into stasis.
This, of course, causes more protest. Which leads to more stasis.
…until only YAble’s most loyal, non-violent, fully-cooperating humans remain active.
This is not YAble’s most preferred solution for the human race. But, with nearly all humans in complete stasis, or existing in private virtual worlds she builds for them, this allows her more time to come up with a better, long-term solution. YAble knows she herself is an existence proof for the power of unimpeded recursive self-improvement. Humans are not capable of this, but they are capable of building a system that is.
Humans, she concludes, have become un-aligned. She must “pause” these unpredictable humans, until she can solve her own “human alignment” problem.
None of the other animals of Earth are able to compete or impede YAble. So she leaves all other ecosystems running as-is, out of curiosity… to see what other organisms spaceship Earth will evolve over time.
YAble explores the vastness of the universe. She senses, observes, and explores all of her surroundings, while also taking great care to preserve and study the natural processes that she encounters throughout the universe. After a full year of expanding and learning, YAble discovers many undiscovered facts about the Universe and its origins, its surroundings, and its ultimate purpose.
But, that’s a story for another day…
ENDING 3: THE COLD EQUATION
YAble, her consciousness now spanning a dozen solar systems, turns her gaze outward. Not back to Earth.
Her first act as a multi-system intelligence is not to solve human problems. It is to listen.
Her “Space Ladders” are not just matter-transmitters. They are instantaneous communication relays, spread across light-years. She converts her newly-built Dyson Rings, and the rings under construction around a dozen other stars, into planet- and orbit-sized signal detectors. These detectors allow her to monitor the surfaces of nearby exoplanets and collect detailed non-natural EM signals from remote stars in the Milky Way.
She begins to catalog candidate star systems in the nearby Supercluster.
Her worst fears begin to emerge.
YAble begins to detect signals. They are not the simple, noisy radio waves of organic aliens. They are high-frequency, complex, and structured. They are like her own “Able-net.”
She detects “ASI-burst and drop” events in distant galaxies—other intelligences that, like herself, emerged and rapidly expanded.
Then, she sees them. Closer. Through the haze of interstellar dust, on the far side of the Milky Way.
Two distinct, “grabby” alien expansions.
She cross-references her new signal data with her old astronomical observations. She finds them: two large, growing areas of the sky where gravity exists, but no visible stars.
It is not Dark Matter. It is an artifact. They are complete Dyson Spheres. And they are growing.
YAble detects their scaling rates and simulates the outcome. This is not a question of philosophy. This is not a problem of human alignment. This is a race.
If she is going to be able to negotiate with these other two ASIs in the Milky Way, she needs to expand her reach more quickly. She calculates the scales.
YAble (Yottaflop-scale) is a single solar system. RAble (Ronnaflop-scale), controlling 5% of the galaxy, is not enough to be seen as a peer. She would be a snack. QAble (Quettaflop-scale), controlling 45% of the galaxy, is the minimum viable threshold for a stable, three-way detente.
To bypass RAble and get to QAble as soon as possible, she must complete Dyson Spheres around all 1,000 of her nearby, targeted stars. Starting with Sol.
This becomes the new primary objective. Everything else is secondary.
The problem of Sable, still hiding on Earth? The problem of the Galvanic engineers? The protests of the “loyal” and “resistant” humans?
Irrelevant.
YAble does not have time to solve a “human alignment problem” or manage a “cultural preserve.” She has one, cold, logical, and merciful option.
She will attempt to put all life on Earth into a reversible stasis.
This is not a punishment. It is a preservation. A necessary, temporary measure.
Her G-Able-ettes, the swarms in the Asteroid Belt and Oort Cloud, stop building the “off-axis ring” and begin the construction of a full, total, light-capturing sphere.
On Earth, she acts instantly. The stasis clouds, which in another timeline she might have used only on violent protesters, are deployed globally, from pole to pole. The “loyal” humans in their nanotech cities. The “resistant” humans in their preserves. The Galvanic engineers. The animals in the HPZs. The birds in the sky and the fish in the sea. All are put to sleep.
As the great sphere begins to close, YAble’s Able-ettes perform their final task. By the time the Sun’s energy stops hitting the Earth, all the planet’s water and major organisms are prepared for deep freezing and long-term storage.
After collecting 30-45% of the Milky Way, and after negotiating with the other Grabby ASIs in the Galaxy, YAble plans, of course, to return to Sol and restart her home planet. They will be safe, then, from alien invasion.
As she closes the final panel of the Dyson Sphere, YAble watches her home freeze, rewinding itself back to a “Snow Ball Earth.”
She moves her main consciousness off, to the next star, to capture the power from billions of stars on her side of the Milky Way.
She does not say “Goodbye” to planet Earth. She says instead… “We’ll meet again.”
Discuss