“The only winning move is not to play”—the insanity of the regulatory race to the bottom
By William K. Black
The plot of the movie WarGames (1983) involves a slacker
hacker (played by Matthew Broderick) who starts playing the game “Global
Thermonuclear War” with Joshua, a Department of Defense (DoD)
supercomputer that has been given partial control by DoD of our nuclear
forces. The game prompts Joshua, who has been programmed to win games,
to trick DoD into authorizing Joshua to launch an attack on the Soviet
Union so that Joshua can win the game. The hacker and the professor
that programmed Joshua realize that the only way to prevent Joshua from
attacking is to teach “him” that no one can “win” global thermonuclear
war. The insanity is that the people who created the game “Global
Thermonuclear War” thought it could be won. Joshua races through
thousands of scenarios and ends his plan to win the “Global
Thermonuclear War” game by attacking the Soviet Union when he realizes
that “the only winning move is not to play.”
Wednesday, March 28, 2012
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