Today's post, GAZP vs. GLUT was originally published on 07 April 2008. A summary (taken from the LW wiki):

 

Fleshes out the generalized anti-zombie principle a bit more, and describes the game "follow-the-improbability".


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"Follow the improbability" is tantalizingly close, but not quite the right answer to the GLUT puzzle, I think. The right game seems to be "follow the K-complexity". The simplest algorithm that generates the GLUT is probably similar to a conscious human, so if you subscribe to the universal prior, then seeing a GLUT implies with high probability that there's a human nearby.

Well spotted. "Follow the improbability" is enough of a clue to get the right answer ("a human made it"), though.

And he still doesn't actually state the GAZP. Is there a statement of it anywhere? I see there isn't one on the wiki either.

I think the GAZP is probably something along the lines of "Anything that says it's Bob, for reasons that is similar to the reasons Bob would say that he is Bob, is in fact Bob." Along this principle, we could upload you, and as long as the computer is running algorithms that are isomorphic to the "algorithms" run by your brain, that copy in the computer is you.