Dark forest theory is wrong. Staying undetectable is always inferior to both staying undetectable and safely deploying varyingly detectable decoy targets at safe distance to probe the situation and gather intelligence.
Dark forest theory is wrong. Staying undetectable is always inferior to both staying undetectable and safely deploying varyingly detectable decoy targets at safe distance to probe the situation and gather intelligence.
Deploying decoy target requires more advanced technology (space travel) than hiding the signature (we may be able to do it long before we reach another star). I don’t think this is a good argument. Let’s say, some civilization decides to invest in decoy. It needs to shine brightly, the energy footprint is huge, a lot of work has to be done to transform the entire system. Then what? If there’s a hostile player, capable of destruction, they research and destroy the target, and start surveying the neighborhood. You cannot just build a decoy on another end of the galaxy, right? The further you have it, the more complicated is the task. And then you can only hope that the time left will be enough to collect enough energy (even if you have the tech) for defense.
Dark forest theory is about very advanced civilisations not engaging with anything around them. Limited resources are not an issue in this case. You can easily just do everything in parallel with AI or other automated control system, using stars as energy sources, including spawning whole decoy civilisations at different stages of development. Because we see so many stars we know nobody is running out of energy yet.