I am an easily bored Omega-level being, and I want to play a game with you.
I am going to offer you two choices.
Choice 1: You spend the next thousand years in horrific torture, after which I restore your local universe to precisely the state it is in now (wiping your memory in the process), and hand you a box with a billion dollars in it.
Choice two: You spend the next thousand years in exquisite bliss, after which I restore your local universe to precisely the state it is in now (wiping your memory in the process), and hand you a box with an angry hornet's nest in it.
Which do you choose?
Now, you blink. I smile and inform you that you made your choice, and hand you your box. Which choice do you hope you made?
You object? Fine. Let's play another game.
I am going to offer you two choices.
Choice 1: I create a perfect simulation of you, and run it through a thousand simulated years of horrific torture (which will take my hypercomputer all of a billionth of a second to run), after which I delete the simulation and hand you a box with a billion dollars in it.
Choice 2: I create a perfect simulation of you, and run it through a thousand simulated years of exquisite bliss (which will take my hypercomputer all of a billionth of a second to run), after which I delete the simulation and hand you a box with an angry hornet's nest in it.
Which do you choose?
Now, I smile and inform you that I already made a perfect simulation of you and asked it that question. Which choice do you hope it made?
Let's expand on that. What if instead of creating one perfect simulation of you, I create 2^^^^3 perfect simulations of you? Which do you choose now?
What if instead of a thousand simulated years, I let the boxes run for 2^^^^3 simulated years each? Which do you choose now?
I have the box right here. Which do you hope you chose?
So it makes no difference whether I torture you or not, because in a billion years no one will know?
Hmm. I think the key question is "Are there observable effects from you torturing me?" when Omega did it, there weren't. Where the observable effects would have occurred, I blinked, I.E, nothing happened.
I think this is distinct from you torturing me right now, because there would be observable effects, which would fade away into history slowly over time. Eventually, it wouldn't be noteworthy any more, but that would take a long time to occur.
A big difference is that you can't hit a "Reverse to Status Quo Ante" button, like Omega can, of course.
So, in the future, speaking of my life in particular will likely be gibberish, (I say likely because I am assuming I'm not important a billion years from now, which seems likely.) but it isn't gibberish right now, might be a better way of putting it.
Would that make it more clear?