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Thursday, March 31, 2011
To Protect Patented Genes, DARPA Wants a Security System that Records Genomic Changes
Wiki Commons
Clay Dillow
PopSci
Here at PopSci we love a good broad agency announcement from DARPA (that’s where they ask the private sector to do something technologically outrageous), but even next to the
flying Humvees
, the
weather manipulation
, the
cyborg beetles
, and the
“hundred-year starships,”
this one, we have to say, is WAY out there. DARPA wants a
genetic security system
that’s built into the genome that can monitor for and report on changes to an organism’s genetic makeup.
Or--to borrow Danger Room's metaphor--DARPA wants a “track changes” feature for genomes like the one that tracks edits in a Word document, a technology that will record and report any modification to a genome. They call it Chronicle of Lineage Indicative of Origins, or CLIO. We’re calling it ambitious.
First of all, why? DARPA ostensibly wants such a technology to protect intellectual property. Genomes (and specific genes) are now bio-commodities, and patented microbes and the genes therein are the property of those who create them.
Read Full Article
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