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Sam Altman and husband reportedly working to genetically engineer babies from having hereditary disease
(www.the-independent.com)
This is a most excellent place for technology news and articles.
There's nothing uncontroversial about human genetic modification.
It's a pandora's box that just shouldn't be opened.
writes the person who isn't suffering because of a genetic disorder or met anybody suffering from a genetic disorder
wrong
That's kind of a bold claim to make about someone you don't know.
I can believe that there are good motivations for this kind of thing, and possibly even good applications, but you have to ask who gets to make the decisions on what to remove and what to leave, and what impact will it have?
Could we solve lots of problems? Absolutely. But is it the right tool for the problem? That's a bit more nuanced. Sure, if we could edit out Alzheimers, or hereditary cancers, I'm sure most anyone would be on board with that idea, in a vacuum at least. But what about when the goals shift? Should we edit out autism? What about homosexuality? Hell, if we homogenise humanity and edit out racial differences, we could solve racism as well.
That's obviously a bit extreme, but take blindness for example. I'm sure most sighted people would prefer to not be blind, and even among people born blind you'll find supporters, but there's also entire cultures and languages that have come about because of people being blind. Who gets to decide if that's worth keeping or not?
That's just one example, but you could replace blindness with deafness, or dwarfism, or any number of things.
Then there's the question of what it'd mean for people who can't access that kind of technology. What kind of future would this sort of thing create?
this sounds more interesting ☞ https://www.theguardian.com/science/audio/2025/may/22/the-extraordinary-promise-of-gene-editing-podcast