Let 2500 blossoms bloom and give the drug industry a sneezing fit.
Capitalism has a purpose and a limit.   I would like to hear more from
Arthur about how his thinking has changed about limits.

 

Thanks Natalia, 

 

REH

 

From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of D and N
Sent: Saturday, January 01, 2011 11:15 PM
To: RE-DESIGNING WORK, INCOME DISTRIBUTION, EDUCATION
Subject: [Futurework] DNA research and Crowdsourcing

 

What do you think of this group effort to rewrite DNA code? 

Natalia


Crowdsourcing cure faster: scientist


Geneticist says the more people researching, the better


Shannon Proudfoot, Postmedia News


Published: Friday, December 31, 2010

A Canadian geneticist's plans to crowdsource a cure for breast cancer is
among the things being forecasted for 2011 and beyond by the World Future
Society. 

The Washington, D.C.-based think-tank releases an annual report of the most
intriguing glimpses of the future gathered from researchers, futurists and
big thinkers over the past year, including a Toronto-based geneticist who's
working on a novel way to seek a cure for cancer. 

Andrew Hessel co-founded Pink Army Co-operative in 2009 because he was
frustrated by the glacial pace of big pharmaceutical development and
convinced lives could be saved faster with many brains working collectively.


He's hoping to attract 2,500 people who will pay $20 each for a share in the
non-profit Pink Army, and he's collected about 420 mini-investors so far.
The seed money will fund the first steps in what he envisions as a
crowdsourced cure tailored for each person's cancer and powered by synthetic
biology, a fast-growing area of genetics that lets researchers rewrite DNA
code instead of just cutting and pasting. 

"I do this not because I'm running a lab or want to make a million dollars;
I'm doing it because it's such a powerful technology and almost nobody knows
about it," he says. 

"The only way you're ever going to beat cancer is, first of all, strip the
profit motive out of it -- that's just crazy." 

Profits and patents have "siloed" cancer researchers and companies who
jealously guard their innovations rather than building on each other's work
and making significant strides in cancer treatment, Hessel says. 

He chose breast cancer as a starting point because the disease has such a
powerful advocacy and fundraising community, and once Pink Army has enough
funding to get off the ground, he plans to open up the research and design
process to a Wiki-type model.

 


C Times Colonist (Victoria) 2010


 

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