THIS is what interests me, in terms of government policy. I strongly suspect 
biology is the new manufacturing. 

E



Crispr Makes It Clear: The US Needs a Biology Strategy, and Fast
https://www.wired.com/2017/05/crispr-makes-clear-us-needs-biology-strategy-fast/
(via Instapaper)


WIRED
Biology has emerged as one of the most important technology platforms of the 
21st century. With the arrival of the gene-editing technology Crispr, biology 
will soon converge with everyday medicine, big agriculture, and artificial 
intelligence to influence the future of all life on our planet. Crispr, which 
allows scientists to edit precise positions on DNA using a bacterial enzyme, is 
already transforming cancer treatment, preventing the spread of disease, and 
solving global famine. Its trajectory necessarily involves government agencies 
and commissions, our elected officials, and the courts—and none of them are 
prepared for what’s coming.

WIRED OPINION

About

Amy Webb (@amywebb) is the author of The Signals Are Talking: Why Today’s 
Fringe Is Tomorrow’s Mainstream and is the chief executive of the Future Today 
Institute, a strategic foresight and research group in Washington, DC.

This was apparent last July, when I participated in a closed-door meeting 
coordinated by the State Department and the National Academies of Science, 
Engineering, and Medicine. In the room were research scientists, government 
officials and policy wonks with PhDs in the hard sciences, and our task that 
day was to talk about the future of regulation and oversight, as well as 
competitiveness in the biosciences and security. It didn’t take long for us to 
reach a troubling conclusion: The US currently has no coordinated biology 
strategy. As a result, Crispr, along with other emerging technologies, is 
developing faster than our government’s ability to address it.

Since that day in July, Americans elected a president whose administration has 
openly disavowed the scientific method, data-based evidence, and basic 
research, and a Congress with just one PhD scientist. Now, our current 
government leaders are running away from the future, rather than planning ahead 
for it.

I spent the entire meeting sitting next to Feng Zheng, who at that time, along 
with MIT and the Broad Institute, was fighting Jennifer Doudna and her fellow 
researchers at UC Berkeley for ownership of Crispr patents. He was affable, 
interesting, and tight-lipped about the lawsuit.

But the lawsuit—at least the existence of it—should have been part of our 
conversation, and it should now be on the agenda somewhere within the Trump 
administration. The government doesn’t have a national biology policy, so a 
patent war has sealed our fate.

Like many groundbreaking scientific developments, the Crispr breakthrough 
happened as a result of competition and collaboration between expert teams. In 
this case, Doudna’s contributions were publicly funded, while Zheng’s were done 
under the auspices of a private organization. A few months after our meeting, 
the fate of those patents and of all future Crispr research was decided by a 
panel of judges at the US Patent and Trademark Office, whose job it is to 
evaluate new research within the context of past inventions, not to map out 
scenarios for how a patent decision might affect American business and society. 
When those judges, who are political appointees, awarded the Broad Institute 
the patents, the most important one went to Zhang’s for-profit startup Editas 
Medicine, which now owns the exclusive license for all future human therapeutic 
uses of Crispr. 

Technically, it isn’t the job or requirement of the USPTO to consider the 
long-ranging downstream effects of Crispr, which gives us the ability to 
permanently remove or add elements to the human genome. So instead, I’ll ask: 
What if someone makes a business case against treating certain genetic diseases 
in poorer populations? Or to allow wealthy Americans augment their babies to be 
10 percent smarter? What if a security firm like Blackwater wants to engineer 
its soldiers to have more muscle mass? This technology could save millions of 
lives worldwide and help eliminate certain awful diseases, but it could also be 
used in ways that might make you uncomfortable.

What about the future of your genetic privacy? Scientists need to store vast 
amounts of data for human genomes, and space may fill up by 2025, according to 
researchers at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. As the Crispr 
ecosystem improves, our storage needs will explode along with the computing 
power and requirements for acquiring, analyzing, encrypting, and safeguarding 
our genomic data. The Federal Communications Commission eased regulatory 
requirements on internet privacy rules without thinking through the 
consequences. What will happen to the privacy of your genome, which will be 
stored by third parties under terms that are subject to politicking?

Crispr can be used to engineer agricultural products like wheat, rice, and 
animals to withstand the effects of climate change. Seeds can be engineered to 
produce far greater yields in tiny spaces, while animals can be edited to 
create triple their usual muscle mass. This could dramatically change global 
agricultural trade and cause widespread geopolitical destabilization. Or, with 
advance planning, this technology could help the US forge new alliances.

How comfortable do you feel knowing that there is no group coordinating a 
national biology strategy in the US, and that a single for-profit company holds 
a critical mass of intellectual property rights to the future of genomic 
editing?

While I admire Zheng’s undeniable smarts and creativity, for-profit companies 
don’t have a mandate to balance the tension between commercial interests and 
what’s good for humanity; there is no mechanism to ensure that they’ll put our 
longer-term best interests first.

Without a plan, the US is left with the existing democratic instruments of 
change: patents, regulation, legislation, and lawsuits. And society is trusting 
our lawmakers, political appointees, and agency heads to apply those 
instruments to biological technologies that could literally change the future 
of humanity.

The American public doesn’t need the blunt hammer of the patent office, and any 
sweeping legislation or series of regulations would doom this technology from 
achieving its potential. Instead, government needs a new, sophisticated toolset 
to anticipate and confront what’s on the horizon. This is what we ought to do 
next.

First, government officials must recognize biology as a technology platform—a 
difficult request to make of this White House and Congress, which often 
conflate genetics with divinity. Not all scientists are card-carrying atheists. 
Religion and science can coexist; it is possible to believe both in God and the 
scientific method. Talking about biology as a technology platform, using a 
common lexicon, can help move that conversation away from cherished beliefs 
toward practical applications.

Second, the US needs a dedicated group of nonpartisan scientists, 
technologists, ethicists, policy experts, and futurists to develop strategic 
plans on biology, artificial intelligence, and robotics. Part of their mandate 
must be to educate our elected officials on emerging science and technology. It 
can be a reboot of the former Office of Technology Assessment, or a new 
Department of the Future, but the group should form a connective tissue between 
legislators and the scientific community.

With that group in place, they’d map out ways to resolve the opposing forces of 
commerce and collaboration in the public interest. A national biology strategy 
is a start, but it cannot be the end game. Any plan will need to be continually 
tweaked and updated, because the future responds to every decision made in the 
present.



Sent from my iPhone

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