M Prize For Anti-Aging Research Hits $1,000,000 46
Reason writes "William Haseltine of Human Genome Sciences (the 'father of regenerative medicine') has pushed the M Prize for anti-aging research - a project cofounded by biogerontologist Aubrey de Grey and Dave Gobel - over the $1,000,000 mark in pledges. Congratulations to all involved! Read the press release here."
Immortal (Score:5, Insightful)
If you figure out a way to make people life forever or at least a very long time, you can only make them pay for it once. If you discover a way to make people live an extra decade, they'll pay through the nose for it, eventually die, move on and you'll have a new generation of customers.
It's just like medications and diseases. It's not in the interest of commercialized medicine to research and discover CURES. It's in their interest to research and discover medications that make living with a disease tolerable or prolong your life with the disease rather than eradicate it.
Re:Immortal (Score:1, Interesting)
Re:Immortal (Score:5, Interesting)
But frankly, the people interested in helping people live forever probably aren't that concerened with doing it for profit in the first place. (And if you have ever seen a picture of Aubrey de Grey [cam.ac.uk] you will understand what I'm talking about.)
Don't discount non-commercialized medicine/research for eventually finding the 'cure for aging'. Who would have thought that someone would release a 'free' enterprise-grade operating system when they could actually charge for it indefinitely with upgrades and service packs.
Re:Immortal (Score:2)
Bring on... (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Immortal (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Immortal (Score:1)
If you figure out a way to make people life forever or at least a very long time, you can only make them pay for it once. If you discover a way to make people live an extra decade, they'll pay through the nose for it, eventually die, move on and you'll have a new generation of customers.
Actually, if you read the SENS plan [cam.ac.uk], you'll see that most of the interventions suggested there would have to be performed regularly, every decade or two, and some of the procedures [cam.ac.uk] don't look cheap (replacing the stem ce
Re:Immortal (Score:2)
No offense, but I think this view may be a bit naive.
Think about it this way: you always have to die of something. While we can say that someone died of old age, for instance, the truth is they died of something - heart failure, or a stroke, or organ failure. Saying that you can't extend life indefinitely is essentially like sa
Re:Immortal (Score:2)
Why not open source medicine?
We have open source software. And it benefits everyone who works on it if life extension becomes an actuality. So there may be plenty of volunteers, particularly among the retired community...
surfing immortality (Score:2)
It is like surfing...just don't fall off, the sharks all have sickles and are voiced by Adam Carolla.
Better causes (Score:2)
Vain bastards. Thank god most of Africa probably doesn't know about this.
Re:Better causes (Score:2)
Re:Better causes (Score:1)
Re:Better causes (Score:5, Insightful)
A conclusion you reach based on what? Plenty of medical treatments that started out expensive are widely available now.
Hell, that's true of technology in general, not just medical technology. Think about flying from New York to Shanghai on a schoolteacher's salary in the 1930s, when the term "jet set" actually referred to air travel. Should money have not been spent on the aviation infrastructure we all enjoy today, since it was just a bunch of vain bastards using it at first?
Only big companies and the military could afford early computers. UNIVAC was clearly no use to starving kids in Africa, so for the betterment of humanity we really should have put a stop to that line of research and put those scientists to work in soup kitchens instead. We'd all be so much better off now.
After all, if it benefits one rich person a decade or two before it benefits ten poor people, it should never be developed and all eleven people should suffer. Or at least that seems to be the logical result of what you're saying.
If you'd rather skip using any treatments that were initially high-priced, that is of course your prerogative.
Re:Better causes (Score:1)
From any perspective, ethical, moral, or practical, applying the
Are you joking? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Are you joking? (Score:2, Interesting)
The prize is for curing aging, and curing natural death is not the same thing.
Not that there's not a strong correlation, but 10-year-olds die of natural causes too. It's just that old people are just a hell of a lot more prone to die of natural causes. If we can make old people more like young people, they'll still die, but just far less often.
Wow, only 1million bucks to the person who cures natural death? No wonder why nobody is in a rush. You can make more
Re:Are you joking? (Score:1)
Once people see that scientists are hot on the trail of making a mouse live longer they will start looking at their own lives, and those of their loved ones, and begin to ask for those same improvements.
Who does this benefit? (Score:1)
Re:Who does this benefit? (Score:1)
I would love to give the parents who gave me life the opportunity to have a few more healthy years of their own to enjoy their grandkids.
The people who benefit from this technology are REAL individuals who have value to someone.
It's for mice, not humans. (Score:3, Funny)
Re:It's for mice, not humans. (Score:1)
Re:It's for mice, not humans. (Score:2)
> last generation in which we'll have morons
No, we are not sure, we are just optimists.
Re:It's for mice, not humans. (Score:2)
My personal cure for anti-aging is to become a druid. Not only do you end up not feeling the effects of aging, you also can turn into different animals.
Smart project, if you're seeking donations... (Score:4, Interesting)
1) your mortality
2) what to do with your money before you go
Introducing the perfect solution.... Not only is it a nice "I'm helping humanity" sort of cause, but you also stand a chance of pushing that deadline out a bit.
You want to be immortal to do exactly what? (Score:2, Interesting)
For myself, I think a century in good health would be more than enough.
But maybe it's not nearly the idea of immortality, as the ability to choose when you're done.
Re:You want to be immortal to do exactly what? (Score:2)
Being at school, there's always an assignment, problem set, quiz, test or exam creeping up the next week. I can barely find a whole day to dedicate to something vaguely resembling a "social life". And of course, if school and real life people fail, there's always Slashdot.
Ah, eternity reading Slashdot... Heaven.
Heh... Heh...
- shazow
Re:You want to be immortal to do exactly what? (Score:4, Interesting)
I found it very enlightening to be on the other side of "half my life".
The older I get, the more I think that, no, one century will probably not be enough.
A millenium, maybe, but even then
I want to see the future.
I want to go to the stars.
There are four ways to do this:
I think that it will be fun, for the most part.
Um... (Score:2)
Re:Um... (Score:2)
Alternatively, I could move out to the Mars/Jupiter Asteroid belt, then to the Kuiper Belt, then to the Oort cloud, which some astronomers believe extends from star to star.
By moving from comet to comet, I would eventually, after thousands of years, make it to another star system.
(Although, by that time,
Re:Um... (Score:2)
YES! I'm all for it! My money's on the raccoons, or maybe the possums! They have prehensile thumbs and all! Dang now I'm going to have to get to work on a monolith...
Re:You want to be immortal to do exactly what? (Score:2)
Re:You want to be immortal to do exactly what? (Score:3, Insightful)
You have totally misinterpreted what I wrote.
1. The 9/11 attack didn't affect me at all, except for making me annoyed with the networks for pre-empting my normal TV shows for weeks with endless repeats of the same footage with nothing new to add, and with the FAA for the even longer lines at airports.
Oh, and I'm also annoyed with congres
Re:You want to be immortal to do exactly what? (Score:3, Interesting)
That said, I agree with you
Re:You want to be immortal to do exactly what? (Score:1, Insightful)
I will play for you the most wondrous song that you have ever heard. It will be a song to stir the soul, and make the angels weep in joy for the beauty of it all.
But, here's the catch. I will now renege on my promise and play you only a small part. A fraction of a part. A fraction of that fraction.
This fraction has been rendered so short, that all beauty has been stolen. There is no context, there is no continuance. You will never be able to appreciate the song a
congratulations? (Score:2)
That would be... uh... all of us.
So, er, thanks.
Tomorrow and tomorrow and tomorrow (Score:2)
I can't wait for the cities to grow until there is no border between them.
How the prizes work (Score:5, Informative)
The details from this page [mprize.org]:
Longevity Prize (LP): details
The Longevity Prize is won whenever the world record lifespan for a mouse of the species most commonly used in scientific work, Mus musculus, is exceeded.
The amount won by a winner of PP is in proportion to the size of the fund at that time, but also in proportion to the margin by which the previous record is broken. The precise formula is:
Previous record: X days
New record: X+Y days
LP fund contains: $Z at noon GMT on day of death of record-breaker
Winner receives: $Z x (Y/(X+Y))
Thus, hypothetically, if the new record is twice the previous one, the winner receives half the fund. If the new record is 10% more than the old one, the winner receives 1/11 of the fund. The fund can thus never be exhausted, and the incentive to break the new record remains intact indefinitely. (This is in contrast to a structure that specifies a particular mouse age whose first achiever gets the whole fund.) We believe that this is important, because the public attention will be best maintained if there is a steady stream of record-breaks, showing that scientists are taking progressively better control of the aging process.
The record-breaker will receive prize money every week from the point where they beat the previous record. The amount paid each week will be as if their mouse had just died; the total amount won so far by a living record-breaker will be prominently displayed on the web site.
Rejuvenation Prize (RP): details
The Rejuvenation Prize rewards successful late-onset interventions. There are many ways to structure a prize to achieve this goal. The Rejuvenation Prize has been instituted (in replacement of the Reversal Prize -- see above) so as to satisfy two additional shortcomings of the Longevity Prize: first, that it is of limited scientific value to focus on a single mouse (a statistical outlier), and second, that the most important goal is to promote the development of interventions to restore youthful physiology, not merely to extend life. Thus, the Rejuvenation Prize rules are as follows:
1) The Rejuvenation Prize is awarded not for an individual mouse but for a published study. The study must satisfy the following criteria:
- The treated and control groups must have been at least 20 mice each.
- The intervention must have been begun at an age at least half of the eventual mean age at death of the longest-lived 10% of the CONTROL group.
- The treated mice must have been assessed for at least five different markers that change significantly with age in the controls, and there must be a statistically significant reversal in the trajectory of those five markers in the treated mice at some (unrestricted) time after treatment began versus some (also unrestricted) time before it began. (It is OK if other markers do not show this.)
2) The record that a new prizewinner has to beat should be the mean age at death of the longest-lived 10% of the treated group.
Conveniently, the Rejuvenation Prize does not require the same rigorous validation procedures as the Longevity Prize, because the age involved is defined to be that reported in the publication of the study.
So, if the mouse lives forever... (Score:2)
Has to be said... (Score:2)
I heard recently (on
So in 20-25 they may bring together all reverse aging/ageing techniques.
I say MILF sites will have to be redefined!
And we think social security is screwed up now! (Score:3, Insightful)
boy would immortality or anything like it mess our society up!
Re:And we think social security is screwed up now! (Score:1)
Certainly individuals who are capable of adding something to society by putting out more into the world than taking in, should. Perhaps in a world of lifetimes marked in centuries, one might just *posssibly* find something else in
no, you don't think (Score:2)
Article on De Grey. (Score:1)