X Prize Foundation Encourages DNA Decoding 100
Carl Bialik from the WSJ writes "The X Prize Foundation, the group behind the $10 million prize for human space flight, 'plans to offer a $5 million to $20 million prize to the first team that completely decodes the DNA of 100 or more people in a matter of weeks, according to foundation officials and others involved,' the Wall Street Journal reports. 'Such speedy gene sequencing would represent a technology breakthrough for medical research. It could launch an era of "personal" genomics in which ordinary people can learn their complete DNA code for less than the cost of a wide-screen television.' But don't set aside that TV purchase just yet: Foundation officials don't expect the prize money to be claimed for five to 10 years."
Costs? (Score:3, Interesting)
Thanks!
Re:Costs? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Costs? (Score:2)
10 years ago yes. Today it would take a $10,000 DNA type of sequencer machine and a "super" computer to process the data. And a by super computer this could just be a couple thousand volunteers like SETI, but one would have to put together the effort.
Not like you can share all that money with the volunteers...
Re:Costs? (Score:2)
Phil
Re:Costs? (Score:2)
all in R&D. People are very expensive. And, unlike human space travel, there are
quite a few fairly immediate applications for this technology and lots of people
who will pay for it.
It's great advertising for the X foundation though. Someone else does all the work,
they get to appear visionary and it only costs 5 million. Pretty clever.
Phil
Re:Costs? (Score:1)
That was my initial thought as well. I know that the X foundation (no relation to the professor) will look great in the end, but I think that the result of this could help us all. I know private industry is already pursuing things such as this just like the first non-government/military trip to space. It will be done sooner or later. Why not take some credit for it?
Perhaps I would like to see them offer $50 Mil to go to the moon. Then I can start construction on my super-slingshot. I just nee
Re:Costs? (Score:2)
certainly not care less about 5million dollars either way. If you the X foundation
were venture capital offering 5 million dollars no one would have noticed either
way. Or better still a philanthropic research charity. They should try sponsering
research, rather than living in it's reflected glory.
Phil
Re:Costs? (Score:2)
Phil
Re:Costs? (Score:3, Insightful)
For them, it wasn't (just) about the X-Prize and its money. That was just icing on the cake; the "real money" will probably come afterwards (we'll see how well Virgin Galactic does). I could very easily see the same thing happening with this new prize and the people who are already int
Re:Costs? (Score:1)
Re:Costs? (Score:1)
Instead, what will happen here is that innovators will be focused on doing it in timely and a relatively inexpensive manner, which is probably one of the prize's hidden goals.
Re:Costs? (Score:1)
A whole new era of tire-kicking. (Score:5, Insightful)
While there's no disputing that speedy, accurate genome sequencing will have a significant positive impact, being the pessimist I am, I can't help but dwell on the possible downsides:
Brave new world, indeed.
Re:Chances are these are moot points (Score:2)
Chances are with this level of technology, health concerns will start to be a moot point. Predisposed to being over weight or having cancer... Well why not just use gene therapy to fix that.
Cheap and accurate gene sequencing in the hands of corporations encourages said corporations to discriminate in their hiring practices on
Re:Chances are these are moot points (Score:2)
Sure, and if you have a fast disassembler, all software bugs can be immediatly fixed. Right?
Re:Chances are these are moot points (Score:2, Interesting)
There are only a few successes of gene therapy. Getting the minute details of human physiology is hard. The results from mouse metabolism studies do not always carry over to humans. Researchers are make some progress on understanding the basis of obesity (i.e., leptin, ghrelin, etc.) that lies beyond the obvious "overea
Re:A whole new era of tire-kicking. (Score:3, Insightful)
I have CF and Celiac. Trust me, it's the Old World, brother. You're just about to emigrate is all. Being stripped and deloused is just part of the deal.
KFG
Re:A whole new era of tire-kicking. (Score:1)
I hope there isn't a gene that says "I probably will only stay here for 6 months."
Re:A whole new era of tire-kicking. (Score:4, Interesting)
This kind of genome sequencing technology would bring it into the foreground so that the whole American population would suddenly talk about and understand the concept, and perhaps do something about it, in the same way that high interest rates in the early 1980s had everyone suddenly talking about "time value of money" and "cap rates", terms previously only used and understood by economists and MBAs. (Of course, people seem to have forgotten these things since.)
I mention this because America currently practices a kind of strategy against adverse selection in health care by linking health care provisioning to employment through employer-provided health insurance. I'm not sure if this is why the system was set up initially (probably not, as economists didn't have a good theory regarding adverse selection until the 1970s) but the idea here is that if you're healthy enough to be employable, then you're probably healthy enough to be worth insuring from the perspective of the insurance companies. By being employed, you help level the information assymetry that you hold in your advantage over the insurers.
Of course, if everyone (insurers and would-be subscribers to insurance) held perfect knowledge, the whole industry would collapse. Insurers wouldn't bother insuring people who needed it, and the people who were super-healthy wouldn't bother buying insurance.
Other countries (e.g. Canada) solve this problem by making health care universal. It's quite egalitarian, which some people would consider a good thing. It's also very efficient, because now you don't have to put all kinds of resources into a system to check to see if people are good candidates for insurance. (You also don't have to have billing departments or big beefy accounting departments.)
If there's any kind of sanity in the US, this kind of technology will (finally) provide the political impetus for a real, substantial universal health care system there, too. Whether or not such a system develops can be used as a proxy to determine the hidden (or at least unobservable) information regarding the presense of sanity in the US.
Cheers,
Richard
Re:A whole new era of tire-kicking. (Score:1, Insightful)
I understand these concerns. But we--as in you and me and everyone else on earth--wouldn't have the capabilities we do now if it hadn't been for natural selection. Leave the system alone--through policy and other conscious efforts--and the system will regulate itself; people will evolve into better, more advanced bio-machines.
Darwin's survival-of-the-fittest applies to all living creatures, including us humans. I'm so tired o
Re:A whole new era of tire-kicking. (Score:2)
Umm.... Actually we threw the proverbial monkey wrench into human biological evolution years ago. Once humans were able to sit on a couch and not be eaten by a lion is pretty much when natural selection no longer applies.
Take a look at humans... People with born with imperfect vision (ie requiring contacts and glasses... no offense, since I don't have perfect vision either) won't go away with our current way of e
Great post (Score:1)
Although you are right, my optimistic self cannot help but point the followings
Cheap and accurate gene sequencing would help detect babies with genetic disorder before their birth, possibly allowing the correction of the defective genes prior to the baby's birth.
Cheap and accurate gene sequencing would most certainly be helpful curing uncurable diseases such as AIDS or Cancer
Cheap and accurate gene
Re:Great post (Score:2)
One thing that scares me about this scenerio: "Correction" might mean kill off the fetus before its born. Thats the cheap option right?
(I am not advocating that through any means! I am a Transsexual, but I don't want to be "corrected". Why cannot I live my life the way I want?)
Re:Great post (Score:1)
Not quite. If we haven't been able to learn to protect against those viruses in millions of years of evolution, I really doubt we would have learned in the 100 years since he created the vaccine.
A
Re:A whole new era of tire-kicking. (Score:1)
Re:A whole new era of tire-kicking. (Score:1)
Been there, done that (Score:4, Funny)
I tried it once and apart from a blood stained carpet, I'm serving 12 years for my trouble.
Oh, this is just GREAT news. (Score:5, Insightful)
don't be so paranoid. (Score:2)
Re:don't be so paranoid. (Score:4, Interesting)
Have you tried google?
If You Smoke, You're Fired [thewbalchannel.com]
and
Bad habit is under fire from Daniels, U.S. firms [indystar.com]
From the article:
Ohio is one of 21 states that allow companies to fire workers who smoke anywhere -- even at home.
You call me paranoid, but I bet that if, 10 years ago, I'd suggested that people would be fired for smoking in their own homes and on their own free time you would have called that paranoid too.
Re:don't be so paranoid. (Score:2)
Re:Oh, this is just GREAT news. (Score:1)
Re:Oh, this is just GREAT news. (Score:1)
But then, you guys could just head North to see how it works in Canada if you want to see it in action
Re:Oh, this is just GREAT news. (Score:2)
Are you NUTS?
The reason government feels that it can pass laws about what we can smoke and eat is because it sees itself as paying for you hospital bills. (Even though we pay those bills through taxes.)
Do you really think the government would give a damn about you hurting yourself if it didn't have to foot all the hospital bills you can't afford?
Re:Oh, this is just GREAT news. (Score:1)
Ah valid concern, but... (Score:1)
Re:Ah valid concern, but... (Score:2)
Nah, you miss the point, when a company hires you they do a simple calculation.
Money you will generate for the company - Money you cost the company = Your worth to the company
Theoretically, they do this calculation for all applicants and then hire the person with the highest number after the equals sign. In practice, much of it is based
Re:Ah valid concern, but... (Score:1)
Still, it seems to me with more information available, it should in the end be possible to handle things more efficently, to everyone's benefit? Not that I am not concerned about privacy issues etc., but their might be solutions, too.
huh?! (Score:1)
Re:huh?! (Score:1)
Sloppy language in TFA (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Sloppy language in TFA (Score:2)
Re:Sloppy language in TFA (Score:2)
Some inroads have been made in understanding the code but don't expect to debug your kids yet.
Re:Sloppy language in TFA (Score:2)
Unrealisitc and unnerving (Score:1)
Don't drink the anti-Venter coolaid (Score:2)
Re:Unrealisitc and unnerving (Score:1)
Re:Unrealisitc and unnerving (Score:1)
I'm a skeptic of this prize because the technology is so valuable that a million dollar incentive shouldn't change the decision of whether a company or individual should pursue a billion dollar technology.
If I offered you twenty million dollars to develop a fully functional AI, that certainly wouldn't be your incentive, would it?
DNA decoded with interesting finds (Score:2)
Coincidentally, once these ordinary people get their code sequenced, they find out that they have highly-evolved genetic tendencies for couch potato-ness, eating crunchy foods and better wide-angle vision.
Sequenced AND assembled? (Score:2)
Some companies like 454 [454.com] have got the technology to quickly sequence large genomes but assembling them is a completely different problem. And anyway we understand (roughly) about (roughly) 30% of the genes of any species that has been completely sequenced (mostly bacteria). I wish there was a prize for technics to annotate genomes accurately.
No Need, you already have a blueprint (Score:2)
Just this morning... (Score:2, Funny)
I just couldn't resist!
Re:Just this morning... (Score:2)
Slashdot poster turned geneticist reveals that chromosome 12 decodes to "DRINK MORE OVALTINE."
Moore's Law (Score:2)
Re:Moore's Law (Score:1)
Disproves Intelligent Design... (Score:2)
Re:Disproves Intelligent Design... (Score:2)
Re:Disproves Intelligent Design... (Score:1)
Re:Disproves Intelligent Design... (Score:2)
You don't know that until you decode it:
codon 776a: TTAAC-AACTC-BY-DECODING-THIS-MESSAGE-YOU-AGREE-TH
(of course this is just an example... apparantly an example that the lameness filter objects to, unless accompanied by this useless sentence.)
Re:Disproves Intelligent Design... (Score:1)
Until someone patents it.
HapMap (Score:2, Informative)
Look for the differences. (Score:2)
So... you don't sequence the known quantity and just sequence the 1% that is different.
Re:Look for the differences. (Score:1)
Furthermore, you are missing the point of the prize, which is to promote advances in sequencing technology. If they made the challenge easier then there would be no point.
-- Anonymous Pedant
Re:Why would I want to know it? (Score:2)
First impression. . . (Score:1, Troll)
Just part of a morning of disturbing thoughts. . .
Supercomputing to Find the Answer (Score:1)
supercomputer$> diff myDNA chimpanzeeDNA
supercomputer$>
D'Oh!
Re:Supercomputing to Find the Answer (Score:1)
supercomputer$>
D'Oh!
supercomputer$> ldd /usr/bin/diff /lib/libmono.so.1 (0x00002aaaaabc2000)
:-P.
libmono.so.1 =>
[...]
perhaps the supercomputer is somewhat biased, afterall. Thank-you Miguel
Isn't it possible already? (Score:1)
Pointless! The race is already on (Score:2)
Here's you sequence. And it's all been copyrighted (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Here's you sequence. And it's all been copyrigh (Score:2)
Is this a hoax? (Score:1, Insightful)
I can wait (Score:2)
NimbleGen (Score:1, Informative)
Re:NimbleGen (Score:1)
If I had to take a guess I would say a technology like 45