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Science

Scientists To Open Mass-Cloning Factory in China This Year To Clone Cows, Pets, Humans (express.co.uk) 201

An anonymous reader writes: Scientists in China are planning to open a mass-cloning factory by the end of the year. The ambitious and futuristic facility hopes to be mass-producing one million cows every 12 months by 2020. Not only will it clone cattle, but the factory, which will be located in the northern Chinese port of Tianjin, will also cater to more specific needs by genetically engineering police dogs and thoroughbred race horses. It is part of a $21m plan which is backed by the Boyalife group in collaboration with South Korean company Sooam Biotech Research Foundation.
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Scientists To Open Mass-Cloning Factory in China This Year To Clone Cows, Pets, Humans

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  • ...and this post was signed by me and me and me and me
  • April fools... (Score:3, Informative)

    by skaralic ( 676433 ) on Tuesday April 05, 2016 @12:48PM (#51846497)
    April fools was 4 days ago guys...
    • Re:April fools... (Score:4, Informative)

      by Aighearach ( 97333 ) on Tuesday April 05, 2016 @03:48PM (#51848213)

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]

      Be more credulous about what China is willing to do, medically.

      This is not some joke or corporate PR to gain attention just for cloned pets. This is about food production. And they will also be doing pets for rich people to fund it. And human tests. They don't have the same ethical restrictions. If they think it will help good people, then whatever harm or sacrifice is required from others is also seen as good.

      They're executing Falun Gong practitioners on demand to provide organs. Human cloning for organ harvest isn't even going to be controversial in China.

  • I guess these clones will all look the same?

  • by Impy the Impiuos Imp ( 442658 ) on Tuesday April 05, 2016 @12:52PM (#51846543) Journal

    > factory to clone...humans

    Because if there's one thing the Chinese are bad at, it's producing more humans.

    • Misleading as hell. Here's a less yellow news source. [nbcnews.com] They do not plan on cloning humans.
      • Re: (Score:2, Funny)

        They do not plan on cloning humans.

        Nonsense. Chinese families want a perfect son. They will happily sell their daughter into sexual slavery to afford a perfect son cloned from the father.

        • Are you done spouting racist nonsense?
          • Are you done spouting racist nonsense?

            Nope. Just citing an aspect of Chinese society preferring sons over daughters that goes back centuries.

            • by Altrag ( 195300 )

              Yeah. Good thing mistreatment of women is a problem that's only ever occurred in China. Makes it so much easier to stereotype.

              • Makes it so much easier to stereotype.

                Is the stereotype wrong when its based on facts?

                • by Altrag ( 195300 )

                  It can be, in the context of omission. By singling out one specific people, there's an implicit assumption that the stereotype doesn't equally apply to other peoples.

                  Its basically a quirk of our language and the (not always correct) assumptions we make based on how a phrase or thought it worded, but its the way things are.

                  In this case, while the one child rule and associated penalties may have made the practice more drastic, history provides no shortage of cases where female children were considered inferi

  • by Daetrin ( 576516 ) on Tuesday April 05, 2016 @12:55PM (#51846577)
    "Not only will it clone cattle, but the factory, which will be located in the northern Chinese port of Tianjin, will also cater to more specific needs by genetically engineering police dogs and thoroughbred race horses."

    It gets a brief mention in the title and then the body focuses on cows, dogs, and horses rather than the part about cloning humans???

    Actually checking TFA, it says:

    "There are currently no plans in the pipeline to clone and produce humans in a bid to eradicate disease, but Xiaochun has said that this can change if people become more open to the idea of it."

    So it sounds like the cloning humans is just a "hey, we could do this at some point" thing, and not part of the initial plan of operation?

    In any case, i'm not sure why this is a good solution to a demand for more meat. In the long run (and possibly even the short run) doing a little more research and building a cultured meat [wikipedia.org] factory would probably be a lot more cost effective than cloning the entire cow.
    • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

      by Anonymous Coward
      I'm still going to start collecting locks of supermodel hair from e-bay, because I can see which way the wind is blowing.
    • So it sounds like the cloning humans is just a "hey, we could do this at some point" thing, and not part of the initial plan of operation?
      In any case, i'm not sure why this is a good solution to a demand for more meat.

      Ugh. /s

    • The Book "Fallen Dragon" by Peter F. Hamilton has a great scene where the protagonist is mislead into eating organic beef. Society had developed to eating synthetic meat to the point that he was so repulsed when he found out that we was actually sick. I may be paraphrasing as I can't find a quote online handy, but he said, horrified "You fed me meat from a dead animal?!"

  • SMACX come alive.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rGCaACqy1Ro [youtube.com]

    Should have voiced it with Chairman Sheng-Ji Yang

  • I can't see the point in cloning cows. Artificial insemination works well enough, is less expensive, and they will need a cow to serve as the mother anyway.
    • by Tailhook ( 98486 )

      Artificial insemination works well enough

      No, it doesn't. At least not for what Boyalife intends. When you actually read the story you learn they intend to produce "prime" grade beef. Only 2.9% of of carcasses grade as prime using existing techniques (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beef [wikipedia.org]), and these fetch premium prices. Obviously they intend to use cloning to get control over the variables and produce a reliable supply of prime beef.

  • by Frosty Piss ( 770223 ) * on Tuesday April 05, 2016 @12:58PM (#51846623)

    There are currently no plans in the pipeline to clone and produce humans in a bid to eradicate disease, but Xiaochun has said that this can change if people become more open to the idea of it.

  • How do the bloodlines advance though. I can see why we would want more high-end racehorses, but I thought the real point was to breed a better horse, not level the paying field through some kind of horse formula-1 uniformity.
    • by rhazz ( 2853871 )
      People will still attempt to breed better horses, because if they are successful they can sell the DNA to these companies for probably a lot more than the original horse would sell for. Only when the company starts genetic modifications (probably will happen in our lifetime) to produce super-animals would we see breeding left behind as an unprofitable business model for high-end stock.
    • If they ever do a horse Indycar they'll have to breed them with shorter legs on one side.

  • I feel for those grieving the loss of a pet, but cloning won't bring their pet back. Cloning just creates a genetically identical (except mt-DNA) copy. Remember that individuals come with individual personalities, and even this will diverge based on individual experiences. There is no known way to clone a soul (for lack of a better term).

    • by Dunbal ( 464142 ) *
      Yeah but sometimes the pet's physical characteristics are pretty awesome too.
    • Re:Cloning Pets (Score:4, Interesting)

      by Lumpy ( 12016 ) on Tuesday April 05, 2016 @02:16PM (#51847467) Homepage

      The pet's personality is based on how it is treated when it is raised. simply repeat the same treatment and you will get pretty close to the same thing. I had a full breed collie for 14 years, she died of old age and we got a fresh puppy to replace her. now at a year old there are a LOT of identical behaviors in the new puppy as I am raising it the same way I raised the other. You train in the desired traits, and train out the undesired ones. It's all just dog training, you just need to be consistent.

      Now natural breeding adds in randomness. I am sure there is genetic memory that is passed down, as well as training the pup gets from it's mother for the first 10 weeks that you can not influence.

    • There is no sole, that's hogwash. There is the nature vs nurture argument. DNA vs how you treat it. Then there are viruses that alter brain chemistry and operation, random mutation. Cloning won't bring back a pet because cloning only focuses on DNA.

      • There is no sole

        There are several. They go in alphabetical sequence. You come right after the q-sole.

        • by JazzLad ( 935151 )
          I'll admit, I paused with a confused look on my face for about 2 whole seconds before considering what the next 'sole' would be ... duhno if you originated that or stole it well, but it brought a smile to my face, cheers!
      • There is no sole, that's hogwash. There is the nature vs nurture argument. DNA vs how you treat it. Then there are viruses that alter brain chemistry and operation, random mutation. Cloning won't bring back a pet because cloning only focuses on DNA.

        Even if you aren't religious, you must admit that soles exist; I bet the shoes you wear even have them. As for soul, I am religious and spiritual. I used a religious term to encompass the non-physical essence of the individual. Identical twins raised in the same household have different personality traits despite identical DNA and near identical nurture.

        In any case, my point is that you won't get your pet back; at most you'll get a twin of it.

  • We need more of them in Las Vegas.
  • 1) A human can live after donating a kidney, lung, pancreas, bone marrow, or liver.

    2) There are a lot of diseases that slowly affect those organs. A prime example is IgA Nepropathy can take 27 years from first affecting your kidneys, till you need a transplant.

    3) Imagine you discover that your 10 year old child has IgA Nepropahty and that they will need a new kidney sometime in 10-30 years. You can clone them today, ensuring a healthy kidney without any immune suppression drugs,, or wait and hope they

    • by Lumpy ( 12016 )

      http://www.adultswim.com/video... [adultswim.com]

      Here is your blueprint....

    • by Altrag ( 195300 )

      Damn right you will clone her.

      That's where the problem comes in. If the "clone" is just a meatsack with working organs then great. But that's unlikely since they're being cloned from non-meatsacks.

      So now what you have is two daughters, not much different from identical twins other than the time delay, rather than a daughter and a meatsack. Are you OK with sacrificing one daughter for the sake of the other?

      And if during the cloning process the company can correct that defective gene.. why would you sacrifice the healthy daughter for t

      • 1) This is a disease, not a genetic issue. Make no sense at all to 'clone' someone to deal with a genetic issue.

        2) Note the long term lines I declared. That means the clones get to decide, not anyone else. It's all voluntary, by adults.

        3) As I clearly stated, this was to deal with situations where neither clone should die. Yes, there is a small (3% chance of dying from donating a kidney, liver, pancreas, etc.)

        Yes, you can bring up evil ideas for some douchebag to do. I fully admit it is possible to a

  • by whitroth ( 9367 ) <whitroth@5-cen t . us> on Tuesday April 05, 2016 @01:35PM (#51846975) Homepage

    Is a specific cow, or pet that special? And if so, why on *earth* would you think a cloned one would act the same?

    And people... there are these people called "twins", or "triplets", etc, and they all turn out differently. What would you expect to get by cloning someone?

    And it's a long term thing, if you're cloning your favorite movie star, or politician...

                    mark

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward

      Think about fruit trees. Just about any fruit you buy at a grocery store will have come from clonally propagated (grafted) tree. Every Fuji apple comes from a clone of the original Fuji tree and so on.

      Suppose that a specific cow has beautifully marbled meat or really high milk production. You could breed that cow, and hope that its offspring has the same trait, or you can clone that cow and virtually guarantee it.

      Twin studies don't disprove the importance of genetics when it comes to outcomes, they prove it

    • by delt0r ( 999393 )
      People really believe *everything* is coded in your DNA. Right down to the type of music you like. Explain that identical twins (same DNA) not only have very different personalities, look different, like different things etc. And people still don't get that nurture/nature part at all.
  • They have to perfect their techniques on critters, then they can work on creating a super army of clones. I bet 3 cats that China, and I assume 4 or 5 other countries, ARE working on human clones in a laboratory away from public eye. Its not a matter of IF, its a matter of WHEN. You didn't think they were just throwing those aborted fetuses in a trash can did you?
  • Begun the clone war has.

  • Would we get these [youtube.com]?

  • by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Tuesday April 05, 2016 @02:10PM (#51847377)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • Another lousy headline, including the headline on TFA. Deeper in the article it says that there are no current plans to clone humans. I also love the picture in TFA, which has a caption about cloning cows but shows a line of people.

    Come to think of it ...

  • The flat-earthers can't touch a project when it's built in China. The new AP-1000s are going in there. This is where the Thirty Meter telescope should be built.

  • Has anyone seen Temuera Morrison recently?

  • The headline is misleading; from the article: "There are currently no plans in the pipeline to clone and produce humans in a bid to eradicate disease, but Xiaochun has said that this can change if people become more open to the idea of it." Time for a Sixth Day law.

    BTW, there's a possibly more reputable article (from Dec 2015, but basically same content) here: http://phys.org/news/2015-12-c... [phys.org]

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