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George Church linked to Obama BRAIN Initiative and CRISPR advancements
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kaggle-ho-016385House Oversight

George Church linked to Obama BRAIN Initiative and CRISPR advancements

George Church linked to Obama BRAIN Initiative and CRISPR advancements The passage provides background on George Church’s scientific work and his role in the Obama administration’s BRAIN Initiative, but offers no concrete allegations, financial details, or misconduct. It is largely biographical and lacks actionable leads for investigation. Key insights: George Church is a leading genetic engineer and founder of the Personal Genome Project.; He contributed to the development of the Obama administration’s 2013 BRAIN Initiative.; Church is noted for pioneering use of CRISPR and related gene‑editing technologies.

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George Church linked to Obama BRAIN Initiative and CRISPR advancements The passage provides background on George Church’s scientific work and his role in the Obama administration’s BRAIN Initiative, but offers no concrete allegations, financial details, or misconduct. It is largely biographical and lacks actionable leads for investigation. Key insights: George Church is a leading genetic engineer and founder of the Personal Genome Project.; He contributed to the development of the Obama administration’s 2013 BRAIN Initiative.; Church is noted for pioneering use of CRISPR and related gene‑editing technologies.

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kagglehouse-oversightgenetic-engineeringcrisprbrain-initiativebiotechnologyai-ethics

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In the past decade, genetic engineering has caught up with computer science with regard to how new scientific initiatives are shaping our lives. Genetic engineer George Church, a pioneer of the revolution in reading and writing biology, is central to this new landscape of ideas. He thinks of the body as an operating system, with engineers taking the place of traditional biologists in retooling stripped-down components of organisms (from atoms to organs) in much the same vein as in the late 1970s, when electrical engineers were working their way to the first personal computer by assembling circuit boards, hard drives, monitors, etc. George created and is director of the Personal Genome Project, which provides the world’s only open-access information on human genomic, environmental, and trait data (GET) and sparked the growing DNA ancestry industry. He was instrumental in laying the groundwork for President Obama’s 2013 BRAIN (Brain Research through Advancing Innovative Neurotechnologies) Initiative—in aid of improving the brains of human beings to the point where, for much of what sustains us, we might not need the help of (potentially dicey) Als. “Tt could be that some of the BRAIN Initiative projects allow us to build human brains that are more consistent with our ethics and capable of doing advanced tasks like artificial intelligence,” George has said. “The safest path by far is getting humans to do all the tasks that they would like to delegate to machines, but we re not yet firmly on that super-safe path.” More recently, his crucially important pioneering use of the enzyme CRISPR (as well as methods better than CRISPR) to edit the genes of human cells is sometimes missed by the media in the telling of the CRISPR origins story. George's attitude toward future forms of artificial general intelligence is friendly, as evinced in the essay that follows. At the same time, he never loses sight of the AI- safety issue. On that subject, he recently remarked: “The main risk in AI, to my mind, is not so much whether we can mathematically understand what they ’re thinking; it’s whether we re capable of teaching them ethical behavior. We’re barely capable of teaching each other ethical behavior.” 165

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