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- Inside the Silicon Valley push to breed super-babies - MSN
Investors say genetic prediction services for embryos, used by Elon Musk and others, are a trust fund for future children Many scientists are skeptical
- Silicon Valley wants to help me make a superbaby. Should I . . .
Polygenic testing startups are Silicon Valley at its most audacious: promising to make future generations healthier and smarter, while inviting deep controversy over the soundness of the science and its potential for harm
- Superbabies Startup Seeks Funds for Controversial Gene . . .
(Bloomberg) -- A California-startup focused on genetically editing human embryos — a step toward creating so-called designer babies — is raising money as many of Silicon Valley’s ultra-rich turn
- The Dream Of Super Breed Babies Is Becoming A Reality In . . .
Silicon Valley startup Orchid is pioneering embryo screening that sequences the full genome and assesses risk for diseases like cancer and bipolar disorder Backed by tech elites, it promises healthier babies through data While some hail it as revolutionary, others warn of ethical, scientific, and societal risks — including modern eugenics and inequality in access to such technology
- Silicon Valley’s tech elite want to make superbabies. They . . .
Screening embryos for desirable and undesirable traits, the Collins’ say, is the first step to achieving their goal of “low-effort parenting ” The family is part of the next boom to hit Silicon Valley: fertility tech for producing “ superbabies ”
- Inside Silicon Valleys new pronatalism baby-boom movement
Elon Musk — who apparently now has 13 children — has openly endorsed the movement, which believes in pumping out babies to fight societal collapse OpenAI CEO Sam Altman has said, “Of course
- Dawn of the Silicon Valley Superbaby: The Intersection of . . .
Engineering the next generation with ethical and societal implications of the Silicon Valley superbaby In the heart of Silicon Valley, where innovation drives the future and ambition knows no
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