Research associate at SecureBio, Research Affiliate at Kevin Esvelt’s MIT research group Sculpting Evolution, physician. Thinking about ways to safeguard the world from bio.
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Launching a Nucleic Acid Observatory, as outlined recently by Kevin Esvelt and others here (link to paper). With $100m one could launch a pilot version covering 5 to 10 states in the US.
- Aug 7, 2021, 6:22 PM; 13 points) 's comment on Most research/advocacy charities are not scalable by (
Thanks for this write-up. Concerning this point:
Quantitative investigation of tech capabilities required for broad environmental nucleic acid surveillance to be useful
This article provides a good introduction to current challenges within genomic pathogen surveillance: Ten recommendations for supporting open pathogen genomic analysis in public health
Hi, happy to read about where you stand and where you want to go with NEAD.
FYI, the link in this sentence seems broken: “currently offering self-hosted alternatives to Slack, Google, and Zoom, one reason for this being our concern with risks from data privacy neglect. ”
Hi!
I think you mean to say: “every way a higher growth rate would be good is also an equally plausibly reason it would be bad”
Instead you wrote:
“Evidential symmetry here would be something like: every way a higher growth rate would be good is also an equally plausibly reason it would be good eg. increased emissions are equally likely to be good as they are to be bad.) ”
Spencer Greenberg also comes to mind; he once noted that his agreeableness is in the 77th percentile. I’d consider him a generator.