Responsible Nanotechnology Interview 65
cynical writes "WorldChanging has a lengthy interview with Chris Phoenix and Mike Treder of the Center for Responsible Nanotechnology, a non-profit group helping to make sure molecular manufacturing is developed as safely as possible. In the article they talk about their policy task force (which includes folks like Ray Kurzweil, David Brin, and Jaron Lanier), the risks and benefits of nanofactories, and why open source is so important to the responsible development of nanotechnology."
Coral cache of article and other links (Score:3, Informative)
http://www.worldchanging.com.nyud.net:8090/archiv
Additionally, here's the web site for the Center for Responsible Nanotechnology: http://www.crnano.org/ [crnano.org]
Other links:
* Wikipedia article [wikipedia.org]
* Responsible Nanotechnology blog [typepad.com]
* Wise-Nano [wise-nano.org]: their collaborate website (i.e. wiki) for "studying the facts and implications of advanced nanotechnology"
(I tried to post this anonymously, but Slashdot gave me a "There was an unknown error in the submission" error. I guess I'll have to risk being modded down for karma-whoring.)
Re:Coral cache of article and other links (Score:2)
Wow (Score:1)
Somebody quick help them, they are all over their faces.
They also have a nice graph showing the links to the development stages and what aims and benefits it gets.
Strangely absent are steps II and III. One of them has to be Military, any guesses on the other one?
Re:Wow (Score:2)
Intellectual property (Score:4, Interesting)
Discuss. :)
Re:Intellectual property (Score:4, Interesting)
Add to that the possibility of desktop feedstock refining: just throw in the old stuff to break it down and get something new out of its atoms, and you get a veritable revolution at your hands.
The alternatives are clear: Designs are restricted at the manufacturer's will, programing the nanofactory is illegal under the DMCA, and feedstock is sold by the hp principle: give away the factory, earn money through the proprietary feedstock cartridges. Pay for every time you assemble a product, even if you paid for its design already. DRM galore.
Which is it going to be?
Re:Intellectual property (Score:2)
Not only that, but what about the physical parallels to information which is illegal nowadays, like child pornography? For example, what do gun control laws mean if anybody can trivially construct their own firearms?
Re:Intellectual property (Score:1)
Your DMCA and HP analogies are apt, however. I can certainly imagine companie
Re:Intellectual property (Score:2)
nanofactories and their larger-than-molecular-scale recursive fabs (any machine that can make things and copies of itself) will help people make much more dangerous
Actually, IP works quite well in chemistry (Score:2)
Please don't assume the problems of software patents extend to all types. They don't.
Re:Actually, IP works quite well in chemistry (Score:1)
Two words on chemical patents, "Big Pharma".
yea it only costs me $400+ a month to keep myself from climbing a water-tower with a rifle and a high power scope.
No problem with patents none at all...
A PhD scientist costs $500,000 / year (Score:2)
Someone has to pay those salaries, or your drug wouldn't exist in the first place. It really is that simple.
Oh joy open source grey goo! (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Oh joy open source grey goo! (Score:1)
Re:Oh joy open source grey goo! (Score:2)
Re:Oh joy open source grey goo! (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Oh joy open source grey goo! (Score:2)
If you want to fear a scenario, picture what some madman (m/f) could do with nanobots. Don't like a particular group of people? Figure out some genetic simularity, program your nanobot-virus and release. Lots of possibilities there.
Re:Oh joy open source grey goo! (Score:2)
I don't think a literal "gray goo" is possible based on energy concerns. I suppose I could imagine a plague of very small autonomous inimical robots...that could be very bad. Wouldn't want someone creating a plague of those in his basement. ;-)
It'll be interesting to see what's really possible.
Re:Oh joy open source grey goo! (Score:1)
prediction: America practices safe nanotechnology (Score:2)
Who will win the nanotech race?
This reminds me of the actions of a certain Korean cloning researcher who recently got caught in a scandal.
IMHO, ethics has finally come within sight of a potential head to head battle with progress, in that ethical nations will have a disadvantage against unethical nations.
Re:prediction: America practices safe nanotechnolo (Score:1)
And unicorns.
KFG
the parent post was NOT a troll post (Score:2)
My post optimistically assumed that America would be more aware of nanotech ethics than certain other countries, and that assumption remains yet to be proven.
I'm sorry for any arrogance my post conveyed.
The REAL argument is how will ethical nations, in general, compete against unethical nations, in the coming and inevitabl
nano-beard update (Score:3, Funny)
WorldChanging: So, to start -- what is the Center for Responsible Nanotechnology hoping to make happen?
Center for Responsible Nanotechnology: We want to help create a world in which advanced beard technology -- nano-beards -- is widely used for beneficial purposes, and in which the risks are responsibly managed. The ability to manufacture highly advanced nano-beard products, such as those adorning our own faces right now at an exponentially accelerating pace will have profound and perilous implications for all of society, and our goal is to lay a foundation for handling them wisely.
For goodness' sake! (Score:2, Funny)
I agree, this is a waste of time (Score:2)
There is no reason to be worrying about technologies that are many decades in the future, outside of the pure fun of idle speculation. Taking yourself seriously, though, probably means you have a screw loose or three.
Re:I agree, this is a waste of time (Score:2)
Naval Officer: Sir! We need to build an all steel non-sail navy!
Grover Cleavland: Pollycock and brumbule boo! Thats all that HG Wells you've been reading.
Navel Officer: But the British are building one.
Gorver Cleavland: Oh...
Einstein: We need to make an atomic bomb.
Franklin D. Rosevelt: Hogwash and crumsticks! This is pure scientific fictionary. Never ever ever happen in our lifetimes. I dare say we won't see an Atomic bomb til the 21st century.
Einstein: But the Nazi's are building one.
Frankling
Get back to me when the Chinese start (Score:2)
Re:For goodness' sake! (Score:3, Insightful)
Their whole concept of nano tech is based on the premise that we can build factories that can build anything they want - with no constraint on power or materials.
Yeah yeah, "one of the first projects couild be a massive solar array..." to which I answer, even if we had cheeply available power, something I consider much more likely than their verson of nanotech, you would still need nano miner
Re:For goodness' sake! (Score:2)
I see these developments as more or less inevitable. The first compiler-writer did not have a compiler. Same for machine tools, automobiles and various other enterprises. We all start small. Scaling up is limited only by imagination.
Re:Its a political/societal reason not a tech one (Score:2)
Actually, the fact that we didn't have flying cars in 2000 was more of a political issue than a technological issue. After all, would you really want Grandma traveling at high velocities through the air?
Think about how crappy we drive on the roads and imagine all the damage and death by drunk drivers alone in flying cars. Imagine is the local terrorist could just hop in a flying car and drive
Cytotoxicity (Score:2)
One word: Cytotoxicity.
Nanotubes and buckyballs are so small that they can infest your lungs and bloodstream in no time. I recall reading a research paper about buckyballs being able to destroy DNA when they get to the cells.
Just imagine the consequences from an outbreak in a nanomaterials factory.
This is NOT about grey goo and other sci-fi monsters... This is about potentially toxic materials (materials that nature is
Obligatory Homer Simpson joke (Score:2)
Safe nanotech? Nah (Score:1, Interesting)
What the hell is it with /. and Michael Crichton? (Score:5, Funny)
Bloody hell. Every time there's a global warming story, some goon who's mistaken a thriller novel for a scientific paper cites Crichton as evidence that it's all a lefty environmentalist conspiracy. Now Crichton gets raised as an authority on nanotech.
That does it. Next time there's a story on genetics or cloning, I'm going to say it's a bad idea because look what happened in Jurassic Park.
Re:What the hell is it with /. and Michael Crichto (Score:2)
Re:What the hell is it with /. and Michael Crichto (Score:2)
Definitely not Prey (Score:2)
Crescent City Rhapsody [amazon.com] by Kathleen Ann Goonan demonstrates by example the threat of nanoplagues and what they can do. She has other novels in this series dealing with similar subjects, which I also recommend.
Anvil of Stars [amazon.com] by Greg Bear has a lot of information about interstellar warfare with nanotechnological weapons.
Sadly, there aren't any more that I've seen. Most authors fall into the same pits as Michae
Foresight (Score:3, Informative)
http://www.foresight.org/ [foresight.org]
Interesting article though. I dig reading about nanotech, its the coolest sci-fi-ish tech thats just around teh corner somewhere.
Re:Foresight (Score:2)
Re:Foresight (Score:1)
, and
From CRN:
, so it certainly sounds like there is overlap betwe
wow! (Score:1)
Open Source ? (Score:2)
I mean, the geek analogy would be to say that you want to give everyone a PHLAK distribution, while our body runs an unpatched Win ME.
Why is it... (Score:1)
Purdue Nanotech Center Opens This Week (Score:1)
Here's [insideindi...siness.com] something covering the opening of the new Purdue nanotech center...perhaps relevant for someone who can use the after-knowledge...
Related to a letter I wrote last week... (Score:1)
Richard Smally V. Eric Drexler (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Richard Smally V. Eric Drexler (Score:1)
Take everything we know about chemistry and add a bit of positional control. This does not of course give us the ability to arbitrarily place molecules or atoms in energetically awkward positions, but should allow us to control
Talking heads with *no credentials* (Score:2)
Pie in the sky? (Score:1)
Re:Pie in the sky? (Score:2)
Maybe it's just me, but hasn't the trend throughout history been that the cheaper and easier and more accessible something is, the harder it is for a single entity to control it?
Especially given that several nation