Home
Archive
Columnists
Video
Blogs
Discuss
About
Search
Donate
Advertise

Consumer biotech can measure and alter biological states for the mass market -- which goes much further than the consumer electronics craze over iPhones and Wiis.

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Register to Vote: Rock the Vote, powered by Working Assets Wireless
  • AlterNetYour turn

Support AlterNet
Do you value the information you're getting from AlterNet? Please show your support with a tax-deductible donation.


Feedback
Tell us how we're doing.

Consumer Biotech

By Annalee Newitz, AlterNet. Posted November 1, 2007.


Consumer biotech can measure and alter biological states for the mass market -- which goes much further than the consumer electronics craze over iPhones and Wiis.

Share and save this post:
Digg iconDelicious iconReddit iconFark iconYahoo! iconNewsvine! iconFacebook iconNewsTrust icon

More stories by Annalee Newitz

Get AlterNet in
your mailbox!

 
Advertisement

When will we tire of the endless scandals over bricking iPhones, RSI-causing Wiis, and PlayStation shootings? I think the time is coming soon, my friends. In fact, the whole consumer electronics craze is about to die off and give birth to a new home-tech phenomenon. I refer, of course, to the consumer biotech revolution that's just on the horizon.

Consumer biotech isn't a new idea. Home pregnancy tests are a form of consumer biotech, as are Viagra and Prozac. Many diabetics administer insulin using small computers that measure their blood sugar levels and administer appropriate doses when necessary. I call this stuff consumer biotech because it measures and alters biological states for the mass market. And when smart phones become as boring as dumb ones, the lust for cool new biotech will replace the lust for new game consoles. Here are a few ideas about what will happen when consumer biotech goes beyond medical devices and into the realm of entertainment.

DNA Crystal Ball

Already people are jumping at the chance to get their genome sequenced using cheapo services like GeneTree.com. Meanwhile, scientists at the Georgia Institute of Technology have invented a biosensor for identifying viruses that's the size of an attaché case. So it shouldn't be long before a company develops handhelds that identify sections of your DNA that offer hints of your distant parentage as well as what kinds of characteristics you're likely to develop as you age. Of course, nobody really cares about the science behind this crap -- they just want to be told a cool story that predicts what will happen to them based on their allele configuration. Thus Mattel will offer the DNA Crystal Ball, a little computer that will spit out pseudoscientific "predictions" about you based on poorly researched genomics studies. If you have this or that allele, you might become an artist! Or you might be quick to anger. Your ancestors might have been Indian princesses or African warriors! Since the device will be sold purely "for entertainment," it won't give you, for instance, valuable information about a predilection for breast cancer. But you'll metastasize happily knowing you've got the "gene" for friendliness.

Clonies!

Kids love Shrinky Dinks, the plastic toys you color and stick in the oven, shrinking them into hard little plastic ornaments. So why not do the same thing with tissue engineering? Using techniques already perfected by a bunch of Australian tissue artists from a lab called SymbioticA, kids will create wee "clonies," tiny versions of themselves grown from their own skin cells using tissue-engineering edifices. Just culture a bit of your skin and grow it in a petri dish while you build a little model of yourself out of the foamy edifice. Once you've got a few inches of skin, drape them on the edifice, let them grow for a few days, and presto! A tiny version of you, made of your own skin! You'll get days of fun, and then you can dispose of the clonie in a handy biohazard container (sold separately). Try it with your dog, and your friends!

Gene Expression Jam Session

Remember how cool Garage Band was back when people thought playing with computer networks was as fun as playing with cellular signaling mechanisms? Jim Munroe has predicted that in the future every kid will have an Easy-Bake Oven for growing new animals, but Gene Expression Jam Session will be way cooler. Mix and match the genes of your choice using an easy user interface and rewrite your biology on the spot. Want to glow green for the evening or sprout hair all over your body? How about growing an extra pair of arms on your torso? Gene Expression Jam Session will produce the genes you need to do it, enclose them in a nifty virus-shell vector for quick delivery to your DNA, and shoot 'em right into your arm for fast-acting fun! Once you're sick of your newly engineered appearance, you can buy a plug-in that reverses the effects of your newly added genes or adds extra genes to make you look even wilder!

And don't get me started on the consumer nanotech revolution. You haven't truly lived until you've turned your pet goldfish into a golf ball.

Digg!

See more stories tagged with: genome, dna, biotech

Annalee Newitz (annalee@techsploitation.com) is a surly media nerd who has this weird growth on her head that won't stop flashing the Google logo until she pays for a Jam Session upgrade.

Liked this story? Get top stories in your inbox each week from AlterNet! Sign up now »


Advertisement

 

Comments Turn comments off sitewide Give us feedback »
Comments closed.
The comments for this story have been closed. Thank you to everyone who participated.
View:
It generally begins this way
Posted by: talkville on Nov 2, 2007 3:32 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"... they just want to be told a cool story that predicts what will happen to them based on their allele configuration."

Biology and biologists are experiencing a hey-day of attention, lime-light, and -- this is worrisome-- adoration and even worshipful-type treatment in pop as well as "haute" culture. DNA is the rage! It's fun and exciting and has un-limited applications and potentials; just as this writer describes in her article.

It would be a real prudent move, however, to take a little time and consider some of the 'darker' possibilities of putting the prefix 'bio-' together with 'technology'.

Once one's DNA sequence and specific components of it are identified, classified and hierarchized into a Taxonomy Table, it is ALSO possible (and not too far from considering probable) that one's social position, function (job), work availability, etc will be able to be ASSIGNED from birth to each and every one of us. Once something is established as "predictable" with regard to our human and social bodies, many applicabilities can be used by those who hold power (and that can include even democratic societies!)

These scientific findings must not be made into magic. They are real and they carry not only positive but negative real possibilities. And they can all too easily lead into some very, very pernicious kinds of thinking -- such as "biological superiority" for instance, a philosophy society much investigated, expounded and held by Nazi Germans in the not too distant past.

It may be great fun and exciting and energizing to witness the vast explosion of DNA-related gizmos, gadgets, stories, etc. going on today. But let's not one day wake up and find out we were assigned to the Janitorial Track or the Clerical Track or the Politician Track or whatever due to the composition of our particular DNA -- by law and 'thoroughly legal' testing procedures approved by the Education Department.

P.S. A related article is currently on by Sean Gonzalves (forgive spelling?) about IQ and it's uses.

Thanks for the article!

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]