happybadger

joined 4 years ago
[–] happybadger@hexbear.net 6 points 2 days ago

Especially with the natural sciences, I feel like a demon working for private companies. I'm poisoning everyone around that customer to make them feel some pathological need for control, enclosing the commons for a company to greenwash their destruction, or making some beautiful green space I can't visit the moment I get off work. When I take my dog to the parks I tend, I'm picking weeds because I'm proud of the things that get to enrich my community. That's the whole thing my degree avoided teaching.

[–] happybadger@hexbear.net 10 points 2 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago) (2 children)

I tear my hair out daily but over the things worth fixing and the processes inhibiting that. Removing the profit motive does so much for making workplaces collaborative toward those common goals. For all the pay cut you take in the public sector it feels human.

edit: like our conflicts today were the bureaucratic obstacles to making a demonstration garden based around handicap accessibility, but we both agree about handicap accessibility and would love to make our spaces as inclusive as possible. The most radical things the Americans with Disabilities Act lawyers suggest are the ones we'll both happily incorporate and expand on. That's Star Trek shit.

[–] happybadger@hexbear.net 39 points 2 days ago (2 children)

I wouldn't be surprised at all if democrats took him back. He did the salute but they did the holocaust.

 

She worked for 25 years in private sector horticulture before joining the public sector. Her first business was trying to xeriscape in a region that had no clue what that meant and it failed hard, the same kind of contracting business I want to start on the side. While driving we both awkwardly danced around how much we both hate the specific lawns and ornamental beds we maintain for the same reasons. We both have the same biocentric waterwise landscaping philosophy.

I can just openly be an Eco-Marxist, openly call for the guillotining of the golfers we're surrounded by, and it's just whatever because everyone there intuitively gets it. Only good job I've ever had. wholesome

[–] happybadger@hexbear.net 20 points 2 days ago

Not at all surprised. Polis is the ultimate the-democrat, just three oil companies in a trench coat.

[–] happybadger@hexbear.net 43 points 2 days ago

I'm glad he spent 12 years doing that instead of being any other kind of crypto demon. Sure he almost risked violating all the pollution-mitigation efforts landfills take in an entirely new way to destroy the environment with crypto shit, but at least he wasted all of his money on that instead of something else. Hopefully it hurt.

[–] happybadger@hexbear.net 12 points 2 days ago (1 children)

They never suffer external consequences, but sometimes they dive too deep in a submarine they built.

[–] happybadger@hexbear.net 31 points 2 days ago (3 children)

I hope this escalates. Trump has the CIA/military/ICE goons, Musk has unlimited money and drug-fueled delusions. Please let either of them lose.

 

cross-posted from: https://rss.ponder.cat/post/199016

spoiler

Brian Armstrong, the billionaire CEO of the cryptocurrency exchange Coinbase, says he’s ready to fund a US startup focused on gene-editing human embryos. If he goes forward, it would be the first major commercial investment in one of medicine’s most fraught ideas.

In a post on X June 2, Armstrong announced he was looking for gene-editing scientists and bioinformatics specialists to form a founding team for an “embryo editing” effort targeting an unmet medical need, such as a genetic disease.

“I think the time is right for the defining company in the US to be built in this area,” Armstrong posted.

The announcement from a deep-pocketed backer is a striking shift for a field considered taboo following the 2018 birth of the world’s first genetically edited children in China—a secretive experiment that led to international outrage and prison time for the lead scientist.

According to Dieter Egli, a gene-editing scientist at Columbia University whose team has briefed Armstrong, his plans may be motivated in part by recent improvements in editing technology that have opened up a safer, more precise way to change the DNA of embryos.

That technique, called base editing, can deftly change a single DNA letter. Earlier methods, on the other hand, actually cut the double helix, damaging it and causing whole genes to disappear. “We know much better now what to do,” says Egli. “It doesn’t mean the work is all done, but it’s a very different game now—entirely different.”

Shoestring budget

Embryo editing, which ultimately aims to produce humans with genes tailored by design, is an idea that has been heavily stigmatized and starved of funding. It is illegal in much of the world and is effectively prohibited in the US.

American law forbids the Food and Drug Administration from considering, or even acknowledging, any application it gets to attempt a gene-edited baby. But that rule could be changed, especially if scientists can demonstrate a compelling use of the technique—or perhaps if a billionaire lobbies for it.

In his post, Armstrong included an image of a seven-year-old Pew Research Center poll showing Americans were strongly favorable to altering a baby’s genes if it could treat disease, although the same poll found most opposed experimentation on embryos.

Up until this point, no US company has openly pursued embryo editing, and the federal government doesn’t fund studies on embryos at all. Instead, research on gene editing in embryos has been carried forward in the US by just two academic centers, Egli’s and one at the Oregon Health & Science University.

Those efforts have operated on a shoestring, held together by private grants and university funds. Researchers at those centers said they support the idea of a well-financed company that could advance the technology. “We would honestly welcome that,” says Paula Amato, a fertility doctor at Oregon Health & Science University and the past president of the American Society for Reproductive Medicine.

“More research is needed, and that takes people and money,” she says, adding that she doesn’t mind if it comes from “tech bros.”

Editing embryos can, in theory, be used to correct genetic errors likely to cause serious childhood conditions. But since in most cases genetic testing of embryos can also be used to avoid those errors, most argue it will be hard to find an “unmet need” where the DNA-altering technique is actually necessary.

Instead, many scientists conclude that the bigger market for the technology would be to intervene in embryos in ways that could make humans resistant to common conditions, such as heart disease or Alzheimer’s. But that is more controversial because it’s a type of enhancement, and the changes would also be passed through the generations.

Only last week, several biotech trade and academic groups demanded a 10-year moratorium on heritable human genome editing, saying the technology has few real medical uses and “introduces long-term risks with unknown consequences.”

They said the ability to “program” desired traits or eliminate bad ones risked a new form of “eugenics,” one that would have the effect of “potentially altering the course of evolution.”

No limits

Armstrong did not reply to an email from MIT Technology Review seeking comment about his plans. Nor did his company Coinbase, a cryptocurrency trading platform that went public in 2021 and is the source of his fortune, estimated at $10 billion by Forbes.

The billionaire is already part of a wave of tech entrepreneurs who’ve made a splash in science and biology by laying down outsize investments, sometimes in far-out ideas. Armstrong previously cofounded New Limit, which Bloomberg calls a “life extension venture” and which this year raised a further $130 million to explore methods to reprogram old cells into an embryonic-like state.

He started that company with Blake Byers, an investor who has said a significant portion of global GDP should be spent on “immortality” research, including biotech approaches and ways of uploading human minds to computers.

Then, starting late last year, Armstrong began publicly telegraphing his interest in exploring a new venture, this time connected to assisted reproduction. In December, he announced on X that he and Byers were ready to meet with entrepreneurs working on “artificial wombs,” “embryo editing,” and “next-gen IVF.”

The post invited people to apply to attend an off-the-record dinner—a kind of forbidden-technologies soiree. Applicants had to fill in a Google form answering a few questions, including “What is something awesome you’ve built?”

Among those who attended the dinner was a postdoctoral fellow from Egli’s lab, Stepan Jerabek, who had led the base-editing research project. Another attendee, Lucas Harrington, is a gene-editing scientist who trained at the University of California, Berkeley under Jennifer Doudna, a winner of the Nobel Prize in chemistry for development of CRISPR gene editing. Harrington says a venture group he helps run, called SciFounders, is also considering starting an embryo-editing company.

“We share an interest in there being a company to empirically evaluate whether embryo editing can be done safely, and are actively exploring incubating a company to undertake this,” Harrington said in an email. “We believe there need to be legitimate scientists and clinicians working to safely evaluate this technology.”

Because of how rapidly gene editing is advancing, Harrington has also criticized bans and moratoria on the technology. These can’t stop it from being applied but, he says, can drive it into “the shadows,” where it might be used less safely. According to Harrington, “several biohacker groups have quietly raised small amounts of capital” to pursue the technology.

By contrast, Armstrong’s public declaration on X represents a more transparent approach. “It seems pretty serious now. They want to put something together,” says Egli, who hopes the Coinbase CEO might fund some research at his lab. “I think it’s very good he posted publicly, because you can feel the temperature, see what reaction you get, and you stimulate the public conversation.”

Editing error

The first reports that researchers were testing CRISPR on human embryos in the lab emerged from China in 2015, causing shock waves as it became clear how easy, in theory, it was to change human heredity. Two years later, in 2017, a report from Oregon claimed successful correction of a dangerous DNA mutation present in lab embryos made from patients’ egg and sperm cells.

But that breakthrough was not what it seemed. More careful testing by Egli and Oregon showed that CRISPR technology actually caused havoc in a cell, often deleting large chunks of chromosomes. That’s in addition to mosaicism, in which edits occur differently in different cells. What looked at first like precise DNA editing was in fact a dangerous process causing unseen damage.

While the public debate turned on the ethics of CRISPR babies—especially after three edited children were born in China—researchers were discussing basic scientific problems and how to solve them.

Since then, both US labs, as well as some in China, have switched to base editing. That method, in theory, could also endow an embryo with a number of advantageous gene variants, not just one change.

Company job

Some researchers also feel certain that editing an embryo is simpler than trying to treat sick adults. The only approved gene-editing treatment, for sickle-cell disease, costs more than $2 million. By contrast, editing an embryo could be incredibly cheap, and if it’s done early, when an embryo is forming, all the body cells could carry the change.

“You fix the text before you print the book,” says Egli. “It seems like a no-brainer.”

Still, gene editing isn’t quite ready for prime time in making babies. Getting there requires more work, including careful design of the editing system (which includes a protein and short guide molecule) and systematic ways to check embryos for unwanted DNA changes. That is the type of industrial effort Armstrong’s company, if he funds one, would be suited to carry out.

“You would have to optimize something to a point where it is perfect, to where it’s a breeze,” says Egli. “This is the kind of work that companies do.”


From MIT Technology Review via this RSS feed

wut

 

I'm working on an eco-Marxist book that's kind of broad in its scope. Organising that and finding the right ways to communicate the messages is very different from fiction writing I've done. Is there any go-to book about how to write a solidly dialectical materialistic, academic-level book or did any of the big theorists detail their own writing process?

[–] happybadger@hexbear.net 51 points 5 days ago (1 children)

iPad kids are going to seem so normal compared to kids raised by a hallucinating chatbot.

[–] happybadger@hexbear.net 1 points 5 days ago (1 children)

I'd still support any micromobility rental company over allowing any car into a city because it induces demand. However, sloppy implementation turns the public against them and leads to unnecessary restrictions instead of the regulations which would protect riders and encourage more pedestrian infrastructure. That technology should be introduced to the public as the much better option it is with as few incidents as possible before it reaches mass adoption. I don't want people thinking they're more dangerous or wasteful or inconvenient than the reality of comparing them to a car, but it's those incidents that reinforce that perception.

[–] happybadger@hexbear.net 40 points 5 days ago

China, stop shitting my pants. This has happened too many times. I wake up after a long night of drinking and my pants are full of your shit. It's disgusting and shameful.

 

Silicon Valley billionaires like Elon Musk say they’ll save the world with AI, Mars colonies and eternal life. Astrophysicist Adam Becker says they’re dead wrong.

Who is right — the billionaire or the scientist?

In this explosive interview on The Nerd Reich podcast Becker—author of More Everything Forever—calls out Elon Musk, Sam Altman, and the tech overlord cult pushing fantasies of immortality, godlike AGI, and space empires. From the myth of the singularity to the hellish reality of Mars, Becker brings the receipts and destroys the pseudo-science behind billionaire techno-utopianism.

[–] happybadger@hexbear.net 24 points 5 days ago

Behold, the least-demonic liberal.

9
submitted 6 days ago* (last edited 6 days ago) by happybadger@hexbear.net to c/music@hexbear.net
 

One of my favourite albums of all time. The violinist from The High Llamas brought a string ensemble to a mix of 70s funk/prog folk/blues/doo-wop/reggae.

[–] happybadger@hexbear.net 8 points 6 days ago

Showering is when you pee and poo while riding on a butt.

 

I saw it for the first time in a similarly intense storm last year and it was remarkable. It seems like it might be a stormy night locally but this could be your best viewing chance in a while. They have northern and southern hemispheric projections on that Space Watch website.

edit: Hot damn, it just reached the highest threshold I've seen in a year:

ALERT: Geomagnetic K-index of 8, 9-

Threshold Reached: 2025 Jun 01 1346 UTC

Synoptic Period: 1200-1500 UTC

Active Warning: Yes

NOAA Scale: G4 - Severe

NOAA Space Weather Scale descriptions can be found at

www.swpc.noaa.gov/noaa-scales-explanation

Potential Impacts: Area of impact primarily poleward of 45 degrees Geomagnetic Latitude.

Induced Currents - Possible widespread voltage control problems and some protective systems may mistakenly trip out key assets from the power grid. Induced pipeline currents intensify.

Spacecraft - Systems may experience surface charging; increased drag on low earth orbit satellites, and tracking and orientation problems may occur.

Navigation - Satellite navigation (GPS) degraded or inoperable for hours.

Radio - HF (high frequency) radio propagation sporadic or blacked out.

Aurora - Aurora may be seen as low as Alabama and northern California.

 

https://www.reddit.com/r/nursing/comments/1kznqn7/stanford_nurses_saving_lives_by_day_sleeping_in/

spoilerPALO ALTO, Calif. —

Emergency nurses at Stanford Hospital are choosing to sleep in vans between shifts. These nurses need to be on call and within a 30-minute drive of the hospital, but many can't afford to live nearby.

“I personally know at least 15 people sleeping in their vehicles," said TJ Carella, an emergency nurse. "But there are definitely more than that."

The cities surrounding Stanford Hospital are some of the most expensive in the state. Average home prices are over $3 million.

"No, absolutely not," Carella said, when asked if he could afford that.

He lives in Pleasanton, which is about an hour away. When he needs to be on-call, he sleeps in a retrofitted Sprinter van that has a bed, mini-fridge, a solar-powered generator and a composting toilet.

"I tried to make it as homey as possible," he said. "But it does feel weird. I have a master's degree. I work hard, but this is the reality."

Stanford does offer spare rooms for nurses, but Carella says it is not always guaranteed. He says sleeping in a van became the only reliable way he could do his job.

"We get woken up out of nowhere, and we half to be here in 30 minutes," he said. "We are often texting each other, trying to figure out where to park. Some of us have been ticketed a few times."

His union is currently negotiating a new contract with the hospital. Not only are they asking for an increase in wages, they want a change to their schedule so nurses like Carella can better plan when he is on call.

“We do have nurses who fly in from out of state, work their straight days and fly home," said Colleen Borges, the president of CRONA, Stanford's nurses' union. "It is virtually impossible for a new nurse to purchase a new home here in the Bay Area.”

In a statement, Stanford Medicine said:

“We deeply value our nurses and are committed to reaching an agreement on a contract that recognizes their vital contributions to our health care system.”

They also mentioned Stanford has a nurse retention rate that exceeds national standards. However, Carella says that retention rate won't last.

“In order for us to keep doing what we need to do, then there are some things that need to change," he said.

 

spoilerSen. Cory Booker has expanded upon his historic Senate floor speech from last month into an upcoming book.

“Stand” will be published Nov. 11, St. Martin’s Press announced Wednesday. In April, the New Jersey Democrat made headlines by delivering the country’s longest continuous Senate floor speech — just over 25 hours. The 56-year-old Booker spoke in opposition to numerous Trump administration policies, whether the desire to make Canada part of the United States or cuts to Social Security offices.

“This book is about the virtues vital to our success as a nation and lessons we can draw from generations of Americans who fought for them,” Booker said in a statement.

Booker’s speech broke a record set by Sen. Strom Thurmond of South Carolina, a segregationist and southern Democrat who opposed the advance of the Civil Rights Act of 1957, which eventually passed.

Booker was assisted by fellow Democrats who gave him a break from speaking by asking him questions on the Senate floor.

idk about you but i still clap when i listen to it on 2x speed. thank you sir

 

FULLY-anatomically correct, and I'm a professional method actor. I have my own car batteries if you want me to battle. Not one corporate retreat or wedding needs a serious Pikachu impersonator? Hit me up.

 

yea

 

I'm so fucking tempted but I could make four Sashatown mugs for that price.

 

https://daytonart.emuseum.com/objects/4869/snuff-bottle-with-stopper

https://www.reddit.com/r/ArtefactPorn/comments/1kvvn3q/snuff_bottle_shaped_like_corn_carved_out_of/

From the comments:

Maize was introduce to China in the middle of the 16th Century and spread pretty rapidly through the region. It appears to have been a major driver of the rapid population increase in the 1700s.

Alternatively from https://www.jstage.jst.go.jp/article/yakushi/125/7/125_7_583/_pdf

A certain Chinese herbal book presented to the emperor in 1505 shows a drawing of maize under the caption of Yiyi-ren (Job's Tears). Also, a Chinese poem written around 1368 contains a term yumi, which indicates maize. These new findings offer clear evidence that maize existed in China in the pre-Columbian era, or before 1492.

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