Roundtables: CRISPR Babies—Six years later
Available only for MIT Alumni and subscribers.
Recorded on July 25, 2024
CRISPR Babies: Six years later
Speakers: He Jiankui, CRISPR Pioneer, Antonio Regalado, senior editor for biomedicine, and Mat Honan, editor in chief
Gene editing can correct or improve the DNA of human embryos, essentially opening the door to "technological evolution" of our species. But in 2018, a premature attempt to use gene editing led to a prison term for He Jiankui, the researcher involved. Editor in chief Mat Honan and senior editor for biomedicine Antonio Regalado have a conversation with He Jiankui, biophysicist and creator of the first gene-edited humans, to revisit this controversial technology and the future of editing in IVF clinics.
Related Coverage
- EXCLUSIVE: Chinese scientists are creating CRISPR babies
- China’s CRISPR babies: Read exclusive excerpts from the unseen original research
- The creator of the CRISPR babies has been released from a Chinese prison
- Controversial CRISPR scientist promises “no more gene-edited babies” until society comes around <
Keep Reading
Most Popular
AI can now create a replica of your personality
A two-hour interview is enough to accurately capture your values and preferences, according to new research from Stanford and Google DeepMind.
This AI-generated version of Minecraft may represent the future of real-time video generation
The game was created from clips and keyboard inputs alone, as a demo for real-time interactive video generation.
Why AI could eat quantum computing’s lunch
Rapid advances in applying artificial intelligence to simulations in physics and chemistry have some people questioning whether we will even need quantum computers at all.
The 8 worst technology failures of 2024
Vertical farms, woke AI, and 23andMe made our annual list of failed tech.
Stay connected
Get the latest updates from
MIT Technology Review
Discover special offers, top stories, upcoming events, and more.