Home > News > Publishing Dangerous Ideas
June 30th, 2005
Publishing Dangerous Ideas
Abstract:
Chris Phoenix: Two Stanford researchers have written and published a paper suggesting that it would be easy for terrorists to injure or kill hundreds of thousands of people by putting botulism in our milk.
In a sense, this is playing a deadly serious game called "How smart are the terrorists?"
A few commentators on our blog have questioned whether CRN should be publicizing the detailed technical information that we do, explaining exactly why and how molecular manufacturing could lead to massively disruptive advances in technical capability. But talking about molecular manufacturing does not have the same potential short-term downside; no hostile power can act on the idea quickly. So we have more time for the contest of wits. And the key technical ideas were published more than a decade ago. Doing nothing is essentially guaranteed to lead to the implementation of the idea -- but without any chance to prepare for the impact of the technology.
Source:
Responsible Nanotechnology
Related News Press |
Preparing for Nano
Disruptive by Design: Nano Now February 1st, 2019
How nanoscience will improve our health and lives in the coming years: Targeted medicine deliveries and increased energy efficiency are just two of many ways October 26th, 2016
Searching for a nanotech self-organizing principle May 1st, 2016
The latest news from around the world, FREE | ||
Premium Products | ||
Only the news you want to read!
Learn More |
||
Full-service, expert consulting
Learn More |
||