This idea kind of rhymes with gain-of-function research in a way that makes me uncomfortable. “Let’s intentionally create harmful things, but its OK because we are creating harmful things for the purpose of preventing the harm that would be caused by those things.”
I’m not sure if I can formalize this into a logically-tight case against doing it, but it seems conceptually similar to X, and X is bad.
I think that the key difference is that in the case of profitable-but-bad technologies, someone, somewhere, will probably invent them because there’s great incentive to do so.
In the case of gain-of-function, if there stops being grants and the academics who do it become pariahs, then the incentive to do the gain-of-function research is gone.
This idea kind of rhymes with gain-of-function research in a way that makes me uncomfortable. “Let’s intentionally create harmful things, but its OK because we are creating harmful things for the purpose of preventing the harm that would be caused by those things.”
I’m not sure if I can formalize this into a logically-tight case against doing it, but it seems conceptually similar to X, and X is bad.
That’s fair enough and a good point.
I think that the key difference is that in the case of profitable-but-bad technologies, someone, somewhere, will probably invent them because there’s great incentive to do so.
In the case of gain-of-function, if there stops being grants and the academics who do it become pariahs, then the incentive to do the gain-of-function research is gone.