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Should Nanotech Be Regulated?

Memorize writes "Josh Wolfe writes an article in Forbes arguing that it is too early to regulate nanotech. Wolfe is worried that the 'green gang' (his term for environmentalists) are going to regulate nanotech out of existence before the technology even works in the lab. It seems like much of the discussion of nanotech is hype, including the potential benefits, such as immortality and the potential dangers such as grey goo. However, nanotech does hold some promise of environmental benefits such as cheap solar power. Are the risks real, and if so, is it worth the risk?" From the article: "There are rumblings that regulations are needed. They say they want to guarantee the safety of the technology and instill confidence in the general public."

403 comments

  1. Nanotech Inspector by MyLongNickName · · Score: 5, Funny

    I wanted to be a nanotech inspector, but I failed the eye exam.

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    1. Re:Nanotech Inspector by MyLongNickName · · Score: 4, Funny

      The moderators' sense of humor must qualify as nanotech...

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    2. Re:Nanotech Inspector by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I modded you down because you forgot to yell 'Frist Post!'

    3. Re:Nanotech Inspector by Wordsmith · · Score: 0

      Nano Nano!

  2. Nanotubes by Rei · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Well, given that CNTs seem to be a perfect size to get lodged in the lungs, I wouldn't want the industry to be exposing itself to an asbestos-style situation.

    --
    What a crazy random happenstance!
  3. Wide Societal Debate by ALeavitt · · Score: 4, Interesting

    From TFA:
    "There needs to be a wide societal debate informing and underpinning government decisions, and this can't be confined to technical issues alone. It would be a mistake to attempt to sideline this discussion to a group of experts..."

    Great thinking. Let's take the debate out of the hands of the people who know what they're talking about, and put it firmly in the hands of John Q. Public. "But I read a book about nanotechnology, and these swarms of tiny robots killed people. Won't somebody think of the children?"
    I'm not saying that it's a mistake to involve society at large in a matter like this, but experts' opinions are going to be the most well-informed, and therefore the most valuable. People who know nothing about nanotechnology except for the fact that a manufactured particle can damage the environment just don't know as much about the issue as people who have been studying nanotechnology for years. The public's opinion can easily be swayed by politicians with hidden agendas, and somehow I doubt that scientific advancement will win out against mass panic and sentimentalism. What we need are some honest, unbiased reports of the pros and cons of nanotechnology: where it's headed, how it could help us, how it could harm us, and what the cost will be. Instead we'll have a mob of people going off half-cocked and writing their senators because them thar robots are goin' take over, and you cain't even see 'um. Give authority to the people who have earned it; they're the ones who will know the right thing to do with it.

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    1. Re:Wide Societal Debate by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The fascinating thing is that the "green gang" seems to want to research the technology out of existance. Environmental impact studies of this and that. Millions of dollars to see what happens when a particle gets into your lungs, and so on.

      It's not like this is something new, we've been dealing with particulate pollution since before the beginning of the industrial age.

    2. Re:Wide Societal Debate by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      You mean, just like how genetically modified foods was handled?

      This stuff now pervades many aspects of our everyday eating habits, yet I can't find out about it, and I don't know the risks or benefits.

      The "people who know what they're talking about" are often people firmly entrenched in companies that are out to make a buck, and are possibly more than willing (as history has proven) to ignore potential dangers in that quest. Do you trust Monsanto to tell you the god's honest truth about GM foods?

      The biggest problem here was that there was next-to-no public debate about it. These companies are even resisting a requirement to label foods as GM foods! This is ridiculous! It eventually comes down to individual choice, so it makes more sense to get involved sooner rather than later.

      The more this is done under public scrutiny, the more we can verify that companies or special interest groups are not bribing or unduly influencing public officials. Or do you think it's a wise idea to have accounting crooks shaping national energy policies behind closed doors to suit their own motives?

    3. Re:Wide Societal Debate by anagama · · Score: 1

      • t's not like this is something new, we've been dealing with particulate pollution since before the beginning of the industrial age.

      We've been dealing with particulate polution a lot longer than that. Imagine the particulate levels inside a cave with a fire burning, or any other structure with a fire pit and a hole in the ceiling as a heating/cooking system. People have been affected by particulate polution all the way back to the romantic dawn of time (so to speak).
      --
      What changed under Obama? Nothing Good
    4. Re:Wide Societal Debate by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      The quote is not actually advocating taking the debate out of the hands of experts and putting it into the hands of anyone who feels like contributing. The quote is advocating bringing additional experts from other areas into the debate. In other words, as the quote states, the debate "can't be confined to technical issues alone", or even "to only focus on environmental and health issues". The quote is saying "let's look at this from all angles". It is not saying "let's let any moron decide and ignore the experts".

    5. Re:Wide Societal Debate by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Agreed. "A good decision is based on knowledge and not on numbers." -Socrates

    6. Re:Wide Societal Debate by WidescreenFreak · · Score: 4, Funny

      Or even worse ...

      "I saw that Star Trek episode where two nanites had sex and reproduced like rabbits! They had to shoot the computer! And then they, like, started talkin' and stuff, and that dude had to apologize.. Well, shit, I ain't wanna apologize to some sex-maniac robots who want to take over my computer! No way, man! None of this nanotechnology for me! I don't wanna shoot my 'puter neither!

      I saw it on TV, so it's gotta be true!"

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    7. Re:Wide Societal Debate by hey! · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Great thinking. Let's take the debate out of the hands of the people who know what they're talking about, and put it firmly in the hands of John Q. Public.

      I for one won't welcome our new technocratic overlords.

      People who know nothing about nanotechnology except for the fact that a manufactured particle can damage the environment just don't know as much about the issue as people who have been studying nanotechnology for years.

      True. But people who are promoters of the technology can't be entrusted with decsions that affect society as a whole either. Even "experts" in nanotechnology aren't necessarily experts in environmental impact. They aren't necessarily experts in human health. The problem when it comes to assessing widespread commercialization of a technology like this becomes interdisciplinary. Who will enforce that this debate takes place? Mr. Special Interest pushing against unwashed John Q. Public who is whipped into a frenzy by Snidely Politician, Esq.

      If you want a better system, do something for your local elementary school, shake, stir, then wait twenty years and hope things turn out beter.

      I'm not saying that it's a mistake to involve society at large in a matter like this, but experts' opinions are going to be the most well-informed, and therefore the most valuable.

      Well, I'm not sure what you propose then.

      The fact is, venal politicians will try to sieze on an issue one way or the other. The answer is not to discourage debate, but to encourage more of it. The power of the "opinion makers" to convince society of all kinds of malarkey doesn't come from vigorous public debate, but the lack of it.

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    8. Re:Wide Societal Debate by r4bb1t · · Score: 1

      "Give authority to the people who have earned it; they're the ones who will know the right thing to do with it."

      [sarcasm]Because we all know that those in authority have always earned it and are always best informed.[/sarcasm] I agree that for the most part the experts in the field will be the most well informed. What you do is have them write that "honest, unbiased reports of the pros and cons of nanotechnology" and then give that to John Q. Public to let him discuss the issue. You can't (well... shouldn't, I guess) get around asking John (at least in this country), since his tax dollars pay the bills of the senators/etc. that represent him.

      Besides, just because you are the technical authority on the matter doesn't then automatically make you the moral authority on the matter.

    9. Re:Wide Societal Debate by mthaddon · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Too right.

      "Leave the regulation to the industry who knows it best" - er, hello, conflict of interest anyone?

      I don't want to regulate new technology out of existence, but at the same time, I don't want lack of regulation allowing big corps to go ahead and do exactly what they want without any accountability and/or assessment of the risks.

      We're not talking about regulating scientists here, we're talking about regulating corporations.

    10. Re:Wide Societal Debate by EvilTwinSkippy · · Score: 3, Insightful
      Having trained as an engineer, I can tell you that every independent review system is designed to do preciesly that.

      Einstein once said "You don't really understand something until you can explain it to your grandmother."

      If the techies can't put it in layman's terms, they don't understand the material well enough themselves. And considering that the people who have to live in the world with this stuff ARE John and Jane Q. Public, if you don't want them showing up at your doorstep with pitchforks and torches, you need their buy in early.

      If a technology is safe and effective, consumer resistance is as long as their attention span. The technology will be used, it may just be 20 years later.

      --
      "Learning is not compulsory... neither is survival."
      --Dr.W.Edwards Deming
    11. Re:Wide Societal Debate by s20451 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Great thinking. Let's take the debate out of the hands of the people who know what they're talking about, and put it firmly in the hands of John Q. Public.

      You're missing the point. The debate is already in the hands of the masses, and is always in their hands. The largest source of funding for research is the government, and the government answers to the people, at least nominally. Furthermore, the public is ultimately going to pass judgement by either buying nanotech goods or boycotting them.

      People respond not to reason, but to intuition and impression. Just take the example of genetically modified foods. There are plenty of reasons to be both for and against these foods, but the lasting impression that most people have is of "frankenfoods", the label attached to them by environmental organizations. This is the first and only exposure that most people have with the debate, and simply by dominating the sound bites, the environmental movement has succeeded in making people queasy about it. (I won't say whether I think that's a good thing or not.)

      The main lesson here is that having good public relations matters more than winning debates and having sound science on your side. Nanotech scientists should learn this lesson well if they hope to have wide adoption of their products.

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    12. Re:Wide Societal Debate by s20451 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      When they were first testing nuclear bombs, scientist and Govt decided to go ahead, even though people as distinguished as Fermi at that time wondered whether a nuclear bomb would ignite the atmosphere

      To nitpick, it's pretty well known that almost every physicist who worked on the Manhattan project encountered the "atmospheric ignition" problem. Apparently it was considered a good exercise for the newbies to prove that it was not possible given what was known about the nuclear cross-sections and energies of atmospheric atoms. For example, see "The making of the atomic bomb" by Richard Rhodes.

      So the debate can be phrased better in terms of: what if there are unknown phenomena that could still lead to atmospheric ignition? This is not a trivial question. For example, the "Castle Bravo" nuclear test had a design yield of 6 megatons, but actually yielded 15 megatons due to an unforeseen fusion reaction involving lithium in the core. It ended up being the largest nuclear test ever performed by the United States, and ended up sickening and killing Japanese fishermen who accidentally saied through the fallout.

      Another problem is that it's very hard to put a percentage on the risk of an event which is by nature unknown, or that by nature is either true or false. We now know that the atmosphere didn't ignite (and that micro-organisms didn't come back from the moon, etc.), so to say there is a 1% chance is somewhat meaningless. It's like saying there is a 1% chance that God exists.

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    13. Re:Wide Societal Debate by Atzanteol · · Score: 1

      Let's take the debate out of the hands of the people who know what they're talking about, and put it firmly in the hands of John Q. Public

      If forget the exact quote or who said it, but it was something like "If you can't explain a concept in terms that anyone can understand, then you don't understand it yourself."

      And besides, letting only the priviledged 'knowledgeable' make these decisions is akin to an aristocracy. If It's going to effect my life, I want a say in it. It's up to those profesionals to explain it such that I can understand the issue.

      --
      "Ignorance more frequently begets confidence than does knowledge"

      - Charles Darwin
    14. Re:Wide Societal Debate by hesiod · · Score: 1

      > doesn't then automatically make you the moral authority on the matter.

      "Moral authority" doesn't enter into it. There is no (im)morality to be attached to this. It is science (supposedly) based on fact, not faith based on subjective views of right & wrong.

      All we really need to know from the technical authority (aside from the purpose) is if it will adversely affect anyone's health, and if it will work correctly. If it's harmless and works, then it is "good" and there should be no further debate about the ability to produce it.

      Where morality DOES apply is when individuals choose to misrepresent or lie about their findings. That's the potential problem here, IMO.

    15. Re:Wide Societal Debate by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      You can't find out about it? What, pray tell, is preventing you?

      If so, how would you know that it pervades our everyday lives? How do you know they have ignored potential dangers in the past? How did you know Monsanto was a large GM manufacturer?

      There are endless debates raging on GM foods. You're just too lazy to pay attention, and too lazy to find out about GM foods.

      I'd look for someone other than Greenpeace, they just flat out lie and spout FUD about GM food. They're even worse than the corporations. If you can find Penn and Teller's 'Bulls**t' show on GM foods, it's a shocking intro to the world of lying luddite greenies.

    16. Re:Wide Societal Debate by Mr.+Slippery · · Score: 1
      "Moral authority" doesn't enter into it. There is no (im)morality to be attached to this. It is science (supposedly) based on fact, not faith based on subjective views of right & wrong.

      If only it were that simple.

      The facts are rarely 100% clear, leading to some uncertainty. Even when the facts are 100% clear, usually what they are clear about is the amount of risk, not a simple safe/unsafe categorization.

      The question of how to deal with uncertainty and risk is very much an ethical one. How much risk do I have the right to subject you to?

      --
      Tom Swiss | the infamous tms | my blog
      You cannot wash away blood with blood
    17. Re:Wide Societal Debate by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The problem is, there are a wide number of 'experts' who still think that smokeing isn't bad for you, because of a little something call bias, which is a powerful thing. Here you are advocating that the only people who should be in on the debate about nanotechnology are the people who have invested significant parts of their lives and resorces developing it? Am I the only on that thinks this likely to lead to bias? Seriously, nano-tech isn't going to save the world, so who really cares if it's caught up in regulations for 10-20 years while people make sure it's safe. sheesh.

    18. Re:Wide Societal Debate by blooba · · Score: 1
      Clearly, "informing and underpinning" does not mean that it will, as you say, "take the debate out of the hands of the people who know what they're talking about." The premise of your argument is a non-sequitur.

      Anyway, ultimately, the debate must be a public one. Do you really want to give the final authority to a bunch of eggheads who spend all of their waking hours in a lab?

    19. Re:Wide Societal Debate by Luthair · · Score: 1

      I don't believe when people refer to experts that they're referring to people on the payroll.

      Food companies resist the GM label because the public hasn't really been informed about it and may have the impression all modified food is bad for you.

    20. Re:Wide Societal Debate by _Sharp'r_ · · Score: 3, Interesting

      See also a previous comment in another story for the perils of the government setting up a [whatever] to regulate nanotech.

      Better to not have any regulations at all then to let those who would break the regulations or who want to avoid competition in nanotech become the ones creating the regulations.

      --
      The party of stupid and the party of evil get together and do something both stupid and evil, then call it bipartisan.
    21. Re:Wide Societal Debate by TGK · · Score: 4, Insightful

      My wife is a political science graduate student researching the Codex (and I'm going to spell this wrong) Alamantarius, which is a International Regulatory group based out of Rome dealing with food safty standards. I've been helping her edit/research her thesis a bit, so I'm in a pretty decent position to comment on this.

      GM Foods - For starters, GM foods are more or less prevasive in the US right now. If you buy produce at a major supermarket, chances are 99% that it's a GM product. If it's marked "Organic" odds are that it's only partialy organic, more than likely also incorporating GM strains. Yes, that's not how it's supposed to be, but that's proving to be overwhelmingly the case.

      GM foods carry a lot of risks, though not as many to the 1st world population as you've probably been lead to beleive. There is evidence that US Beef may contribute to various forms of cancer (the EU brought this evidence to light in their case before the WTO on their argiculture subsidies) but that's not a GM issue so much as it being pumped full of antibiotics and sterroids.

      The real danger of GM foods is in the 3rd world (no longer an accecptable term, but a hell of a lot shorter than the real deal... and everyone knows what it means). Because GM foods are considered intelectual property, the seed stocks cost a great deal more than non-GM seed stocks. In many 3rd world countries, where 1st world corporations own a huge amount of the land, subsistance agriculture is no longer an option. In order to drive down food prices, 3rd world governments are forced to try to maximize production on non-agribuisness owned land. When offered GM crops that yeild 4-5x as much, they jump at the chance. Typicaly the first year's seed stock is free.

      Unfortunatly, Thermodynamics comes into play here. You can't just create 5x as much food from the same plant without takinx 5x as much out of the soil. Doing so depletes the soil, making it all but useless for non-GM products. You can use high end fertilizers, but these very high nitrogen compounds often damage plants that have not been specificly tailored to survive them (read GM plants).

      The trap is closed in year two. With feilds unable to sustain anything but GM products the faltering agricultural economy has no choice but to buy the seed stocks. Since they are IP, the stocks are priced well above those of normal seed stocks and are typicaly incapable of reproduction.

      And you wonder where famine comes from.

      In all honesty, the risks to you of eating a tomato grown with an extra tick skin to allow easier transport are fairly minimal... it just tases like crap. The real victims are the countries in which those tomatoes are grown to the exclusion of staple crops like corn and wheet so that you can have a Whopper meal (with tomato, lettuce, and pickles) for less than $5.00

      Of course, there are a few stocks of GM corn that made it into the human food supply that were never approved for human use, just cattle. God alone knows what's in that stuff. That, by the way, does reproduce... and today we've no idea what corn is natural and what is cattle GM.

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    22. Re:Wide Societal Debate by Jherek+Carnelian · · Score: 2, Funny

      If you want a better system, do something for your local elementary school, shake, stir, then wait twenty years and hope things turn out better.

      Or, just spray the local elementary school with brain-enhancer nanobots and let them do what they're good at!

    23. Re:Wide Societal Debate by hesiod · · Score: 1

      > People respond not to reason, but to intuition and impression. Just take the example of genetically modified foods.

      You need another 'i' word in there. Intimidation. The use of that stupid frankenshit is meant to scare people because they don't have any VALID reasons, so they use buzzwords instead. Not to mention the government intimidation used to pass LOOOOADS of unconstitutional laws.

    24. Re:Wide Societal Debate by OldAndSlow · · Score: 2, Insightful
      I'm not saying that it's a mistake to involve society at large in a matter like this, but experts' opinions are going to be the most well-informed, and therefore the most valuable.

      I guess you don't have a feel for the history of "expert's opinions" and where they lead: But the night of Dec. 2-3, 1949, was cloudier than expected, and the winds kept shifting. Calculations were off, and almost 8,000 curies of iodine 131 were released. And soon afterward, rain and snow came to force the iodine particles down all over the inland Northwest. One follow-up iodine 131 reading on vegetation in Kennewick was almost 1,000 times the limit set at that time. link

      Experts are in love with their cool new field. Experts are human. Experts will almost always exagerate the benefits and minimize the harm that their work will bring. Not evil, just human.

      But experts are not to be trusted.

    25. Re:Wide Societal Debate by ShieldW0lf · · Score: 1

      First up, moral authority does enter into it, because this is not just theoretical science, it is also technological application. Investing effort into the development of technology based on science does require a moral decision. It's not a matter of building it then determining if it's safe, it's a matter of estimating the risks and social consequence involved in building it in the first place.

      Example? Investigating biology doesn't require a moral decision presuming that you do no harm in your research and create nothing new that could propagate. But investing efforts in applying biological science to the areas of virus based vaccinations, genetically modified foods and germ warfare do require moral decisions.

      Secondly, morality doesn't have anything to do with religion or faith. Read up on some philosophy some time. Those who surrender their moral decisions to someone else such as a religious or political leader are not moral people. They may or may act in a moral fashion, but if they don't decide for themselves if the actions are moral or not then the final morality of their actions amounts to more of a coincidence.

      Understanding, investigation, logic and a consideration of the ramifications of an action on the individual and the environment the live in are prereq for moral decision making. Religious faith destroys the capacity for morality. Please don't propagate the lie.

      --
      -1 Uncomfortable Truth
    26. Re:Wide Societal Debate by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Einstein once said "You don't really understand something until you can explain it to your grandmother."

      If the techies can't put it in layman's terms, they don't understand the material well enough themselves.


      Sounds good but if the FDA followed this policy you wouldn't even have Panadol.

    27. Re:Wide Societal Debate by Tassach · · Score: 1
      If the techies can't put it in layman's terms, they don't understand the material well enough themselves
      That's BS, to a certian extent. Sure, you can take a highly technical subject and present a SUMMARY of the general concept in layman's terms. However, the knowledge imparted this way does not give the layperson a sufficient understanding of the subject to make informed decisions about it, or for them to understand all the implications.

      To make an analogy, I can easily explain driving to my 7-year-old in terms she can understand: "this pedal makes the car go faster, this pedal makes it stop, this wheel makes it turn" and so forth.

      However, having heard this watered-down summary of how to drive does not enable her to operate a motor vehicle safely, nor or does it give her the knowledge to make informed decisions to questions like "is it safe to change lanes now, or should I let that truck pass me first?"

      --
      Why is it that the proponents of "one nation under God" are so eager to get rid of "liberty and justice for all"?
    28. Re:Wide Societal Debate by LaCosaNostradamus · · Score: 1

      What we need are some honest, unbiased reports of the pros and cons of nanotechnology: where it's headed, how it could help us, how it could harm us, and what the cost will be.

      I agree. Of course, having been informed, the rest of us "society at large" will ultimately decide how to regulate nanotech by our use of the vote and through elected representatives. The ultimate right (voting) should follow from the ultimate responsibility (being informed).

      --
      [You have a stable society when some nut guns down a schoolyard and the law doesn't change.]
    29. Re:Wide Societal Debate by LaCosaNostradamus · · Score: 1

      The problem with "experts" is that they're often "on the payroll" from some partisan interest in the debate at hand. Too many of the experts involved in things like nanotech are at least taking "partnership" grant money from corporations. How am I expected to trust their results? After all, we've seen some rather high-profile data falsification cases in the last decade.

      --
      [You have a stable society when some nut guns down a schoolyard and the law doesn't change.]
    30. Re:Wide Societal Debate by glyn.phillips · · Score: 1

      Nothing kills a technology faster than irrational public fear. Test results are irrelevant. Safety analysis is futile. Prepare to be buried.

      The "people who know what they're talking about" are often people firmly entrenched in companies that are out to make a buck, and are possibly more than willing (as history has proven) to ignore potential dangers in that quest.

      The same can be said of the aviation industry. I have worked in the aviation industry for more than twenty years and I have never seen a safety decision go the wrong way. There are good reasons for this:

      1. The managers would rather spend millions making sure a product is safe than risk the damage to the company's reputation. It is hard to sell a product that people don't trust.

      2. The potential cost of product liability suits and judgments is big enough to justify a lot of expense to be as sure as possible they won't happen.

      3. Every employee was aware that sooner or later either the employee himself or a close family member would be flying on one of the airplanes we were building.

      Don't be so quick to assume that companies are only interested in a quick buck. Companies consist of employees who do not want themselves or anyone else to get hurt.

    31. Re:Wide Societal Debate by EvilTwinSkippy · · Score: 2, Insightful
      So you consider everyone without technical knowledge to have the intellectual and emotional development of 7 year old? Newpapers are written at a 5th grade reading level, so they at least assume your are 10 years old.

      Laymans terms. Will this crap give me cancer (or at least any more than anything else I use)? If this stuff leaks into the environment, what will happen? If a shipment of this stuff spills on the freeway, can you clean it up with a hose, or do you need the guys in MOP suits? What would happen if my toddler swallows the stuff? How long can I store it on the shelf? Can I throw it out with my regular garbage.

      If you can't answer these basic questions, you are worthless as an engineer.

      --
      "Learning is not compulsory... neither is survival."
      --Dr.W.Edwards Deming
    32. Re:Wide Societal Debate by d34thm0nk3y · · Score: 1

      You can't find out about it? What, pray tell, is preventing you?

      Go into a grocery store and visit the produce section. Which produce is genetically modified and which is not? I personally have no problem with GM food, but there is no legitimate reason to not label it properly.

    33. Re:Wide Societal Debate by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >What we need are some honest, unbiased reports of the pros and cons of nanotechnology

      I agree that opinions of pros will be valuable. However, I do not understand how opinions of cons will be useful for us. Will the cons be required to be felons, or will a simple misdemeanor do?

    34. Re:Wide Societal Debate by budgenator · · Score: 1

      I thought that would have been SG1; but anyways when they manage to put a pentium4 with centrino wireless technology on a DNA strand we'll be seriously screwed.

      --
      Apocalypse Cancelled, Sorry, No Ticket Refunds
    35. Re:Wide Societal Debate by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So there's no danger at all except to idiot 3rd world countries. No wonder no one gives a damn around here.

    36. Re:Wide Societal Debate by ShieldW0lf · · Score: 1

      Governments aren't allowed to require it to be labeled, at least in North America. NAFTA forbids it. It is considered a barrier to trade, and if any government, (municipal, state/provincial or federal) were to attempt to introduce such legislation, the companies that sell GM food would sue the hell out of them and win. Democracy is dead. Welcome to Planet Starbucks.

      --
      -1 Uncomfortable Truth
    37. Re:Wide Societal Debate by jessecurry · · Score: 1

      Although I loved Prey I hope that our nanontech regulations aren't made by a bunch of people who read it and used it as their definitive source for nanotech info.

      --
      Those who know, do not speak. Those who speak, do not know. ~Lao Tzu
    38. Re:Wide Societal Debate by radtea · · Score: 1


      And you wonder where famine comes from.

      We know where famine comes from. In the past century it came exclusively from governments using control of the food supply as a weapon. The famine in Darfur is the most recent example of this.

      The problem of landless small farmers in the developing world is real. So is the problem of GM crops that get loose. And Monsanto is pretty much the incarnation of evil. But any account of the looming GM disaster that leaves the deep complicity of governments out of the picture is radically incomplete.

      --Tom

      --
      Blasphemy is a human right. Blasphemophobia kills.
    39. Re:Wide Societal Debate by ramblin+billy · · Score: 1


      BRAVO!

      Did you notice that the article used as the basis for this story was written by Josh Wolfe, who manages an investment portfolio called "Nanosphere"? Did you notice the "Special Offer" to "Get in on the ground floor of a growth industry still in its infancy"? Personally, Forbes Magazine is not my first instinct when I go looking for scientific and technological information. Wolfe uses reasonable arguments to back his opinions but quotes the most extreme views as examples of opposing opinions. His agenda is as transparent as the predominance of advertising on the page. After searching and reading several other nanotech papers, including the EU's 'Towards a European Strategy for Nanotechnology' it seems to me that the emphasis is placed more on the possibility of economic benefits than possible hazards. I don't think we have to look too hard to find examples of industries which place economic benefit over scientific reality and consequences to the environment. Suggesting that current regulations are adequate is suggesting that we are doing a good job of regulating the existing industries. Take a good, deep breath in any major city in America and THEN tell me that with a straight face. My God, isn't it obvious we need a better way?

      Unfortunately we are victims of our own stupidity. We HAVE the government we deserve - Bush got reelected for Christ's sake - literally! If the American people are too dumb or lazy to recognize that the bright light shining out of Washington is the proctologist making sure the coast is still clear then they deserve to choke on Bucky balls. Too bad it's our kids who may have to pay the price.

      billy - maybe I can stop the nanobots with all that duct tape I've got stashed in the basement

    40. Re:Wide Societal Debate by budgenator · · Score: 1

      whether a nuclear bomb would ignite the atmosphere
      it does, they called nitrous oxide emmisions, hell even your regular bombs do it, even your car does it.

      --
      Apocalypse Cancelled, Sorry, No Ticket Refunds
    41. Re:Wide Societal Debate by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      And the obvious counter example is the tobacco industry ...

    42. Re:Wide Societal Debate by ikkonoishi · · Score: 1

      Labeling would be redundant.

      ALL food is GM.

      Its called thousands of years of selective breeding.

      Genetic alteration is just a more efficient method of what we already did.

    43. Re:Wide Societal Debate by ikkonoishi · · Score: 1

      *breaths in*

      Ahhhh...

      I don't see your problem. Regulation has been doing a great job of controlling air quality, and it will only get better from here. We are currently right around the peak of pollution production. Once China is finished with its industrial revolution pollution will no longer be a global problem.

      Nanotech will actually help in this regard. Filters made of carbon nanotubes placed over smoke stacks could catch pretty much all particulate matter. Also if nanofacturing really takes off using diamandoid materials then carbon will become a valuable commodity, thus further reducing all sorts of pollution.

      Generally the speed of human innovation overwhelms most long-term problems once we are aware of them.

    44. Re:Wide Societal Debate by ikkonoishi · · Score: 1

      Yeah I don't want to have to wear a 200 pound heat sink on my head.

    45. Re:Wide Societal Debate by Kirth · · Score: 1

      You mean, just like how genetically modified foods was handled?

      If you give 'em the means to monopolize it, they will spread all around, sueing you for the damage they did.

      Because you violated their patents by letting your garden run over with their genetically modified plants/grey goo.

      --
      "The more prohibitions there are, The poorer the people will be" -- Lao Tse
    46. Re:Wide Societal Debate by lgw · · Score: 1

      Very poor reasoning (aside from the fact the whole thing is a urban myth). Better a 100% chance of destroying all humanity that to let Hitler win. There are fates worse than death.

      Anyway, there should be some sort of vaguely credible scientific evidence that nanotech could possibly be harmful before we talk about regulating it. To date, there's no such evidence. People are afraid of some fantasy world where nanotech means tiny little machines that assemble atoms into molecules, but that sort of nanotech only exists in SF books, and should not be a basis for regulation.

      At the point where some sort of nanotech moves from research to development, and specific products can be talked about, part of that discussion should be the safety hazards of the product. If it's a product that doesn't already fall with the purview of the FDA, *then* we'll have a reason to talk about new sorts of regulation.

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    47. Re:Wide Societal Debate by lgw · · Score: 1

      This is a damn good point. Irradiated food was one of the best technological breakthoughs of the past century, and it went undeveloped because of our superstitious fear of "nukular". A massive PR campaign there would have been quite helpful.

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    48. Re:Wide Societal Debate by bperkins · · Score: 1

      Of course, there are a few stocks of GM corn that made it into the human food supply that were never approved for human use, just cattle.

      You're talking about starlink.

      God knows, but so does the EPA:
      From: http://www.ncseonline.org/nle/crsreports/agricultu re/ag-101.cfm

      "The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) approved the gene-spliced variety of yellow corn in 1998 for use only as animal feed and set a zero-tolerance level for its use in human food based on the fact that this particular Bt protein does not break down easily in the human digestive system."

      Starlink was banned from human consumption due to a _specific_ compound that was considered to likely be alergenic.

      Your ranting sounds hysterical, and you give no references.

    49. Re:Wide Societal Debate by CustomDesigned · · Score: 1
      If this stuff leaks into the environment, what will happen?

      One thing that has always irked me about Sucralose proponents, is that after assuring me that (almost?!) all of the stuff goes right through your system, they only have blank stares when I ask what effect all that Sucralose getting flushed down millions of toilets is going to have. Anyone have a pointer to even a premininary study on the environmental half life of the stuff, and maybe add some to a pond to see if anything happens?

    50. Re:Wide Societal Debate by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yup, Good 'ole Monsanto!

      My wife's Grandfather worked for them during the Manhatten project. Most people don't know that they were involved. Anyway, they let their workers work completely unprotected during the whole project when they were working with parts that were emmitting radiation. Needless to say all the laborers came down with cancer of one weird form or another but usually thyroid, lung, or esophagul. MANY years later, after everyone died off, there was a class-action suit and they paid up and the amount was a pittance - like $50k.

      Let's see, 50k for your life - good deal! Anyhow, as usual, no admittance of guilt was one of the stipulations.

      Yeah, I trust big business to do the right thing - NOT!

      let's see,

      * Intel with their forcing OEMs to sell only their chips,

      * MS with their similar dealings and putting 3rd party software companies out of business by rolling it into their distro and calling it "essential",
      * Enron (&*^$#),

      * Monsanto

      and my cousin wants to know why I don't trust big-business - GO FIGURE.

      This won't get fixed until we hold CEOs responsible. Here's my idea - if someone dies by their hand intentionally or not and it can be proven that it was due to greed then they should go to jail as if it was murder and become a bend-over buddy and given a name like Alice. They should be stripped of all the cash that they made during their tenure and that includes the off-shore accounts too!

      Look, Martha was guilty and she served her time for it BUT what about all the other #$^$ers?! Why was SHE made the example?

    51. Re:Wide Societal Debate by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No amount of selective breeding would insert genes from a pig into a tomato.

    52. Re:Wide Societal Debate by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is stupid.

      It wasn't stated that it was impossible to get any information about GM in general, but rather that it is impossible to find out which items are GM and which are not, or which components in a multi-food compound are GM.

      As it is, it's too late since now almost everything is GM and labeling is redundant. However, perhaps labeling at the time would have ensured a more rigorous safety evaluation rather than companies shoving this through without the consumer's explicit knowledge.

      The argument of "you're too lazy" is also a stupid argument. This falls back to the "if you plan on doing X you should spend the time to do adequate research on it". If I followed that argument for banking, food research, exercise, the contractor working on my house, the mechanic working on my car, the administration of my computer, the air quality of my neighbourhood ... well, shit, I'd have to quit my job.

      Clearly the GP knew a bit about it, but was stymied by the lack of openness and transparency. Or perhaps govts should be elected behind closed doors; you could find out the vote results but you'd have to spend several weeks researching the results, and wade through piles of contradictory propaganda garbage.

    53. Re:Wide Societal Debate by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As a word of advice ...

      you should distrust both about equally.

      And if your only option is to believe either one of the extremes, let me introduce you to the spectrum in between.

    54. Re:Wide Societal Debate by ikkonoishi · · Score: 1

      I'm sure it could be done eventually. It would take a long time and a lot of effort though.

    55. Re:Wide Societal Debate by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting
      Thermodynamics comes into play here. You can't just create 5x as much food from the same plant without takinx 5x as much out of the soil. Doing so depletes the soil, making it all but useless for non-GM products. You can use high end fertilizers, but these very high nitrogen compounds often damage plants that have not been specificly tailored to survive them (read GM plants).
      What if the crops are more solar efficient so they don't use more nitrogen, they are just better at photosynthesis ? Maybe it's worse too and it actually requires more nitrogen from the soil, I don't know and I'm not googling to find out. I'm just saying I'm not convinced.
    56. Re:Wide Societal Debate by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      At which point do you believe the pig would fertilize the tomato?

    57. Re:Wide Societal Debate by hesiod · · Score: 1

      > usually what they are clear about is the amount of risk, not a simple safe/unsafe categorization.

      Of course, but that still does not mean there is any morailty attached to it unless someone chooses to put it there falsely. Weighing pros and cons is NOT what morality means. Taking Pros vs. Cons, seeing which is more desireable for the general populace (barring something extreme, like "we'll wipe out California & the rest of us will live like kings"), etc, are legal issues, not moral issues.

      > The question of how to deal with uncertainty and risk is very much an ethical one. How much risk do I have the right to subject you to?

      No, it's not an ethical issue unless you intentionally put someone else at risk. If there is no risk, there's no ethical question (also, "ethics" and "morals" are very different things, but that's another matter).

    58. Re:Wide Societal Debate by hesiod · · Score: 1

      > it's a matter of estimating the risks and social consequence involved in building it in the first place.

      Everything has risks. Walking outside carries a risk with it. That's what a LEGAL authority does, not a moral authority.

      The LEGAL authorities are the ones who weigh risks and decide what is best for the people. A MORAL authority tells you that certain things are wrong because they fall under an arbitrary heading of "morally wrong." That includes stuff like sex, drugs, etc and includes things that are both illegal and COMPLETELY LEGAL.

      We do not care about the morality of nanotech, we want to know whether it should be LEGAL* or not! And how do we find out? Researching it.
      * For sale to regular citizens for everyday use

      > Those who surrender their moral decisions to someone else such as a religious or political leader are not moral people.

      (I can't believe I'm about to make this argument, because I am "devoutly" Atheist, and even insult Christians whenever I can)

      So anyone who follows the Ten Commandments, whether written by God or Moses, is not moral simply because they chose to follow someone else's description of it?

      > they don't decide for themselves if the actions are moral or not

      A big problem with that is that if they choose someone to follow, that is their choice of morality. Their basic idea of morality happens to coincide with someone else who is smarter than them, so they use that person as a role model.

      Would you say that someone who believes in General Relativity is lacking scientific thought just because they didn't write it themselves?

      > Please don't propagate the lie.

      Believe me, I'm about the last one to support the intricate con called religion. Of course, belief might lead to faith. ;)

  4. Wow by TheKidWho · · Score: 0

    People really tend to over exagerate the problems with new technologies. By now we should have had multiple nuclear wars, would have extreme shortages of food, would have way too large of a population, would be all dying from pollution, would no thave enough oxygen to breathe from all the trees we cut down, blah blah blah.

    Gimme a break folks and do your science.

    1. Re:Wow by Ironsides · · Score: 1

      Don't forget that either we should be suffering from another global ice age with everyone under ice, or drowning under 300 feet of water.

      --
      Fly me to the moon Let me sing among those stars Let me see what spring is like On jupiter and mars
    2. Re:Wow by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yea, just ask the Japanese, or the Allies in the trenches of WW1.

      JK

    3. Re:Wow by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If the potential problems hadn't been exagerated, they could easily have come true in many cases. Raising warnings like that draws attention to potential issues so the risks can be minimized.

      Attempting to regulate due to such extreme concerns isn't the answer.

    4. Re:Wow by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'd rather be over-cautious than under-cautious.

    5. Re:Wow by foobsr · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Gimme a break folks and do your science.

      By now we should have had multiple nuclear wars

      The worst case scenario was "nuclear winter" which implied one game only.

      would have extreme shortages of food

      Developing Countries ...

      # 815 million people are undernourished
      # 1.2 billion people live on less than $1/day
      # 153 million children under age 5 are underweight
      * 11 million children under age 5 die every year, over half of hunger-related causes
      # 1 in 6 people is hungry
      # 1 in 4 people lacks safe drinking water

      would be all dying from pollution

      Europe's children dying from pollution

      would no thave enough oxygen to breathe

      Decreased oxygen content in the atmosphere--an ecological disaster imperceptibly sneaking up?

      Gimme a break folks and do your science.

      Well.

      CC.

      --
      TaijiQuan (Huang, 5 loosenings)
    6. Re:Wow by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      People really tend to over exagerate the problems with new technologies. By now we should have had multiple nuclear wars, would have extreme shortages of food, would have way too large of a population, would be all dying from pollution, would no thave enough oxygen to breathe from all the trees we cut down, blah blah blah.

      Umm all these things have come true to an extent. Nuclear fallout from both WWII and nuclear energy plants as well as weapons testing has destroyed huge land masses.

      Extreme food shortages exists toady in many parts of the world. (although obviously not your parents basement). People are starving to death every day.

      The population is "way to large" in many parts of the world driving people to live with poor air quality and stacked like sardines. Look at the living situation in Tokyo for example.

      Air pollution wipes out numerous species every year. Eventually the biological effects of this will be felt as the damage moves up the food chain.

      Look at Mexico city and LA for example. People are getting sick from just breathing. I think the deforestation and damage it causes is in full effect.

      There is no need to wait until doomsday to realize we need to make changes. If we do then at that point it will be too late.

    7. Re:Wow by hedge_death_shootout · · Score: 2, Insightful

      [litany of negative stats on nutrition]

      Some other stats:

      * Since late 50's, the price of food has fallen by two thirds.
      * Since '60, average calories per day in the *developing* world has risen by 40 odd percent.
      * Proportion of starving people has fallen in all continents since the 70's. Varies per region and the worst is Subsaharan Africa where it's only fallen 7-ish percent.
      * Proportion of undernourished children in the developing world has fallen from 40 to 30% in the last 15 years and is expected to fall further.

      And this all when:
      * Population has doubled since 1960.

      So it's unacceptable, but getting better, contrary to what some might have you believe.

      Of course we could all go 'organic' and starve billions if we wanted to.

    8. Re:Wow by markov_chain · · Score: 1

      Extreme food shortages exists toady in many parts of the world. (although obviously not your parents basement). People are starving to death every day.

      Maybe so, but not because of environmental damage.

      --
      Tsunami -- You can't bring a good wave down!
    9. Re:Wow by Eternally+optimistic · · Score: 1

      And regulating nanotechnology helps this? What's with the $1/day, I know it is a conveninently scary number to keep repeating, but it doesn't have any meaning.

      --
      What keeps me going is my inertia.
    10. Re:Wow by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Some other stats:

      * Since late 50's, the price of food has fallen by two thirds.
      * Since '60, average calories per day in the *developing* world has risen by 40 odd percent.
      * Proportion of starving people has fallen in all continents since the 70's. Varies per region and the worst is Subsaharan Africa where it's only fallen 7-ish percent.
      * Proportion of undernourished children in the developing world has fallen from 40 to 30% in the last 15 years and is expected to fall further.

      And this all when:
      * Population has doubled since 1960.

      If you are going to quote statistics, please do us the courtesy of providing sources for your information (as the parent did).
    11. Re:Wow by bcattwoo · · Score: 1

      What do any of these have to do with new technologies? I guess the nuclear weapons one would qualify, but the continued existence of the human race has more to do with levelheaded diplomacy than an overaggeration of their destructive potential. All the rest of them pretty much relate to the earth's booming population in one way or another. Even the negative population growth promoting wackos would probably prefer to see that stemmed through less procreation rather than eliminating life preserving technologies.

    12. Re:Wow by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I believe anyone who thinks that the danger of nuclear war is not-significant needs to do her history. Really, how many times have we almost been wiped off the face of the earth by our own governments? I mean, the cuban missle crisis is the obvious 'we were an hour from the end of the world' senerio, but I think we have had some others too. . . . Really, large firballs that flatten cities are bad for your health. I know it sounds extreimist, but believe me, we don't want to be nuked.

    13. Re:Wow by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Uhmmmm... Really? Shall we tell that to the people in north vietnam, or the people being run over by the sahara desert? or may be the palistians who have no water because their aquafer misteriously disapeared. . . . Yes, the world is fine, nothing is ruined.

    14. Re:Wow by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      # 815 million people are undernourished
      # 1.2 billion people live on less than $1/day

      ergo:

      385+ million people live on less than $1/day and not starve

      or

      let's use calories instead of dollars, ok?

    15. Re:Wow by pipingguy · · Score: 1


      # 815 million people are undernourished
      * 11 million children under age 5 die every year, over half of hunger-related causes
      # 1 in 6 people is hungry
      # 1 in 4 people lacks safe drinking water


      Are the solutions to these problems social, technological or political?

    16. Re:Wow by deimtee · · Score: 1

      yes.

      --
      I'm guessing that wasn't on their radar screen...
  5. Regulation by jmartens · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The problem with regulation of nearly anything is it only stops honest people. Usually, the people that weren't going to do anything wrong in the first place.

    --
    Now that's a death ray!
    1. Re:Regulation by ackthpt · · Score: 2, Interesting
      The problem with regulation of nearly anything is it only stops honest people. Usually, the people that weren't going to do anything wrong in the first place.

      You also have to question the legitimacy and intentions of the regulators, as he's alluding to, sort of. In the broad sense, everyone is entitled to it. Better to allow everyone to have the stuff and treat them fairly, than withhold it and waste intelligence resources (and more) trying to stem its spread.

      --

      A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
    2. Re:Regulation by EvilTwinSkippy · · Score: 2, Insightful
      No. Regulation means that everyone is bound by the same rules, and there is not "profit motive" for taking the low road. We have regulations on child labor so it does not become the model of efficiency. We have regulations on dumping so that piles of trash are not models of efficiency.

      Regulations keep everyone honest. How? Because entreprenuers are REALLY good at knowing what is in the rules and not in the rules. And there is no rule about X (no matter how morally repugnant), and if X means bigger profits, do X with abandon.

      Engineers do the same with the laws of physics. Things like refrideration and the haber process exploit loopholes in thermodynamics and chemistry.

      --
      "Learning is not compulsory... neither is survival."
      --Dr.W.Edwards Deming
    3. Re:Regulation by EvilTwinSkippy · · Score: 1
      The problem with regulation of nearly anything is it only stops honest people.

      No the problem with regulation is that it keeps everyone honest. If there is not rule, it's never wrong to break it.

      --
      "Learning is not compulsory... neither is survival."
      --Dr.W.Edwards Deming
    4. Re:Regulation by utexaspunk · · Score: 1

      without regulation, you have no legal recourse against the dishonest people. sure, an honest person would never release harmful nanotech particles into the environment, but we know that not everyone is honest, and if we don't have laws against it the dishonest ones cannot be held responsible for their behavior.

    5. Re:Regulation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why is this maked as insightful? We can't pass laws cause people will break them? Ok, fine, I'm going to go steal a car now. Screw you all.

    6. Re:Regulation by hesiod · · Score: 1

      > loopholes in thermodynamics and chemistry.

      Uuuh... can you explain to me how laws of nature have loopholes? WRT science, if you can "get away with" something, it wasn't "against the rules" to begin with.

    7. Re:Regulation by EvilTwinSkippy · · Score: 1
      We manipulate the compression, liquification, and evaporation process of a gas to pump heat from one area to another. That doesn't happen in nature. It requires a rather complex differential equation to describe properly.

      If it requires a higher math than algebra, it's magic to the general public.

      The Haber process achieves the impossible in nature. We take N2 in a stable form, and get it to break "up" into a less stable form through a set of energy reactions and feedback loops.

      Again, it requires a complex set of differential equations to describe properly. (See Above.)

      In nature you can't make "cold", and in chemistry you can't get a molecule to go from a stable form to a less stable form. Ergo, loopholes.

      --
      "Learning is not compulsory... neither is survival."
      --Dr.W.Edwards Deming
    8. Re:Regulation by GileadGreene · · Score: 1

      Well, apparently you can "make cold", and get chemicals to move from stable to less-stable forms. You've just described two processes that do it. Have we observed them in "nature"? Not to my (limited) knowledge. Does that mean they're not possible in nature? No. Otherwise they wouldn't be possible for humans either. Natural "laws" don't have "loopholes".

    9. Re:Regulation by EvilTwinSkippy · · Score: 1
      On that note, geologists have found a naturally occuring nuclear reactor on Gabon Africa.

      Linq

      Back on the subject, the two processes are special because they would never have been discovered until someone played around with numbers in the theoretical domain. The processes are non-obvious. In fact, both only work inside of a very small envelope of conditions.

      Someone didn't tinker with a device an BAM out came a refriderator. Someone actually looked at the equations and realized "hey wait a minute". And 50 years of R&D later people were installing the damn thing in their kitchen.

      That's magic to me. And I DO grok the math.

      --
      "Learning is not compulsory... neither is survival."
      --Dr.W.Edwards Deming
    10. Re:Regulation by hesiod · · Score: 1

      > We take N2 in a stable form, and get it to break "up" into a less stable form through a set of energy reactions and feedback loops.

      How do you know that this doesn't happen on Jupiter, in a pond of Nitrogen? You don't. What you have descibed is humanity taking things out of their natural Earth-borne state. Most of what you have described (the part I understand at least) could technically be possible on another planet without humans.

      But the big mistake, IMO is thinking that humans are not part of nature or even so far removed from it that we can break it somehow.

    11. Re:Regulation by GileadGreene · · Score: 1

      It may well be "magic" to you. But that in no way, shape, or form makes it a "loophole" in the laws of nature.

    12. Re:Regulation by EvilTwinSkippy · · Score: 1
      You just want the last word in this thread. Don't you?

      I'll bet you don't even understand the engineering principles you are trying to start an argument about. I do. You don't. It's magic to you.

      --
      "Learning is not compulsory... neither is survival."
      --Dr.W.Edwards Deming
    13. Re:Regulation by GileadGreene · · Score: 1

      Given that I am, by training and profession, an engineer, I'm fairly confident that I understand the engineering principles involved. The whole point of engineering is to find ways to use the laws of nature to do things we couldn't do before (not things that "aren't possible in nature" - if they're not possible, they can't be done at all). It doesn't involve "loopholes" in the laws - no magic there - it involves truly understanding what those laws are, what their full consequences are, and how they interact with each other. That is my last word on this thread.

  6. Yes. by Seumas · · Score: 3, Funny

    In America, everything should be regulated. What are you - some sort of godlesss pink commie?

    1. Re:Yes. by Clay+Pigeon+-TPF-VS- · · Score: 1

      Wanting the anarchic panopticon as you do makes you seem as if you are more of the authoritarian communist than the majority of /.ers.

      --
      Viral software licensing is not freedom, it is in fact GNU/Socialism.
    2. Re:Yes. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      un-regulated godless pink commie? for some reason a large hairy man in a tutu (too-too?) comes to mind here... i think you were looking for pinko

  7. Where's that nasty Green Gang? by October_30th · · Score: 5, Insightful
    The last thing it needs is a "societal debate" and intense government scrutiny. How can you intelligently discuss and regulate something that is still in the discovery and development stage, before it really exists in a practical manufacturing sense?

    Heh. This article is nothing but yet another libertarian call for unlimited dog-eat-dog capitalism. Then again, what else can you expect from Forbes?

    Of course anything that has as monumental potential consequences as nanotech needs at least proper societal debate -- even when it's still in discovery and development stage. What are we going to do if the promises and nightmares come true? Furthermore, in the case of nanotech we would not only need government scrutiny but international governmental scrutiny and control. You don't have to be a greenie to realize that.

    The fact that the people doing the debate do not understand the scientific details has nothing to do with their eligibility to participate in the debate. We already have referendums concerning whether we should build new fission plants and a perfectly valid argument against such a plant is: I don't want nuclear waste buried in my backyard for my grandchildren to take care of. You don't have to be a nuclear scientist to have something meaningful to say in a sociological/political sense. The same goes for nanotech.

    So why is this guy saying that we shouldn't have public discussion (not referendums, mind you) about such a revolutionary technology as nanotech? Because it makes the profitmongering more difficult. That's why. The part of the article that I quoted above summarizes the attitude of the author perfectly: "shut up, shut up, shut up - I can make a lot of money with this, so you've better shut up about anything negative we might face when developing nanotech".

    And where is that nasty Green Gang anyway? All sources I can see him quoting are respectable research organizations like the British Royal Society and Royal Academy of Engineering. If his beef is with scientists who're capable of thinking green in any other context than a dollar bill, he's the one who's risking the nanotech revolution.

    --
    The owls are not what they seem
    1. Re:Where's that nasty Green Gang? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh yes, that dog-eat-dog stuff that gave us electicity, science, medicine, etc. Can't have any of that.

      Go back and hit your books. Read up on Adam Smith a bit and then come back and play. In a capitalistic society, individuals taking control over their own destiny more times than not advance the general well being. The market rewards the greater good. Geesh. This is simple stuff.

    2. Re:Where's that nasty Green Gang? by October_30th · · Score: 1
      Read up on Adam Smith a bit and then come back and play.

      Your faith in the markets is touching, but your false dichotomy and appeal to authority remain unconvincing.

      It's not like we're forced to choose between two extremes: a dog-eat-dog capitalism or an oppressive communist planned economy.

      --
      The owls are not what they seem
    3. Re:Where's that nasty Green Gang? by Doctor+Faustus · · Score: 1

      a perfectly valid argument against such a plant is: I don't want nuclear waste buried in my backyard for my grandchildren to take care of.

      I'm sorry, but NIMBY is not a valid argument.

    4. Re:Where's that nasty Green Gang? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Once the federal gummint stops handing out monopolies to big players like candy to obese children, I'll agree that there's some self-regulating free market & that your argument holds. At the moment, there isn't much evidence of this.

      Even then, your argument ignores obvious problems like asbestos-style "mistakes" in employee safety. The market doesn't protect employees and I think it's a gov't responsibility to do so. Before you start ranting about labor unions, I'm not talking about that - I'm simply talking about gross willful physical abuse of workers which the market has no selective pressure to abate. Employers may have the right to cull employees based on competence, &c., but damned if they have the right to endanger the lives and physical wellbeing of their employees. The decision between a productive living and your physical health has no place in a civilized society, with the exception of its military force.

    5. Re:Where's that nasty Green Gang? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      whether we should build new fission plants and a perfectly valid argument against such a plant is: I don't want nuclear waste buried in my backyard for my grandchildren to take care of.

      You call that perfectly valid? Of course you would, you know jack shit about the subject. You don't know that for decades now there have been re-enrichment processes that can recycle most of the "waste" products back into material suitable for use in a normal reactor again with very little leftover waste. The reason we don't do this is because that same reactor design can keep going past the reactor-fuel level up into the nuclear-weapon-material level, and if someone forgot to turn it off at the right time, it would be "bad" (according to the treaties we pretend to obey anyway. Any guesses on where the US is getting its new nuclear warhead material?). And produce energy doing it. You'll probably cite supercritical reactor accidents next despite the fact that modern pebble bed reactors address the issue by breaking the fuel up into pebbles that, by themselves, can't sustain a reaction. Then when the containment is breached, they're sent scattered across the reactor floor where you end up with quickly cooling bits of uranium waiting for someone in a suit to sweep up.

      You're right about the libertarian tripe though, but saying that the public should have a say first requires that the public be properly educated (and by that, I mean with the real truth, not the version thats spinning so fast it generates electricity all by itself).

    6. Re:Where's that nasty Green Gang? by October_30th · · Score: 1, Interesting
      Well, of course it is - politically - and that's what matters (or should matter, anyway) when it comes to high-impact decisions like this.

      Such an argument might not be logical, it might not be reasonable, but the opinion should be counted nevertheless. If there's enough of them, then so be it. Otherwise we end up with a scientific elite dictating what's best for everyone else and, as a scientist, I for one wouldn't want to see that.

      --
      The owls are not what they seem
    7. Re:Where's that nasty Green Gang? by revscat · · Score: 4, Insightful

      So why is this guy saying that we shouldn't have public discussion (not referendums, mind you) about such a revolutionary technology as nanotech? Because it makes the profitmongering more difficult. That's why. The part of the article that I quoted above summarizes the attitude of the author perfectly: "shut up, shut up, shut up - I can make a lot of money with this, so you've better shut up about anything negative we might face when developing nanotech".

      Exactly. The belief that the market will take care of everything bad all by its lonesome is just asinine. It's religious in a way: the market is perfect and holy, and the government is evil and wicked. It's stupid mainly because it is so grossly simplistic.

      Just because money is to be made at something doesn't mean that it is risk-free or unworthy of regulation. This is a potentially very dangerous technology. Examining that and working towards prevention of abuse is just the wise thing to do. If it is possible for someone to use nanotech to make machines that present a realistic threat to the general population, then by all means we can and should look at taking legal steps to prevent such abuse.

      The free market is great, except when it isn't.

    8. Re:Where's that nasty Green Gang? by soupdevil · · Score: 1

      NIMBY can be a valid argument -- if nobody wants it in their back yard, perhaps we need to find a better way to build it, or increase the local value until someone does want it in their back yard.

    9. Re:Where's that nasty Green Gang? by Twanfox · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Why is it not a valid argument? If there is some major reason why you wouldn't want to have it nearby you, then perhaps the root of that desire has some merit. Such as: Disposition of nuclear waste is a major concern, and if it is improperly disposed of near residential areas, it could poison and kill off the local environment. If you don't want to live next to it, then that concern should be addressed in a sane fashion before the process continues.

      It is the irrational or unfounded 'NIMBY' responses to an issue that aren't valid arguments.

    10. Re:Where's that nasty Green Gang? by thefirelane · · Score: 1

      The fact that the people doing the debate do not understand the scientific details has nothing to do with their eligibility to participate in the debate.

      Still hold that opinion when it comes to evolution, or just when its convenient for your agenda?

    11. Re:Where's that nasty Green Gang? by October_30th · · Score: 0
      Actually, being a physicist, I do know quite a lot of the properties of radioactive materials and radioactivity. Also, being a greenie, I've read plenty about reactor design and safety and personally I think fission is an acceptable energy source -- for the time being.

      But my point was: you don't have to have a PhD in nuclear physics to have valid opinions on sociological and political aspects of such decisions. That's not democratic. If a granny fears for the safety of her grandchildren, because there's going to be a fission plant next door, then so be it. She should be heard and she should have one vote to cast -- just like the nuclear physicist/engineer living across the street.

      In a democracy we end up making irrational and stupid decisions because of this, but I strongly believe that in the long run the system is self-healing.

      --
      The owls are not what they seem
    12. Re:Where's that nasty Green Gang? by October_30th · · Score: 1

      I will, if all that nonsense goes through the fair democratic process. I would, however, consider moving somewhere else.

      --
      The owls are not what they seem
    13. Re:Where's that nasty Green Gang? by DogDude · · Score: 1

      This article is nothing but yet another libertarian call for unlimited dog-eat-dog capitalism

      Dog-eat-dog capitalism is what brought you the lifestyle that allows you to post on Slashdot, kiddo.

      I love it when geeks slam capitalism. Since high tech equipment of all kinds can only be affordable via mass production and massive R&D, it's pretty fucking hypocritical to say anything about capitalism while you're typing away on a product that took MASSIVE capital investment by the largest companies in the world.

      --
      I don't respond to AC's.
    14. Re:Where's that nasty Green Gang? by October_30th · · Score: 1
      Dog-eat-dog capitalism is what brought you the lifestyle that allows you to post on Slashdot, kiddo

      Wrong. It was first publicly funded government operation and then capitalism. For fuck's sake, as I said above, it's not a choice between dog-eat-dog capitalism and planned economy. Yes, I'm ok with capitalism, just not with the unlimited version.

      --
      The owls are not what they seem
    15. Re:Where's that nasty Green Gang? by qwijibo · · Score: 1

      Employees have the ability to control their own destiny. I don't think anyone is entitled to any particular job at any particular pay rate. The workers need to find a situation that is agreeable to them, and that often involves compromises. For example, there was a lot of discussion recently about game programmers having to work 80+ hour weeks on a regular basis. If there are enough people who are willing to do that, even if it takes a toll on their health, employers will take advantage of that. I worked 80+ hour weeks for months on end to get a project done. I did so as an hourly contractor, so I felt we had an equitable arrangement.

      Employers generally are motivated by keeping costs down and avoiding expensive lawsuits for grossly neglecting the safety of their workers. When people are injured or die in avoidable situations, the juries are generally not too sympathetic to the big faceless corporation.

    16. Re:Where's that nasty Green Gang? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      NIMBY... Is that like NAMBLA? If so, I'm all for it!

    17. Re:Where's that nasty Green Gang? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Yes, I understand what you're saying - I'm motivated to over-perform in my work too (at least relative to the norm I've seen). Looking at my coworkers, I realize that I could certainly get by with a LOT less. Further, I think that I'm doing the right thing and that they are not.

      However I'm worried about social norms of employee endangerment arising. There's IMHO a difference between 80-hour weeks and, say, asbestos inhalation. If society allows the latter to happen in order for a co. to save, say, $40M while causing cancer in 100 employees, this implicitly values the non-lung-cancerous state at $400K. The state would probably consider it illegal for me to contract into an asbestos-inhalation experiment for a lump sum of $400K, and so it's a little bit contradictory for it to allow me to do the same thing in a less-informed environment.

      Of course, one can resolve this "dilemma" by legalizing self-endangering contracts in general...

      I agree (or at least hope) that EVENTUALLY the threat of punishment as you describe will cause free-market employers to consider worker health. AFAIC, this is yet another strong argument against the current anti-free market pseudo-fascism practice of monopolies in the form of patents and "corporate rights".

    18. Re:Where's that nasty Green Gang? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Read a history book. Modern regulations came later in our history as an answer to the problems of unchecked capitalism.

    19. Re:Where's that nasty Green Gang? by jerometremblay · · Score: 1

      We already have referendums concerning whether we should build new fission plants and a perfectly valid argument against such a plant is: I don't want nuclear waste buried in my backyard for my grandchildren to take care of. You don't have to be a nuclear scientist to have something meaningful to say in a sociological/political sense

      This is exactly the problem. The fact is that long term use of a fission plant is more beneficial to the environment than the equivalent tons of chemicals coal/oil centrals throw into the atmosphere.

      When resorting to popular opinion, "not in my backyard" is stronger than "not on my planet". This is a perfectly logical reaction, but you'll admit that maybe it's not the smartest approach of the problem.

    20. Re:Where's that nasty Green Gang? by coopex · · Score: 1

      Yeah, I hear you. I had some nuclear waste with a bad disposition, always mouthing off to me, never doing its chores. I'll tell you, I'm firmly NIMBY now.

      --
      The road to hell is paved with good intentions.
    21. Re:Where's that nasty Green Gang? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      And, in spite of all those "problems of unchecked capitalism", the regulations should now be lifted, right? That's what the author of the original article is saying as far as nanotech is concerned.

      I'd say that war has done more for our technological development than capitalism.

    22. Re:Where's that nasty Green Gang? by planetoid · · Score: 0

      "It's stupid mainly because it is so grossly simplistic." And your signature is... what, then?

      --
      Slashdot requires you to wait longer between hitting 'reply' and submitting a comment.
    23. Re:Where's that nasty Green Gang? by YrWrstNtmr · · Score: 1
      If you don't want to live next to it, then that concern should be addressed in a sane fashion before the process continues.

      The problem is, no one wants it in their backyard (or even their county/state). As everywhere is someone's backyard, problems abound.

    24. Re:Where's that nasty Green Gang? by hesiod · · Score: 1

      > Such an argument might not be logical, it might not be reasonable, but the opinion should be counted nevertheless. If there's enough of them, then so be it.

      Otherwise known as "mob rule." Actually, "ignorant mob rule."

    25. Re:Where's that nasty Green Gang? by hesiod · · Score: 1

      Or educate the person as to why their fears are completely unfounded and show them that they are doing nothing but hurting the future of progress "for the children" due to their own ignorance and stubbornness.

      Assuming the action in question is, in fact, safe.

    26. Re:Where's that nasty Green Gang? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think there's a difference between not understanding the details of a theory, and an outright rejection of the basis for the theory.

      For instance, if I said that I don't believe radioactivity is harmful.. that is far beyond "not understanding the details."

    27. Re:Where's that nasty Green Gang? by hesiod · · Score: 1

      > If it is possible for someone to use nanotech to make machines that present a realistic threat to the general population, then by all means we can and should look at taking legal steps to prevent such abuse.

      If it is possible and viable, laws won't do JACK SHIT to stop them. If someone was creating a nanoweapon, they weren't exactly paying attention to existing laws, so new ones are not an obstacle to anyone who would threaten us.

    28. Re:Where's that nasty Green Gang? by hesiod · · Score: 1

      "I don't like to accept reality, so once I am proven wrong, I'll go somewhere where I think reality is different."

      Oh no, look out! It's a karmaslide!

    29. Re:Where's that nasty Green Gang? by planetoid · · Score: 0

      The difference is, government is better at stealing than it is at contributing. Was it not a government and its zealous moralistic lawyering that drove Alan Turing to suicide? Imagine what more that man would have accomplished and contributed to the field of computing had he not died at such a young age.

      --
      Slashdot requires you to wait longer between hitting 'reply' and submitting a comment.
    30. Re:Where's that nasty Green Gang? by hesiod · · Score: 1

      > it's pretty fucking hypocritical to say anything about capitalism while you're typing away...

      I think technophobes are idiots, but seriously, that's not a good argument, IMO. If I want to spread a message to the largest number of Christians I could, where better to go than a church where they are already assembled?
      If I want to convince geeks that they are ruining the world, where will I find them? Am I supposed to go to every basement in the U.S. searching for them? No, they are assembled on the Internet. In huge numbers.

      It may be a bit hypocritical, but it sorta' makes sense to me. Using evil to fight evil, I suppose. If one is truly for the betterment of people and not trying to just look like a luddite for his whacko friends, they will accept using evil to defeat evil. Look at George Bush. You can't honestly claim Saddam was a good guy, but I don't believe GW is either.

      "The lesser of two evils is still evil," yet when you have no other tools, what are you to do besides suffer? Of course, when it comes to someone forcing an opinion, I'd actually prefer they suffer, but I believe that's a secondary issue.

    31. Re:Where's that nasty Green Gang? by Mr.+Slippery · · Score: 1
      I'm sorry, but NIMBY is not a valid argument.

      You misunderstand NIMBY.

      The NIMBY arguement ("Not In My BackYard", in case anyone isn't familiar with the term) is "I think we should have X, I just don't want it in my backyard." These are the people who argue for more prisons - as long as they're on the other side of town.

      To recognize that nobody wants it in their backyard, and to give equal consideration to all those other people - to say "It doesn't affect me directly but I care anyway" - is the polar opposite of NIMBY. Indeed, it is compassion.

      To go further and say "It doesn't directly affect anyone now living, but will affect future generations, so I care anyway", is getting close to wisdom...and is therefore rarely seen.

      --
      Tom Swiss | the infamous tms | my blog
      You cannot wash away blood with blood
    32. Re:Where's that nasty Green Gang? by 10053r · · Score: 1

      Nano-tech, as Drexler imagines it (although he likes the term molecular manufacturing more now, to distinguish it from nano-pants and sun-block) will be immune to government regulation, so talking about it is pointless.

      How will a government exist when people can create their own power, food, and weapons (that make the pentagon's latest gadgets look like pop-guns) out of dirt? Are they going to prevent people from downloading the plans online? We see how well that is working with media now.

      The power of governments today is based on the threat of violence. If you violate the law, people with guns will show up to take you away. If you kill them, more and more people with bigger and bigger guns will show up until you surrender or are killed.

      If individuals are all armed similarly to the armed forces, how do you enforce law and order? You don't. The only organizations that will survive will be ones based on mutual cooperation, not threat of violence. Try to imagine mutually assured destruction where every individual is a nuclear power. The old paradigms won't make sense any more.

      When I get my cornucopia machine, I'm either taking off for space, or digging a bomb shelter 8 miles deep, because if you think the neighbors arguing at 10 p.m. is bad now, wait until they're armed with WMD's.

    33. Re:Where's that nasty Green Gang? by LaCosaNostradamus · · Score: 1

      I read the complaint differently. If it's bad to bury in the backyard for his grandchildren to take care of, it's bad to bury ANYWHERE for ANYBODY to take care of. So I don't write off NIMBY-based complaints.

      --
      [You have a stable society when some nut guns down a schoolyard and the law doesn't change.]
    34. Re:Where's that nasty Green Gang? by Mr.+Slippery · · Score: 1
      I love it when geeks slam capitalism. Since high tech equipment of all kinds can only be affordable via mass production and massive R&D, it's pretty fucking hypocritical to say anything about capitalism while you're typing away on a product that took MASSIVE capital investment by the largest companies in the world.

      Both the microchip revolution and the Internet have their origins in publicly funded research.

      There's nothing to prevent mass production and massive R&D from occuring outside of capitalism. The USSR had all sort of mass production of arms, and enough R & D to put the first human into space.

      (No, I'm not endorsing state communism; I'm a Zenarchist on good days and a libertarian socialist on others. I have little use for any system where a minority holds power, be it the state directly or a state-backed class of "owners".)

      --
      Tom Swiss | the infamous tms | my blog
      You cannot wash away blood with blood
    35. Re:Where's that nasty Green Gang? by LaCosaNostradamus · · Score: 1

      A fine example of an "irrational or unfounded NIMBY response" is the problem of building electric generation plants in California. The barriers for the plants were set far too high, so they simply weren't built ... however, everybody liked to consume electricity, so they indulged quite a bit. (Of course, although I don't know directly, I'm sure the Californian anti-electric-plant NIMBYs probably dismissed concerns with assertions about the effectiveness of the market for power. At the time, people didn't want to foresee a future of overpricing based upon such an artificial market.)

      --
      [You have a stable society when some nut guns down a schoolyard and the law doesn't change.]
    36. Re:Where's that nasty Green Gang? by revscat · · Score: 1

      But it will prevent people from profiting from those weapons, at least on the open market. No solution is perfect. We can only do our best.

    37. Re:Where's that nasty Green Gang? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "It's not like we're forced to choose between two extremes: a dog-eat-dog capitalism or an oppressive communist planned economy."

      Try; freedom of markets/people and oppressive communist planned economy.

      and yes...you do have to choose...food(capitalism) or poison(communism/socialism)
      What? you want a little of each...good luck with that

    38. Re:Where's that nasty Green Gang? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm sorry, but NIMBY is not a valid argument.

      -1 Troll.

    39. Re:Where's that nasty Green Gang? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So in your tiny mind, facts and reality are socially defined? If everyone voted that the earth is flat and that the moon is made of green cheese, would you consider the question settled?

    40. Re:Where's that nasty Green Gang? by hesiod · · Score: 1

      > But it will prevent people from profiting from those weapons, at least on the open market.

      In the United States. On the open market. Of course, once something goes black market, the markup goes sky high, so the people who sell arms in that fashion would make EVEN MORE MONEY by it becoming illegal, allowing them to acquire and resell even more powerful stuff.

    41. Re:Where's that nasty Green Gang? by hesiod · · Score: 1

      Wow, did you read any of this at all, or just see my comment, out of context, and jump on your horse? I said nothing about how anything is defined. The guy said "I demand that a vote be taken regarding the truth of evolution, but if it doesn't go my way I'm getting the fuck out." And I have a tiny mind? You're the one defending that fucking moron!

      > If everyone voted that the earth is flat and that the moon is made of green cheese, would you consider the question settled?

      THAT'S MY WHOLE FUCKING POINT YOU GODDAMNED IDIOT. READ BEFORE POSTING! guh... makes me want to kill everyone...

    42. Re:Where's that nasty Green Gang? by revscat · · Score: 1

      n the United States. On the open market. Of course, once something goes black market, the markup goes sky high, so the people who sell arms in that fashion would make EVEN MORE MONEY by it becoming illegal, allowing them to acquire and resell even more powerful stuff.

      So what are you implying? That because it would cost more to make illegal, but not wholly prevent it, that we shouldn't even bother?

    43. Re:Where's that nasty Green Gang? by Doctor+Faustus · · Score: 1

      One of the places that was suggested for nuclear waste storage before Yucca Mountain was settled upon was the old Detroit salt mines. I live about three miles from Downtown Detroit, and I would be happy to have glassified nuclear waste in the salt mines if it eliminated the problems of fossil fuel power.

    44. Re:Where's that nasty Green Gang? by hesiod · · Score: 1

      No, it was because of this statement:

      > If it is possible for someone to use nanotech to make machines that present a realistic threat to the general population, then by all means we can and should look at taking legal steps to prevent such abuse.

      What I am saying is if someone is willing to use nanomachines as a weapon, new laws will likely make little to no impact. Killing people was already illegal, so making new laws about nanotech that might kill people seems like political posturing that would no no real good.

  8. everyone should be concerned by Bob+Bitchen · · Score: 1

    Once people understand the implications and the power behind the technology and they still aren't concerned that it could have profound good and bad consequences for all life here then that's proof that it needs to be controlled. But can it be controlled? I don't think so. Let the nano-wars begin!

    --
    http://tinyurl.com/3t236
    1. Re:everyone should be concerned by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Ya, I'm thinking that immortality would *not* be a benefit after a while. Especially if everyone wanted it.

    2. Re:everyone should be concerned by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      W00t!! Bring on the nano weapons!!

    3. Re:everyone should be concerned by hesiod · · Score: 1

      > Once people understand the implications and the power behind the technology and they still aren't concerned that it could have profound good and bad consequences for all life here then that's proof that it needs to be controlled.

      Proof that the U.S. needs to clamp down on the Internet!

    4. Re:everyone should be concerned by ahodgson · · Score: 1

      Of course everyone wants it, or nearly everyone, anyway. Where do you think religions come from?

  9. Questionable... by TripMaster+Monkey · · Score: 4, Insightful
    From the article:


    Last March, a report released by an environmental toxicologist at Southern Methodist University showed that Fullerenes--the soccer ball shaped carbon nanoparticles also known as Buckyballs--caused brain damage in fish.


    However, an earlier report has shown conclusively that just about any substance will cause brain damage in fish, provided that enough of said substance is introduced into their little brain cases.

    Seriously, though...just how much fullerene was used in this study? From www.nanomedicine.com:


    Pure fullerenes are fairly chemically inert. They are stable substances in air or in solution and can be purified by sublimation without decomposition. Unmodified fullerenes are virtually insoluble in water, suggesting a low reactivity with biological tissue.


    I really sympathize with the hippie tree-huggers....honestly, I do. My personal opinion is that all industry should eventually be moved offplanet, and the earth itself converted into one big park. But that goal's quite a ways off, and without important technologies like nanotech, we simply aren't going to make it. These Luddite environmentalists who foam at the mouth at the mention of every new technology, and attempt to instill the same irrational, knee-jerk mentality in the general populace are not helping their species, or Mother Earth. Another point in their disfavor: every prohibition simply creates another underground. There's big money to be made in nanotech, and if people can't do it legally, they'll do it illegally, and I'm betting that the people who are bold enough to disregard the regulations won't really put too much thought...not to mention funds...into safety.

    --
    ____

    ~ |rip/\/\aster /\/\onkey

    1. Re:Questionable... by Coolmoe · · Score: 1

      "There's big money to be made in nanotech, and if people can't do it legally, they'll do it illegally, and I'm betting that the people who are bold enough to disregard the regulations won't really put too much thought...not to mention funds...into safety."

      Well thats fine then we can throw thier asses in prison where we put law breakers. Freeze thier assets for cleanup of the "lab".

      --
      Got hosting
    2. Re:Questionable... by Synbiosis · · Score: 1

      " "There's big money to be made in nanotech, and if people can't do it legally, they'll do it illegally, and I'm betting that the people who are bold enough to disregard the regulations won't really put too much thought...not to mention funds...into safety."

      Well thats fine then we can throw thier asses in prison where we put law breakers. Freeze thier assets for cleanup of the "lab". "

      Yeah, because that really worked for the oil and power industries.

    3. Re:Questionable... by qwijibo · · Score: 1

      Here on earth, I've noticed that there are always a number of governments who will let people with a lot of money do whatever they want. It would be hard to create laws that outlaw products or services that are created or performed by nanotech in a place where it is legal to do so. If anything, it gives a competitive advantage to those who have fewer limits, creating a competetive disadvantage for the "civilized countries" that adhere to the law.

      If people are really concerned about the grey goo scenario, they can rest assured that those responsible will be killed for their sins. Sure, everyone will die, but that's a small price to pay to give those bastards their comeuppins.

    4. Re:Questionable... by GodfatherofSoul · · Score: 1

      Why can't people with objectionss to environmentalist theories express themselves without reverting to pejoratives like "hippie", "tree-hugger", or "Luddite"? It makes it very difficult to take your arguments as anything more than ideological marching orders.

      You also don't seem to empathize with what environmentalists are saying. I think you can review some of the comments to this article to find that some concerns are neither irrational, knee-jerk, or Luddian (if that's a word).

      You make some points that I simply can't accept. You're saying that environmentalism doesn't help humankind OR Mother Earth? You're saying that there's no point to prohibitions since people will do things anyways (you sound like an anarchist on that one)? You're saying that "we simply aren't going to make it" if nanotechnology is regulated?

      I find it interesting that even the greatest "free market" advocates become "tree-hugging hippie Luddites" as soon as they start seeing the effects of pollution and toxin in their children.

      Note, I can't call myself a hardcore environmentalist, but I completely agree wiht the fact that they're out there on the frontlines at least asking questions and trying to educate people.

      --
      I swear to God...I swear to God! That is NOT how you treat your human!
    5. Re:Questionable... by Pentavirate · · Score: 1

      Well thats fine then we can throw thier asses in prison where we put law breakers. Freeze thier assets for cleanup of the "lab".

      That's great until you start reading in the news that South Korea, or some other country that doesn't have the regulations, is making the breakthroughs and the money, meanwhile the more regulated countries get further and further from the cutting edge.

    6. Re:Questionable... by Coolmoe · · Score: 0, Troll

      Thats ok with me if we leave profits to a dangerous substance for some other country to kill itself with. Your rich but im alive so who wins?

      Thats ok you keep the money and the goo.

      --
      Got hosting
    7. Re:Questionable... by avandesande · · Score: 1

      Why dont they worry about some REALLY dangerous stuff, like dimethyl sulfate and epichlorohydrin which are used every day by the thousands of tons.

      --
      love is just extroverted narcissism
    8. Re:Questionable... by DigiShaman · · Score: 1

      There's big money to be made in nanotech, and if people can't do it legally, they'll do it illegally, and I'm betting that the people who are bold enough to disregard the regulations won't really put too much thought...not to mention funds...into safety.
      You mean like what is happening in China or any other nation willing ot pick up the tab to expand their GDP growth?
      Basically, I'm backing up this point of view as I agree with your statement.

      --
      Life is not for the lazy.
    9. Re:Questionable... by mark2003 · · Score: 1

      Spot on, it's a ridiculous argument - if we refused to regulate anything that may be dangerous, immoral or unethical just because some people would ignore the law then we would legalise organ running, drug dealing, murder or crime as all of these things are collectively known.

      Maybe the way to approach this is that nanotech could be used to build WMDs and that apparently Iran is investing heavily.

  10. Grey Goo? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    I don't know, anything that is two letters short of an alcohol isn't all bad in my book.

    1. Re:Grey Goo? by Keamos · · Score: 1

      I'll drink to that!

  11. yes! by bcrowell · · Score: 5, Funny
    I also propose regulation of:
    1. flying cars
    2. artificial intelligences that pass the Turing test
    3. cures for the common cold
    4. concealed laser pistols
    5. faster-than-light travel.
    I think the need for #1, for example, should be obvious -- I'm amazed that nobody's been killed yet, considering the complete lack of traffic regulations. And re #5, according to special relativity, any faster-than-light drive also allows time travel, which has obvious potential for use by terrorists -- surprising they haven't used it yet, given the complete lack of government oversight.
    1. Re:yes! by maxwell+demon · · Score: 2, Insightful

      But what's the reason for #3?

      --
      The Tao of math: The numbers you can count are not the real numbers.
    2. Re:yes! by revscat · · Score: 1

      But what's the reason for #3?

      Snake oil salesmen and abuse. If you claim some drug does something, you must be able to prove it. Similarly, while it may in fact cure the cold, it shouldn't cause fungus to grow out of your nose. Both are classes where the law is used to great benefit.

    3. Re:yes! by isotope23 · · Score: 2, Funny

      Think of the damage to the cold-remedy industry!!!

      --
      Service guarantees Citizenship! Questions Guarantee GITMO.... Amerika Uber Alles!
    4. Re:yes! by null+etc. · · Score: 1
      you forgot to mention:

      6. time travel

      or maybe you did, and somebody travelled backwards through time and erased it!

    5. Re:yes! by Valdrax · · Score: 1

      It causes cancer.

      --
      If it's for-profit but free, you're not the customer -- you're the product (e.g., the Slashdot Beta's "audience").
    6. Re:yes! by deadweight · · Score: 1

      Just to be a pain, flying cars have been around for a long time and have been regulated by the FAA and the DOT for that entire time. (See http://www.strangebirds.com/SB-WU-Aerocar.html) IMHO the REAL downfall of a flying car is no one wants to beat up a very expensive aircraft driving it around on public roads.

    7. Re:yes! by Sinner · · Score: 1
      I also propose regulation of:

      5. faster-than-light travel.
      I believe physicists already have a law for this.
      --
      fish and pipes
  12. Regulation will only slow things down by havaloc · · Score: 1

    With all the promises of nanotech, regulation will only slow down development. Not a good idea.

    1. Re:Regulation will only slow things down by tomstdenis · · Score: 1

      Quite the contrary. The more red tape there is the more organized, fluid and stable the process will become. /sarcasm

      Tom

      --
      Someday, I'll have a real sig.
    2. Re:Regulation will only slow things down by maxwell+demon · · Score: 2, Funny

      So we need regulations! Otherwise, it will happen like in AI, where some time it turned out that all the promises we were given never were fulfilled, and the actual achievements of AI are much less. Therefore heavy regulations are necessary, so when the promises can't be fulfilled, you can just blame the over-regulation instead of having to admit that you were just over-optimistic.

      --
      The Tao of math: The numbers you can count are not the real numbers.
    3. Re:Regulation will only slow things down by Twanfox · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Such a pathetic reason.

      There are many reasons to include regulation in such development when the potential fallout from the products could be lethal. But hey, as your logic goes, let's remove the FDA and get all those drugs out onto the market faster! Doesn't really matter if they kill a few thousand or so because they weren't properly tested, or because the company (as just about ever f'king company that ever existed does) cut corners and shaved off the testing time of development in order to make their buck NOW and beat the competition.

      Maybe it'll be fine and there's no reason to worry. That'd be nice. Maybe it won't and having regulations in place would save our asses. Who knows! I, for one, would err on the side of caution, especially when all the promises made by the development are so grandiose. What better reason to approach with caution then when they tell you it'll give you the wonders of the world, yet haven't proven that it will.

    4. Re:Regulation will only slow things down by An+Onerous+Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Is it really better to inject products into the general public without having a good idea of whether they're actually safe or not? Once you've put the stuff out there, it's hard to get it back. If we can't do a good job recalling defective car seats, what are the odds that we can get individual molecules out of circulation?

      Yes, there are risks to moving too slow. People die by the thousands when the FDA is too slow to approve a product. But when a substance gets widely adopted and then is discovered to be too dangerous (asbestos, PCBs, etc), the costs of taking them back out of the environment range from ludicrous to prohibitive.

      I simply cannot fathom this neo-connish "all regulation is evil evil evil" mentality that so many people have. I think it's absurd to regulate "nanotech" in the sense that it's absurd to regulate "computers": The field is too broad for a one-size-fits-all approach. But the article seems to be suggesting a "once the horse is gone, maybe commission an underfunded and non-binding study to see if locking the barn door might have mitigated the problem" approach.

      --

      You want the truthiness? You can't handle the truthiness!

    5. Re:Regulation will only slow things down by hesiod · · Score: 1

      > let's remove the FDA and get all those drugs out onto the market faster!

      Well, if you valued progress over individuals, then that would be a valid sentiment. One I would agree with, assuming I'll never get sick or hurt. :)

      I, of course, cannot assume that.

    6. Re:Regulation will only slow things down by LaCosaNostradamus · · Score: 1

      Yes, regulation will slow down development. That's a great idea, since We The People have more in mind (like, oh, environmental pollution controls) than developing a product as fast as possible. I hope the developer can make a good product at a profit regardless ... but he has to learn to live in a society where a government of free men exists to regulate the things that can kill, maim or injure any of us.

      --
      [You have a stable society when some nut guns down a schoolyard and the law doesn't change.]
    7. Re:Regulation will only slow things down by Sj0 · · Score: 1

      Of course not! That's only because the FDA refused to allow me to market my fabulous Improved Healthohol on the grounds that it's 85% moonshine.

      Without that pesky beurocratic establishment, I can guarantee you'll never get hurt or sick again, or your money back!

      --
      It's been a long time.
    8. Re:Regulation will only slow things down by hesiod · · Score: 1

      > my fabulous Improved Healthohol

      Screw the FDA... Healthohol made me feel great! Until the next morning, that is, when I had to take my next dose :)

  13. Hold on a minute by dfn5 · · Score: 0
    Wait while I book passage off this rock.... OK, you are now free to destroy the planet. See ya.

    --
    -- Thou hast strayed far from the path of the Avatar.
  14. Mod parent up by MyLongNickName · · Score: 0

    Troll does not mean "I disagree".

    --
    See my journal for slashdot ID's by year. Mine created in 2005. http://slashdot.org/journal/289875/slashdot-ids-by-year
    1. Re:Mod parent up by hesiod · · Score: 1

      > roll does not mean "I disagree".

      Nope, but this means troll:

      > "shut up, shut up, shut up - I can make a lot of money with this, so you've better shut up about anything negative we might face when developing nanotech".

    2. Re:MOD PARENT UP by lgw · · Score: 1

      The "live off the land" option is already impossible for just about everyone. The day the first cavemen used their ability to make fire to move into less crowded caves that were otherwise too cold in the winter we were dependent on technology. The bridge has dun ben burnt.

      Humanity has solved all of its problems throughout our history by moving technology forward, never backwards. I don't see how excluding a primitive lifestyle is a genuine concern.

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
  15. Nah by Neil+Blender · · Score: 3, Funny

    The industry is too small to need to be regulated.

  16. The greens ask for an outright ban? by Ironsides · · Score: 4, Interesting

    the same group that had lobbied against Monsanto's genetically engineered crops in the 1990s--has called for nothing less than a moratorium on the use of synthetic nanoparticles in the lab and in commercial products.

    So before we even know even a fraction of the possible benifits and dangers, they wan't an outright ban on anything that would let us find out what the good or bad is? Banning it from commercial products means it doesn't get used in anything, banning it from the lab means we won't ever find out more on it until the moratorium is lifted. Which probably wouldn't happen until we found out more about it. Catch-22.

    --
    Fly me to the moon Let me sing among those stars Let me see what spring is like On jupiter and mars
    1. Re:The greens ask for an outright ban? by maxwell+demon · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Indeed, a moratorium in the lab is about the stupidest thing you could do. Especially if those things can be dangerous, you do certainly want to know about the dangers before e.g. some terrorist supporters find out and you get hit unprepared. And if those things turn out to be harmless, well, there's no reason not to use them in the lab.

      So banning it from the lab is wrong if it can be dangerous, and is wrong if it cannot be dangerous. Therefore it's always wrong.

      Of course, if there were some unmanagable danger, things would be different. But why should nanotech be more dangerous than e.g. highly infectious bacteria (which labs obviously can handle quite fine)? Propably the opposite would be the case.

      And no, I don't believe in grey goo.

      --
      The Tao of math: The numbers you can count are not the real numbers.
    2. Re:The greens ask for an outright ban? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Thank /DIETY(S)/ it's only synthetics they are after.
      What would a ham sandwich be without mayonaise!

    3. Re:The greens ask for an outright ban? by Kirth · · Score: 1

      The technology isn't the problem. The means to get a monopoly on it is, because it will enable those corporations to be careless and spread it in any they want or don't care. After all, nobody else may legally use it.

      On the other hand, if you don't have a granted monopoly, you sure will be careful that none of your precious insuline-manufacturing bacteriae will leak out.

      --
      "The more prohibitions there are, The poorer the people will be" -- Lao Tse
  17. If you want to be frightened... by __aammuz5019 · · Score: 1

    Read Prey by Michael Crichton. I've heard it said that the science in the story is not real, but it was one of the most frightening scifi stories that I've read.

    smp

    1. Re:If you want to be frightened... by Valdrax · · Score: 1

      The science is atrociously bad. Here's a full critique of its horror. The only thing frightening is that this is the same man who wrote "Jurassic Park" and "The Andromeda Strain." (Of course, it isn't that surprisingly bad if you've read "Sphere" or "Congo.")

      The only nanotech babble that I seen that beats "Prey" is Michio Kaku's loony rant on how mankind "must escape the universe." Just skip straight to the bottom a read about nanobots that are "molecule sized" and capable of moving near the speed of light. This man is a physicist? Sheesh.

      --
      If it's for-profit but free, you're not the customer -- you're the product (e.g., the Slashdot Beta's "audience").
  18. bullshit article about non-existent problem by cahiha · · Score: 5, Insightful

    There is no such thing as "nanotech". Nanotech was an unfulfilled pipe dream about "molecular assemblers" and the like. Of course, Wolfe is just trying to make money off the name as well; he is trying to present this as a brand new industry that is at risk of being stifled.

    Because nanotech was such an abysmal failure, in order for people to save face and sell old research as new, the term has now been applied to traditional areas of material science and molecular biology. Whether those areas need to be regulated and how needs to be decided on a case-by-case basis.

    For example, releasing new materials into the environment, in particular dusts and coatings that can turn into dust, should be subject to stricter regulations--whether "nanoengineered" or just chemical, that sort of thing is a health risk.

    Molecular biology generally has regulations in place already; applying the moniker "nanotech" to molecular biology should not let companies or researchers evade those regulations.

    More generally, however, I don't subscribe to the notion that a new industry (even if "nanotech" were a new industry rather than just good old chemistry and material science) should not be stifled; if it's potentially dangerous, of course, its growth should be stifled until we know how to mitigate the dangers.

    1. Re:bullshit article about non-existent problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      That's precicely the problem with this article. Like so many others, it uses "nanotech" as a field. Nanotech is not a field, it's just a bunch of little things.

      As a materials engineer, there are various things of various scales to work with, and some of them are labeled in that scary "nano" area, for good reason: they are on the scale of nanometers.

      The "nanotech" mentality is equivilent to suggesting that all technology which uses components of a certain size is dangerous.

      Why not "megatech" bans? I'd sure hate to be crushed by some of that.

    2. Re:bullshit article about non-existent problem by Otter · · Score: 1
      Because nanotech was such an abysmal failure, in order for people to save face and sell old research as new, the term has now been applied to traditional areas of material science and molecular biology.

      Absolutely, but if researchers and manufacturers are going to hype really, really fine particles as "nanotechnology", I don't have much sympathy when they're overregulated by people who think that "nanotechnology-based" Dockers pose an apocalyptic threat to humanity, not just some unfamiliar toxicity issues.

    3. Re:bullshit article about non-existent problem by Ironsides · · Score: 1

      if it's potentially dangerous, of course, its growth should be stifled until we know how to mitigate the dangers.

      If you stifle something, nothing gets done. Not even research. Therefroe, you won't know how to mitigate any dangers and won't ever unstifle it. Great way to kill off all industry. How about we stifle fusion research until we know how dangerous an exploding reactor is? Or Wind until we know the dangers it will cause on the world air flow? Could end up stoping the jet stream. Or how about gene therapy? Could cause some nasty mutations (Or cure all genetic diseases).

      Stifling an industry efectively kills research in it. Without research, you don't learn anything about it. And remember, some are asking for a moratorium on use of nanotech in the lab so until we learn more about it. Meaning we would never learn more about it becuase (gasp) research is done in the lab!

      --
      Fly me to the moon Let me sing among those stars Let me see what spring is like On jupiter and mars
    4. Re:bullshit article about non-existent problem by Rakishi · · Score: 1

      So if they find that substance X may cause permenant brain damage they should continue to allow products with substance X to be sold?

    5. Re:bullshit article about non-existent problem by Ironsides · · Score: 1

      So if they find that substance X may cause permenant brain damage they should continue to allow products with substance X to be sold?

      When banning substance X, the ban USE of it is certain applications. Large quantities of iodine can kill. Yet most likely the table salt you use is iodized salt. Lead can cause problems. They baned lead paint, not lead. It's still used in many applications (solder, glass), among others). High concentrations of cholrine in water is dangerous to our health. It's used in lower concentrations in our pools. Nitrates can be used in bombs, they are a primary component in fertilizers. Almost all (if not all) weed killers are poisinous to animals and humans. We put warning labels on them so that people know to be careful with them. Sniffing gasoline fumes can kill you, we still use it. Same goes for propane, kerosene, white gass and others. Natural Gas stoves, furnaces and fireplaces can produce Carbon Monoxide. We haev an entire industry (both gas and environmental) pushing them. X-rays can cause cancer, we still use them in our x-ray machines. UV is used for killing off bacteria. Radiation is used in cancer therapies. (Oh man, that's a big one that can cause brain problems).

      Most things sold for chemistry labs are controlled substances or can cause sever harm. We still teach chemistry. (Same goes for biology and physics).

      Just about everything we use has something in it that can be misused dangerously. We just take precautions, give warnings and occasionaly ban a use of something, but never an outright ban on the substance itself.

      --
      Fly me to the moon Let me sing among those stars Let me see what spring is like On jupiter and mars
    6. Re:bullshit article about non-existent problem by xMilkmanDanx · · Score: 0

      That's not the grandparent's argument. To take your analogy, it would be: we should we ban substance X AND all research on it until we know whether or not it's safe.

      And that was the point, that how can it possibly be determined safe if you can't research it?

    7. Re:bullshit article about non-existent problem by cahiha · · Score: 1

      Stifling an industry efectively kills research in it

      No, that's just not true. Most research is publicly funded; companies do product development. In the few cases where private companies made fundamental advances, it's generally been near-monopolies (AT&T, IBM), or corporate-private partnerships (common in biotech).

      We could prohibit all product development related to, say, "nanotechnology" (if such a field actually even existed), and research would progress pretty much unhindered with public funding, the way most basic and applied research is already carried out in practice.

      How about we stifle fusion research until we know how dangerous an exploding reactor is?

      I didn't say anything about "stifling research".

      But your example is a good illustration: private fusion reactors are currently effectively subject to very "stifling regulations". Has that stopped research? No. Research in fusion reactors is, for various reasons, regulated and publicly funded.

    8. Re:bullshit article about non-existent problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      corporate-private partnerships

      Oops--I meant "corporate-academic", of course.

    9. Re:bullshit article about non-existent problem by Rakishi · · Score: 1

      Grandparent said "industry" which I took to mean products not research. Parent then said that stopping products would kill research so everythign should be allowed. Or at least thats how I understood it.

  19. Green Gang by ackthpt · · Score: 2
    'green gang' (his term for environmentalists)

    He should learn some history, the Green Gang was the predecessor to the KMT, or Nationalist Chinese and was largely run by "Big Eared Tu" in the manner of organized crime with Chiang Kai-shek as his puppet.

    Today's Nanotech is probably tomorrows equivilent to nuclear weapons. Who's to say who can and can't have it? The mighty leader of the free world?

    --

    A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
    1. Re:Green Gang by hedge_death_shootout · · Score: 2, Funny

      He should learn some history, the Green Gang was the bleh bleh bleh...

      Yes, that will indeed have confused a lot of people. 'What's this got to do with pre-KMT Chinese nationalist political movements' I mused to myself as I read the article.

      Actually, I'm lying - I didn't read it at all.

    2. Re:Green Gang by bitfoo · · Score: 1

      The Green Gang were more an autonomous subsidiarity under the KMT than their puppets, partly due to their opposite stance with the Communists. They operated mostly out of Shanghai and provided protection and labor for all facets of the opium trade, which was more or less sponsored by Chiang Kai-shek. They basically established a subgovernment to run Shanghai which Kai-shek allowed and infiltrated all government positions including the police. They even helped the KMT purge the Communists in 192-1927.

  20. New motto for Nanotech technology by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


    Nanotech
    "What could possibly go wrong?"

  21. What good will regulation do? by starseeker · · Score: 5, Insightful

    As the technology matures, it will become easier and easier to do virtually anything with nanotech. So, eventually, it will be abused. (Which I assume is what people are worried about.)

    The question we SHOULD be asking is how can we develop nanotechnology in such a way as to make sure we can stop dangerous/malicious applications. Because they WILL happen. There are just too many people on this planet for any kind of control to succeed in general on such matters. I suspect in the end nanotechnology will become another kind of virus, and it will take something like nanoengineered biological defenses to stop them, which will have to be continually upgraded.

    --
    "I object to doing things that computers can do." -- Olin Shivers, lispers.org
  22. Regulating soot by DaleBob · · Score: 2, Informative

    CNTs and buckyballs are just forms of soot. You can find them in any fireplace. So whatever regulations are on soot emissions to the atmosphere, they should be applied to CNTs as well.

    1. Re:Regulating soot by timster · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Cyanide is just a form of baryonic matter. You can find it in any apricot. So whatever regulations are on feeding people apricots, they should also be applied to feeding people cyanide.

      Come on, you can't possibly be serious.

      --
      I have seen the future, and it is inconvenient.
    2. Re:Regulating soot by thiophene · · Score: 1

      He is serious. The way you many carbon nanotubes are made is by burning graphite.

    3. Re:Regulating soot by thiophene · · Score: 1

      The way many nanotubes are made is by burning graphite.

      That will teach me to not preview before submitting.

    4. Re:Regulating soot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This isn't really true - and it's not all that difficult to understand. Nanotech substances are (get this) very small! They're so small in fact that if you put some nano-dust on your skin, it will go right through it into your blood! Last time I cleanded out my fireplace my pee didn't turn black. Believe it or not, the spooks are interested in nanotech for the simple reason that you can get nasty things into people blood just by getting them to touch some powder.

    5. Re:Regulating soot by XFilesFMDS1013 · · Score: 1

      That will teach me to not preview before submitting.

      It's okay, you're on /. You're not SUPPOSED to preview your posts.

    6. Re:Regulating soot by DaleBob · · Score: 1

      Relating to regulating buckyballs and carbon nanotubes, I'm totally serious. They really are just special pure forms of soot. We inhale soot all the time... in large amounts it'll lead to emphysema and fun stuff like that. I'm just suggesting that there may already be legislation in place that covers the carbon fullerence-type nanostuff. The cyanide argument makes no sense. Except there really are low concentrations of cyanide in apricots and other fruits (just not enough to kill you).

    7. Re:Regulating soot by An+Onerous+Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

      No, the grandparent is right. Buckministerfullerine is "just a special form of soot" in the same sense that cyanide "is just a special form of plant matter". Yes, there are low concentrations of the stuff in any fireplace. But if someone is suggesting wrapping drugs in buckyballs and injecting them as a delivery system, there's no way the FDA is going to accept, "Well, we don't regulate fireplaces, do we?" and give the treatment a go-ahead.

      We don't have nearly enough data about most of the molecules being introduced into our lives. I don't see buckyballs as being particularly special in that regard. You seem to be saying that, because we've lived with "soot" for the last fifty thousand years, that is sufficient evidence of one of its components' harmlessness. It isn't, and it's better that we find out the facts before we base multi-billion dollar industries on it.

      --

      You want the truthiness? You can't handle the truthiness!

    8. Re:Regulating soot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      cyanide "is just a special form of plant matter".

      Baryonic != Plant

      Cyanide is not a plant derivative - at least to my knowledge.

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baryonic

    9. Re:Regulating soot by DaleBob · · Score: 2, Informative

      If you read the first post in the thread, you'll see this was about the inhalation danger of carbon nanoparticles, not drug delivery. Using nanoparticles for drug delivery is A LOT different than unintentionally inhaling them.

      I also never said that soot is harmless (remember the bit about emphysema?), there is all kinds of legislation to reduce carbon emissions from factories and, yes, even fireplaces. So, maybe the point is that the government has already started regulating carbon nanoparticles without even realizing it. Also, there is a ton of data on the effects of soot inhalation that could help us predict the effects of inhaling pure CNTs or buckyballs.

      Plus, carbon nanoparticles are just this tiny little part of all the kinds of nanotech that'll be happening anyway... and inhaling them is obviously only a part of the danger.

      This kind of legislation is not about freaking out about key words; it's about understanding the issues and problems and addressing them in a responsible way.

  23. regulation just raised the cost of entry by bmwm3nut · · Score: 0

    I think regulation is stupid right now. The real reason it's being proposed is to raise the cost of entry for small startups and let the big corporations take the tech all for themselves. That's not to say I'm against reasonable safeguards for the public, but it regulations should be done in a more general way. I believe an earlier post mentioned something about how nano particles are just the right size to be caught in the lungs and that this is similar to asbestos. Rather than having regluations for asbestos and nano particles, how about one broad regulation that says something like "no one is allowed to emit particles of size xx to yy in a concentration greater than zz blah blah blah" of course you could get more specific and say that the particles can't be emitted where there's a gathering of people or something like that. It's just a pet peeve that I have when people try to regulate things so specificly. Rather than regulating the technology, just regulate the effect.

  24. do existing regulations cover this? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Suppose you're manufacturing buckytubes and buckyballs, decide you don't want them anymore, so dump them down the drain. And it turns out they poison fish. Do existing laws say you can't do that?

    It would be good to have some law say you can't dump new-not-yet-specifically-named poisons down the drain or in the garbage.

  25. It Depends by sfjoe · · Score: 1

    Wolfe is worried that ...[environmentalists]... are going to regulate nanotech out of existence

    It all depends on who will be making money off of it. If their are profits to be taken, public safety will have to take a back seat. If it threatens a current business' profits, "public safety" will be the rallying cry.
    And, of course, the radical fundamentalists will somehow work "God's Law" into the whole debate.

    --
    It's simple: I demand prosecution for torture.
  26. I'll be the first to say it? by ect5150 · · Score: 1

    In Russia, the Nanotechs regulate you!

    --
    I have never let my schooling interfere with my education.
  27. The problem isn't what you think it is. by PxM · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The major issue with nanotech in the next few decades won't be a grey goo problem or any other sci-fi apocalypse. The biggest problem will be the toxic garbage mentioned in the article. Self replicating nanobots are still in the distant (20+ years) future but the problem with nanoparticles exists now. Some of the artifical dust being created by the nanotech manufacturing processes is small enough to pass through the various safeguards that organisms have evolved to protect against the environment. Very few things in nature are self contained objects on a nanometer scale so organisms never had a chance to evolve protection against the things we are creating. There is a valid risk of a problem similar to asbestos related cancers and DDT if nanotech becomes widespread before the proper safeguards are in place. I fully support nanotech and do believe the grey goo fears are overstated, but toxic dust is something that people should figure out how to deal with before it becomes dangerous.

    --
    Want a free Nintendo DS, GC, PS2, Xbox. (you only need 4 referrals)
    Wired article as proof

  28. Striking a balance by fiannaFailMan · · Score: 1, Insightful
    From TFA:
    If you would like an example of how business can flourish in a largely unregulated environment, look at the changes to our lives that have occurred thanks to growth of the Internet. E-mail, VoIP, eBay and Google have greatly enhanced lives around the globe. What happens when there is too much regulation? Too often you wind up with tragic corporate sagas and employee fallout. Just look at what is happening to the airline business or to AT&T. Let's not throw a blanket over nanotech before it begins to blossom.
    It's a fair point, but a more balanced article (minus the 'green gang' name-calling) would have also said that too little regulation can also be a bad thing. For example, the deregulation of the energy market in California was botched big time, and the energy consumers were gouged by the likes of Enron.

    I'm sick of these thinly veiled propaganda pieces that take selective examples of private success and government failure to back up their market fundamentalist ideas.

    --
    Drill baby drill - on Mars
    1. Re:Striking a balance by EvilTwinSkippy · · Score: 1
      Hey, look what "deregulation" has done for the airlines. It used to be they made billions in profits. Today, taxpayers are "charged" billions in bailouts.

      Changing the rules by which airlines ass rape the customer does not change the price of aircraft. the cost of fuel, or the fact that someone needs to pay to maintain airports and security.

      What it did do is allow certain entities to push the cost off onto other entities.

      --
      "Learning is not compulsory... neither is survival."
      --Dr.W.Edwards Deming
    2. Re:Striking a balance by Ironsides · · Score: 1

      For example, the deregulation of the energy market in California was botched big time, and the energy consumers were gouged by the likes of Enron.

      California was botched because the regulators kept the price controls, but eliminated most everything else. The Electric companies were by law selling electricity at less than cost. That was going from a fully regulated to partialy de-regulated system. This is the opposite (big differnece here).

      In Enron, the company was speculating in the energy business and covering up it's tracks. Also, they illegaly manipulated the market. Pretty much everything Enron did was illegal and had nothing to do with deregulation.

      I'm sick of these thinly veiled propaganda pieces that take selective examples of private success and government failure to back up their market fundamentalist ideas.

      As for Regulation success? The best (as in closest and only) example (I can think of) would be AT&T before MCI came along and the breakup. The provided great quality of service and kept investing their money in ways to make it better. The primary problem was that the local governments regualted the price of local phone service to below costs and the loss had to be made up with high longdistance fees.

      Provide me a better example of a government regulation success. I have yet to hear one.

      --
      Fly me to the moon Let me sing among those stars Let me see what spring is like On jupiter and mars
    3. Re:Striking a balance by mtg101 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      There's a problem comparing the regulation of email et al to that of nanotech.

      When firms were developing novel internet based system, we could say there wasn't much danger inherent in the process. What's the worst that could happen with email?

      But with nanotech we're talking about altering the construction of matter at the molecular level. That's obviously more dangerous than sending 1s and 0s around a network.

      What if the US were to regulated nanotech like it did email? We'd have months of grey-goo outbreaks before the Congress passed the CAN-GOO act (Citizens Against Nanotech's Grey Onmipresent Ooze) allowing citizens to opt-out of being decomposed into their individual molecules.

      OK I jest - but the point is that more dangerous technologies; eg nuclear power, contagion research, human cloning; need more regulation than technologies like email and internet search engines.

    4. Re:Striking a balance by Inebrius · · Score: 1

      "For example, the deregulation of the energy market in California was botched big time, and the energy consumers were gouged by the likes of Enron. "

      The energy consumers and the regulated utilities are both paying the price. Deregulation isn't a bad thing.

      The problems in California were caused by:

      1) Disallowing the utilities to set up long term contracts for power. The legislature wanted to encourage an energy market to develop - and we got one, only it was quite volatile and open to market gaming.

      2) Requiring utilities to serve all customers without allowing them to pass on the costs to consumers (laws of supply and demand did not apply). If prices could have been ratcheted up, people would have used less power at up to $1.00/kwh. Even charging customers double what they were used to ($.20/kwh) would have curbed demand and prices would not have been so outrageous. We also would not be paying for less than 1 years excesses over the next 10 years.

      3) A slow acting legislature and governor did not help when the system was obviously hemmoraging. They were more concerned with passing the blame than fixing the problem.

      Lastly, I don't think Enron deserves all the credit they are getting. They did not cause the situation - they did take advantage of it as did many others. I think they are just an easy target used to focus blame on, when there was plenty of incompetence and dishonesty to go around.

    5. Re:Striking a balance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How dare you question the free market! You will be reprogrammed shortly.

  29. I'm Feeling Lucky by KipCas · · Score: 2, Funny

    What will be funny is when the "Grey Goo" ecophagy theory plays itsself out and the people at Google figure out a way to search the nanobots blanketing the earth and patent it. And yes, it will be called "Grey Goo-gle".

    --
    Turk: Let's play Steak. J.D.: What? Turk: Steak. The 1st person to finish their steak is the winner of Steak. -Scrubs
  30. In a word: Yes by EvilTwinSkippy · · Score: 2, Insightful
    There are plenty of examples where nanotech versions of certain chemicals behave in a radically different manner than conventional material.

    Take carbon nanotubes. Companies allowed to treat it, according to OSHA standards, as graphite. Technically, yes, it is pure carbon. But there are some exotic, and potentially carcinogenic, reactions that nanotubes can create in the human body. Particularly when inhaled.

    --
    "Learning is not compulsory... neither is survival."
    --Dr.W.Edwards Deming
  31. Erm by t_allardyce · · Score: 1

    ...including the potential benefits, such as immortality...

    Immortality is NOT a benefit, not to yourself, and not to the world population.

    --
    This comment does not represent the views or opinions of the user.
    1. Re:Erm by defnshow · · Score: 1

      I would benefit from immortality as long as they don't give it to people with differnt opinions then me.

    2. Re:Erm by Neph · · Score: 1
      Immortality is NOT a benefit, not to yourself, and not to the world population.

      I was hoping someone would make that point. To amplify: The extropy.org FAQ's response to this issue seems to be "Continuing to die to prevent overpopulation is like not curing a child's toothache because then it would eat too much". There are two problems with this reasoning.

      First of all, the analogy is badly flawed in that the consequences are completely disproportionate: They're comparing overeating with increasing resource scarcity resulting in, at best, mass starvation and deterioration of living conditions or, at worst, global war over said resources.

      The second problem is that it states that the solution to both problems is lowering birth rates. Since the birth rate would have to decrease in proportion with the available extension of human lifespans, the result for immortality (excluding natural causes) would be a birth rate of near zero, meaning complete genetic stagnation of the species. Anyone with an understanding of evolution will tell you that this is a recipe for disaster, since it halts the genetic mixing that sexual reproduction provides as a guard against decimation of the population by agents such as disease and other environmental changes.

      In short, renewal is an indispensable part of the survival of any species; it would be highly unwise to do away with it as a way of making immortality possible. Besides, I think by and large the attraction of immortality is very superficial -- I submit, only half-jokingly, the case of Wowbagger the Infinitely Prolonged.

    3. Re:Erm by Ironsides · · Score: 1

      Counterpoint: Immortality (by this means) would at best stop aging. People would still die by accidents and other means.

      As for the world filling up, all we need to do is start spreading out off planet (and preferably out of the solar system eventualy). This is something we need to do anyway. At that point, we will need more people.

      --
      Fly me to the moon Let me sing among those stars Let me see what spring is like On jupiter and mars
    4. Re:Erm by hesiod · · Score: 1

      > People would still die by accidents and other means.

      No way, after my finger gets cut off the nanobots go drag it back and sew it back on. My lung collapses, they sew it shut and form a micro-air pump to reinflate it. They can splice my neurons back together when my brain gets smashed. They have a constantly-updated map of my entire body in memory. After all, if we're talking in purely hypotheticals, the hypothetical machines will work and react exactly the way I want them to. :)

    5. Re:Erm by t_allardyce · · Score: 1

      Well i guess we can assume that if nano bots are advanced enough to give us immortality then they can probably also turn waste into food, eat pollution, build cheap housing and terraform other planets, they could probably even 'evolve' people on-the-fly, patching the human body against diseases and improving its efficiency, this all sounds like a utopia until you compare it to the current computing arena - by that you can imagine nano bots being buggy, getting hacked or misused and generally fucking up big time, its all a question of how much damage they could theoretically do and how easy it would be to implement a nano bot to do that - then you just sit back and wait for someone somewhere in the world to start it all off.

      --
      This comment does not represent the views or opinions of the user.
  32. Nah.. by EtherealStrife · · Score: 0

    This is frightening.

    1. Re:Nah.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, it's a perfectly good book, I suggest you read it. Oh shit they're coming, I've got to go.

  33. Save us now! by null+etc. · · Score: 2, Funny

    We absolutely have to regulate how nanotechnology is used. Think what would happen if spyware and malware authors got ahold of a few nanobots!

  34. Re:Solution to nano-dust: Nanotech by Lord+Bitman · · Score: 1

    Dont crush nano before it has a chance to create safegards against itself.

    --
    -- 'The' Lord and Master Bitman On High, Master Of All
  35. Too late. by abb3w · · Score: 4, Informative
    I recall seeing a citation that many firms (especially outside the US) were using the health and materials safety data for graphite for CNTs, since nothing specific for carbon nanotubes existed. I've found at least one CNT data sheet online, but therein the phrase "TO THE BEST OF OUR KNOWLEDGE, THE CHEMICAL, PHYSICAL, AND TOXICOLOGICAL PROPERTIES HAVE NOT BEEN THOROUGHLY INVESTIGATED" raises alarm bells for me at least.

    Nanomaterials are weird. Gold metal and even sub-hair thin wires are fairly inert; but nanodivide it, and it becomes highly reactive and much more toxic than lead. And we're putting nanocrystal zinc oxide into sunscreens these days. I'll use it anyway-- with my skin and family history, melanoma is the bigger risk. But nanomaterials exposure is already happening.

    --
    //Information does not want to be free; it wants to breed.
    1. Re:Too late. by youngerpants · · Score: 1, Insightful
      products such as Sulphiric Acid haver been thoroughly investigated, and apparently its pretty bad for us... much worse than CNT's or Asbestos. Its still used a lot in industry though.


      One day, politicians/ regulatory bodies are going to find a happy medum between FUD and ignorance.

    2. Re:Too late. by EvilTwinSkippy · · Score: 3, Funny
      Sulphiric Acid? You probably mean "Sulphuric Acid".

      The reason they can use it is because its effects are immediate. It has this neat property of killing or disfiguring, on contact, anyone who doesn't handle it properly.

      I don't know where you get off saying H2SO4 has not been thoroughly investigated. What do you want, a guy in a labcoat with an eyedropper blinding mice?

      --
      "Learning is not compulsory... neither is survival."
      --Dr.W.Edwards Deming
    3. Re:Too late. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hey, be fair... EVERYONE wants a guy in a labcoat with an eyedropper blinding mice.

    4. Re:Too late. by Politburo · · Score: 1

      The reason they can use it is because its effects are immediate.

      No. GP is referencing what's called "Sulfuric Acid Mist Emissions". While this has the same chemical makeup as the sulfuric acid you used in chemistry class, the mist form allows low concentrations of acid to infiltrate the body. From the MSDS:

      "Carcinogenicity: Cancer Status: The International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) has classified "strong inorganic acid mists containing sulfuric acid" as a known human carcinogen, (IARC category 1). This classification applies only to mists containing sulfuric acid and not to sulfuric acid or sulfuric acid solutions."

    5. Re:Too late. by Spy+der+Mann · · Score: 1

      products such as Sulphiric Acid haver been thoroughly investigated, and apparently its pretty bad for us... much worse than CNT's or Asbestos.

      Yes, but Sulphuric Acid DOES degenerate. Try that with a CNT.

      White cell: "I can't digest this thing! It's killing me AAAAGH"
      Fish's brain cell: "Told ya."

    6. Re:Too late. by srleffler · · Score: 2, Insightful
      On the other hand, I have often noticed that material safety data sheets are sometimes unreasonably dire in their warnings, and tend to always prescribe the most extreme measures imaginable without regard to the extent of the possible exposure.

      Don't believe me? Look at the data sheet for table salt. "Lab Protective Equip: GOGGLES; LAB COAT; PROPER GLOVES", "In the event of a fire, wear full protective clothing and NIOSH-approved self-contained breathing apparatus with full facepiece operated in the pressure demand or other positive pressure mode.", " Ventilate area of leak or spill. Wear appropriate personal protective equipment as specified in Section 8. Spills: Sweep up and containerize for reclamation or disposal. Vacuuming or wet sweeping may be used to avoid dust dispersal.", "Containers of this material may be hazardous when empty since they retain product residues."

      Oops, I forgot to wear my goggles and gloves when I had dinner this evening. I wonder if I'll live.

      To be fair, I think that MSDS's are written with mass industrial processes in mind. Perhaps you have to be a bit more careful if you're working with a thousand tonnes of finely-ground salt. Still, MSDS's do not seem to me to be a very good guide to the overall hazardousness of a substance, especially when they say something as vague as "THE CHEMICAL, PHYSICAL, AND TOXICOLOGICAL PROPERTIES HAVE NOT BEEN THOROUGHLY INVESTIGATED."

    7. Re:Too late. by Mysticalfruit · · Score: 1

      Well... if your putting your sun screen into a humitifier and then standing directly over it and taking deep breaths, there are other considerations that we need to speak about.

      My feeling is that we should continue nanotechnology research and if possible ramp it up. However, I think the FDA needs to clarify that products rendered into the nanoscale should be tested and not assumed that they'll have the same physical properties as their larger macro cousins...

      --
      Yes Francis, the world has gone crazy.
    8. Re:Too late. by Alsee · · Score: 1

      What do you want, a guy in a labcoat with an eyedropper blinding mice?

      I'm suddenly picturing a new reality TV series.

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
  36. grey goo sounds a lot like cancer by oneiron · · Score: 1

    I wonder what organ earth resides in.

  37. You can't moderate the entire world by Kraemahz · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Outright banning or heavily restricting a particular field of research is the fastest way to create a technological divide and be swept away by the pace of advancement, and at the rate it's going that means the country in discussion will be left in the dust in a handful of years.

    You can't question the ethical nature of a technology itself and restrict it appropriately and also have progress. Would nuclear technology have advanced if they were worrying about the very long term consequences? You might argue that nuclear facilities haven't helped us all that much, and have done quite a bit of damage, but we also couldn't be taking steps toward fusion without learning from our mistakes with fission.

    Essentially, the countries that take the risks and have the courage to step into unknown territory are going to see the biggest returns the fastest, since ultimately nanotech offers to return more resources than those expended getting to it. Meanwhile, anyone who pussyfoots around is going to find themself quickly losing military, economic, and technological prowess.

    1. Re:You can't moderate the entire world by hesiod · · Score: 1

      > The country in discussion will be left in the dust in a handful of years.

      Considering the topic is nanotechnology, "dust" seems as plausible as "grey goo."

  38. Global flame war by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Much like the response to EVERY article posted on slashdot, any sort of open forum discussion on this topic by the uninformed masses would just be a deafening roar of half thought out (if half), pessismistic ranting that would point out every reason not to pursue the idea, why the idea is being pursued in the wrong way, how someone else already thought up the idea, etc. Eventually the discussion would boil down to how the minutes of the discussion meetings don't render properly in Firefox before all the scientists who actually know wtf they are talking about collectively build a ship and leave the planet. Of course the ship will probably run on Sun systems, proving yet again how stupid those scientists are.

  39. Better yet: "What could possiblie go wrong?" by spun · · Score: 1

    Hmm, that's the first thing that's ever gone wrong...

    --
    - None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton
  40. Nanotechnology is nanomaterials by obiquity · · Score: 3, Informative

    There is a common misconception about nanotechnology that even /. editors are not immune to. I suppose this has to do with the fact that nanotechnology has morphed over the years into a discpline that has very little to do with "nanofabrication" and nanomachines, areas in which research has slowed substantially since the early 90s.

    Rather, most academic research is now geared towards the production of highly controlled materials at the nano-scale. Nanoparticulate metals and oxides have tons of applications but almost none of them are nano machines. Rather, this work has become advanced form of materials chemistry and physics, designing regular surface features or particles. For this reason, nano-materials are not going to be much more dangerous than normal materials in the big picture. Nano-disperse carbon, which is sometimes called *smoke* or soot, is probably just as toxic as bucky-balls.

    An interesting issue is: why have researches have abandoned nano-machines? I think it has to do with the fact that we already know how to build them. There's technology that has a great track record and can do almost anything you'd like at the nano and sub nano scale. They're called *enzymes* and recent enzyme engineering advances have made many nano-related tasks kind of superfluous. Also there are viruses and bacteria(maybe) that range into the nano-scale as well. So I think it boils down to a "why bother" issue with nano machines.

    Of course I *might* be biased given my chosen area of research. I'm a chem. Prof investigating enzyme and bacteria engineering. Nah, I'm not biased.....

    1. Re:Nanotechnology is nanomaterials by Steven+Edwards · · Score: 1

      That works great for this planet but what about sending sending probes to deep space, mars or the moon? I doubt you are going to be able to develop a enzyme or bacteria that can not only survive but thrive and work with other bacteria to build anything on the surface. Nano-machines have uses just not on this world.....

      Still I would like to hear what you think about seeing Mars with some bacteria and enzymes.

      --
      Why clone Unix when I can clone Windows instead. http://www.reactos.org
    2. Re:Nanotechnology is nanomaterials by Foktip · · Score: 1

      Customized bacterium, and enzymes? Thats so cool. I guess we need nano-machines for nano-fabrication though, you need the basic tools i guess. Are we anywhere near the point where we can understand how and why a virus does what it does - how its programmed?

      I've read about things like nano-computers, fabrics, etc., but making nano-things that were individually intelligent, like bacterium, or enzymes... that sounds quite difficult.

      If there was a rapid-nano-prototyping machine, with some nano-reverse-engeneering analyzing machines to go with it; mayby then it would go faster...

      Perhaps we'll eventually be replacing medication with fabricated viruses. Whee!

    3. Re:Nanotechnology is nanomaterials by obiquity · · Score: 1

      We're getting to understand bacteria and virus quite well. In my lab (and many others) we are able to package our DNA into virus particle coats and use it to transfect other organisms. You can buy a kit from Stratagene (SupeCos) for this very purpose! We "program" organisms by adding synthtic DNA sequences, or cut and past sequences. We also use something called "directed evolution" to evolve enzyme that do non-natural things.

      I can imagine a day when we are able to build other bio nano structures using similar methods. I've seen talks with people "printing" neurons on chips, for instance.

      Cheers!

      -obqt

  41. If you've read "Century Rain" by Alastair Reynolds by isolationism · · Score: 1
    ... Most "Slashers" would probably argue in favour of regulation now before it is indeed too late.

    Incidentally, I will hopefully post a review of this excellent book soonish, if nobody beats me to it.

  42. New Regulation. by Foktip · · Score: 1

    Um what? Particulate pollution? Thats what they want you to think. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Particulate

    Thats about the biggest kind of nano-structures they would make; thats the _starting point_ of nano-technology. THe aim, is to make it way smaller.

    wikipedia:
    "particulate matter smaller than about 10 micrometers, referred to as PM10, can settle in the lungs and cause health problems"

    Thats the problem. Nanotubes, nanofabric, nanocomputers, nanomachines, all of them would want to become smaller and better and the industries are trying to convince government/public that their particles are big, so they can classify them as an entirely different type of hazard (which is currently the case in the US) while at the same time trying to convince their buyers their particles are small (and advanced). It just doesnt make sense.

    THey need better regulation that specifically deals with nanoparticles less than 20nm or even 30nm (safety factor).

    1. Re:New Regulation. by cyclopropene · · Score: 1
      THey need better regulation that specifically deals with nanoparticles less than 20nm or even 30nm (safety factor).
      Yes, exactly. We need to get into the 21st century and regulate nanotechnology the same way we have been regulating centitechnology, specifically centiparticles less than 20cm or even 30cm (safety factor) for decades. After all, the threat from centiparticles, such as bullets, knives and some artillery shells, which killed millions of people back in the 20th century, or toothpicks, which are just the right size to lodge in a persons throat causing death by choking, or even some tasty-looking mushrooms that cause irreparable liver damage, have all now been extremely well managed by government regulation. We need to apply the same mentality that we have for regulating objects the size of apples and oranges and some small furry animals to the new size range that has recently been invented that we collectively refer to as nanotechnology. After all, objects 1-30nm in size did not exist before scientists began meddling around in God's domain creating this new menace to society. Call your congressman now and demand that the government immediately and with great urgency pass legislation to regulate all materials between 1 nm and 20 nm (or even 30 nm, safety factor)!
      --
      Shouldn't you be doing something useful?
  43. Your priority list is messed up. by abb3w · · Score: 2, Insightful
    Time travel itself should be at the head of the list by a long way. To misquote Varley:

    Time travel is so dangerous it makes H-bombs seem like perfectly safe gifts for children and imbeciles. With a bomb, what's the worst that can happen? A few million people die. With time travel, we can wipe out the entire universe.

    Oh, and flying cars are covered under the FAA rules, as I recall.

    --
    //Information does not want to be free; it wants to breed.
    1. Re:Your priority list is messed up. by hesiod · · Score: 1

      > With a bomb, what's the worst that can happen? A few million people die. With time travel, we can wipe out the entire universe.

      First, before the first H-Bomb was detonated, there are probably some who thought the universe could be wiped out. They were wrong.

      Ignoring that past ignorance for a second, that statement is current ignorance: I don't see how the universe could be wiped out by time travel. Even if you could go back in time to the "big bang," you probably wouldn't survive long enough to stop anything from happening. Even if you did, a human or 6 billion is a little insignificant compared to that energy.

      To sum up: Varley is an author of fiction, not a scientist.

    2. Re:Your priority list is messed up. by orasio · · Score: 1

      Of course, but we earthians tend to think of our life as "the universe", and a small team of people,a relatively small set of simple weapons, + some vehicles, could wipe out the entire human civilization at some point, or at least our civilization as we know it.
      Plus, he/she would have the power to find the best spot in time to choose.

    3. Re:Your priority list is messed up. by Cro+Magnon · · Score: 1

      There was a Star Trek novel where an alien race went back in time and kept the asteriod that wiped out the dinosuars from hitting the Earth. Thus mankind never existed! Admittedly, Earth isn't the universe, and it required some advanced stuff besides the time travel (we don't have asteriod deflectors yet), but the potential danger is still far beyond anything else.

      --
      Slow down, cowboy! It has been 4 hours since you last posted. You must wait another few hours.
    4. Re:Your priority list is messed up. by xMilkmanDanx · · Score: 0

      Most people mistake time travel thinking that travelling to the past means travelling to YOUR past. Two possibilities of time travel (in an extremely hypothetical exam), either 1) you turn around and go into the "past" for a time or 2) you have a quantum jump from time uncertainty.

      1) To do so, you turn and thus the past becomes the future relative to you and thus uncertain. By that uncertainty, you are just as unlikely to end back up in the particular "timeline" that you came from as it would be to go forward in time to some particular outcome.
      2) You jump in time from quantum uncertainty. Assuming that the every universe that can exist does exist in some dimension(s) orthagonal to known reality, you would not end up on the same position along your "past". Also, given the speed of the earth relative to the sun and the sun relative to the galaxy and the galaxy relative to all others, that's a whole lot of luck to end up back where you started (relative spacial position to earth).

      Basically, you can't destroy your world (as you knew it before travelling) or anything else. There is no paradox in nature, only in man's limited perception of it.

  44. Regulation-Anarchist Market. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "The problem with regulation of nearly anything is it only stops honest people. Usually, the people that weren't going to do anything wrong in the first place."

    Conclusion: A society without rules is best, because a society with rules is impossible.

  45. ...And You Think Steroids Is A Problem by Chi+Hsuan+Men · · Score: 1

    I imagine that sometime in the (near?) future, athletes using steroids will have been considered the cavemen of artifical performance enhancing measures.

    Imagine nano-tech that will be able to act as red-blood cells, fueling muscles with oxygen in order to perform better. Or, on a a more basic level, able to replenish the body with nutrients in order to keep an athlete's biochemistry in check so they can perform at an inhuman level.

    Granted, this sort of scenario is down a distant road; however, with labs already asking questions about GENE doping, it's not completely proposterous to start addressing these specific situations in order stop the abuses before they start.

    --
    Respect It.
  46. Where's the beef? by MillionthMonkey · · Score: 3, Insightful
    Is this really a problem? Has anyone really been calling for the regulation of nanotech?

    The only evidence he offers is that people were worrying that buckyballs might cause cancer, and the NSF is funding toxicity studies. And the British are also interested in studying nanoparticle toxicity. So what?

    But he also offers this, from the same source from which he gets his scary "wide societal debate" quote:
    Also the ETC (an action group on Erosion, Technology and Concentration)--the same group that had lobbied against Monsanto's (nyse: MON - news - people ) genetically engineered crops in the 1990s--has called for nothing less than a moratorium on the use of synthetic nanoparticles in the lab and in commercial products.
    So a small Canadian corporate watchdog group with an unsuccessful record of opposing biotech holds an extreme position on nanotechnology. Oooh, I'm scared!

    This link found in the article is rather telling:
    Special Offer: Get in on the ground floor of a growth industry still in its infancy. Click here for a complete list of stocks in Josh Wolfe's "Nanosphere" portfolio and for up-and-coming private companies.
    With your subscription for the special introductory price of only $195 (a 67% discount off the cover price), you will receive 12 monthly hard-copy issues of the author's Nanotech Report delivered right to your door. No doubt each issue will be filled with screeching about nonexistent political threats to nanotechnology from powerful Canadians.
    1. Re:Where's the beef? by Sj0 · · Score: 1


      That's right, the canadians are powerless. Nobody has power, except for you. You're the strong one, after all. Nobody would mess with you, not in a million years. Just go back to eating your hamburger.

      ^ ^

      --
      It's been a long time.
  47. Obsession with power by parasonic · · Score: 1

    As soon as anything comes out, any development is made, someone wants to regulate it, or at least someone declares that it needs to be regulated. With a slight bit of foresight, one would not complain until there's something to complain about. Most of the times, things work out for the better...sometimes, things don't, and big deals are made. Nanotech needs a LOT of development and a lot of "space to work with," and limitations right now when there are essentially no problems is a bad idea. Any environmental issue right now with its development is just a drop in the bucket, and in a few years, we will probably have a "safer" solution, and a processor that is so fast that the desktop user won't even have to upgrade for eight years...

    1. Re:Obsession with power by maxwell+demon · · Score: 1
      and a processor that is so fast that the desktop user won't even have to upgrade for eight years...

      Actually we have had such processors for years. Just don't install the newest bloatware on it.
      --
      The Tao of math: The numbers you can count are not the real numbers.
  48. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  49. NO! by myukew · · Score: 1

    In a borg cubus nanotech regulates you!

  50. Too bad it's not like the old days... by kongjie · · Score: 1
    ...when you could fire workers for getting injured on the job, open discharge pipes directly into rivers and implement a system of nuclear power plants without getting a viable plan in place and approved for waste disposal.

    Seriously, this guy is holding up Monsanto and GMO's as the "victims" of regulation he is afraid that nanotech will also suffer.

    My feelings about this are pretty simple, admittedly, but based on the situation with GMO's, it seems that there is a lot of money to be made in creating and patenting and selling GMO's, and not a heck of a lot of money to be made finding out if they could pose a problem for us some time down the road. Sure, there's some funding that will be available for that kind of research, but it's minimal when you compare it to the other side of the equation.

    When we're talking about this magnitude of profit incentive, as a worker bee I WANT the regulation, because there will be no natural roadblocks to misuse and irresponsibility.

    The reason the green "gangs" are so adamant on these issues is that once you let it out, it's too late--the harm has already been done.

    Many scientists' primary experience with ethics is a course in college and administrative personnel who require them to fill out a lot of forms. It's left to others, in this case the Government, to try and look at the big picture.

    As someone who has a great interest in science, I also get pretty pissed off when critics of regulation start throwing around the "Luddite" accusation. We need a term for scientists who have no real concern for the possible consequences of their research; or more specifically, a term for the financiers of said research.

  51. "Guaranteed Safety" is a crock by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    They say they want to guarantee the safety of the technology ...
    <rant>
    Oh, for fuck's sake. You cannot guarantee the safety of anything!

    Learn to deal with the real world, people! Dangers exist, and they cannot be eliminated.

    Reduced to acceptable levels, maybe, but claiming you want to "guarantee the safety" of anything is just a setup to kill off whatever it is because you don't like it, while sounding like you're acting in everyone's best interests.

    It's this kind of luddite fearmongering crap that's going to completely kill off any possibility of space travel or other high technology in the USA, and possibly Europe too.

    When did we become such a society of pussies?
    </rant>

    {fume}
    1. Re:"Guaranteed Safety" is a crock by maxwell+demon · · Score: 1

      Of course you can guarantee the safety of everything. Just put a sign on it: "1 Year Safety Guarantee. Safe or Money Back!"

      Now, in the worst case, you'll lose a lot of money. But that's a different problem ...

      --
      The Tao of math: The numbers you can count are not the real numbers.
    2. Re:"Guaranteed Safety" is a crock by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      First, thanks for writing $PARENT, thus saving me the trouble!

      When did we become such a society of pussies?

      Easy! we became such a society when

      A) Certain "types" (e.g. Trial Lawyers) figured out how to profit from it.

      B) Certain other "types" (e.g. Macro$haft) figured out that, when an organization is big enough, it has little to fear from the "A) types", and, indeed that in context the A) types can be used as an anticompetitive tool.

      C) Certain other "types" (e.g. Red-State (RED! how Ironic) authoritarians) figured out that frightened people are generally easy to control.

      Would you like other examples?

  52. Regulating chemistry? by tgibbs · · Score: 4, Insightful

    So buckyballs may be bad for you? Not exactly a big surprise--there are buckyballs in soot, after all, and breathing soot is not beneficial.

    For the most part, nanotechnology is just a novel approach to doing chemistry--creating molecular assemblies of atoms. It makes possible some novel chemistry, and there will probably be some novel hazards, but there's nothing to indicate that there is some kind of "generic" hazard as is the case with radioactivity, where many different isotopes emit only a handful of energetic particles. So it makes no sense to try to create generic regulations for nanotechnology.

    So we're going to have to investigate the risks of nanosubstances just the way we investigate the risks of biological substances (which are just "evolved organic nanotechnology," anyway) and new chemical compounds--case by case. A company that wants to discharge some nanotechnological waste should be subject to exactly the same scrutiny as a company that wants to discharge a new chemical. Eventually, we'll probably begin to figure out whether particular classes of nanosubstances have particular hazards, like asbestos or polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons. But targeting nanotechnology per se for some sort of heightened scrutiny is just obstructionist fear of new technology.

    1. Re:Regulating chemistry? by 1HandClapping · · Score: 1
      Buckyballs are not my big concern. Nanotubes, are structuraly similar to asbestos fibers, that is thin and stiff and very small.

      If buckyballs are regulated like soot, by that logic, nanotubes should be regulated like asbestos.

    2. Re:Regulating chemistry? by hyfe · · Score: 1
      A company that wants to discharge some nanotechnological waste should be subject to exactly the same scrutiny as a company that wants to discharge a new chemical

      In my opinion, the numerous cases of companies willfullingly evading pollution controls and dumping known harmfull stuff where it shouldn't shows that the regular approach to this just ain't cutting it.

      When the potential damage goes up, so should the safe-guards.

      --
      "" How about taking the safety labels off everything, and let the stupidity-problem solve itself? """
    3. Re:Regulating chemistry? by tgibbs · · Score: 1

      In my opinion, the numerous cases of companies willfullingly evading pollution controls and dumping known harmfull stuff where it shouldn't shows that the regular approach to this just ain't cutting it.

      Whatever regulations you have, there will occasionally be violations, so the frequency of violations is not informative. On the other hand, modern instances of mass toxicity due to illegal dumping seem pretty rare. This is not surprising, since the standards usually have enough safety margin that you have to exceed regulated by a large amount to cause much damage.

      When the potential damage goes up, so should the safe-guards

      The point is that there is absolutely no reason to believe that the potential damage is any greater with substances made by nanotechnological methods than with substances made by conventional methods.

    4. Re:Regulating chemistry? by tgibbs · · Score: 1

      Buckyballs are not my big concern. Nanotubes, are structuraly similar to asbestos fibers, that is thin and stiff and very small.

      If buckyballs are regulated like soot, by that logic, nanotubes should be regulated like asbestos.


      However, it is unclear whether the hazards of asbestos fibers are solely a function of dimension. One early study suggests that nanotubes may not be all that hazardous. On the other hand, there is a long history of human health hazards from dusts, ranging from mineral to agricultural, so I'd be hesitant to presume that a nanotube dust is safe. It is probably a good general policy to minimize inhalation of fine powders, nanotechnological or otherwise.

    5. Re:Regulating chemistry? by 1HandClapping · · Score: 1

      But asbestosis takes 10 to 30 years to develope after exposure, so that study would not have discovered any asbestosis (nanotubosis?).

    6. Re:Regulating chemistry? by tgibbs · · Score: 1

      But asbestosis takes 10 to 30 years to develope after exposure, so that study would not have discovered any asbestosis

      Which is probably why they weren't looking for asbestosis, but rather early indicators of damage such as inflammation. Still, I'd like to see more studies before concluding that such particles are without hazard.

    7. Re:Regulating chemistry? by 1HandClapping · · Score: 1
      From the article

      Last year, a team of researchers in Warsaw carried out experiments to explore whether carbon nanotubes act in lung tissue the way asbestos does. In the April 15, 2001 Fullerene Science and Technology, the researchers reported subjecting guinea pigs to soot that did or didn't contain carbon nanotubes. Four weeks later, data from pulmonary-function tests didn't differ substantially between the groups. Autopsies didn't reveal significant differences in the animals' inflammatory reactions, either. On the basis of this initial evidence, the researchers suggested that "working with soot containing carbon nanotubes is unlikely to be associated with any health risk."

      Too bad they didn't add a control of soot containing asbestos. So they could see what asbestos does in the same amount of time.

    8. Re:Regulating chemistry? by tgibbs · · Score: 1

      Too bad they didn't add a control of soot containing asbestos. So they could see what asbestos does in the same amount of time.

      Inflammatory reactions to asbestos are already known. See for example this study

  53. sssshhhh..... by tempest69 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Ok, everyone keep it quiet that molecular biologists are doing way too much nanotech already. Enzymes are molecular machines that can build things at nano scales. When the nanotech regulators come around remember to call it biology. Storm

  54. We don't understand ecosystems to try nanotech by postbigbang · · Score: 1

    So many ecosystems are either misunderstood, barely understood, or already deceased. Adding nanotech to the mix without knowing the parts of the equation that are affected-- because we're ignorant of much of the environment-- is asking for disaster. Regulatory oversight is incredibly important, before some genie gets out of the bottle that destroys us. We have no methods to fight a nanotech problem, should one emerge. We're defenceless. Is that a good posture for starting an industry?

    --
    ---- Teach Peace. It's Cheaper Than War.
    1. Re:We don't understand ecosystems to try nanotech by Rakishi · · Score: 1

      huh?
      Nano-tech is simply making things really small, and besides the potential pollution from such devices the enviromental impact is not much worse than for any other substance.

  55. Nanobots that flow by lheal · · Score: 1

    If we could make a nanobot small enough, and make enough of them, then their movement would look like fluid flow.

    Imagine companies competing on the viscosity of their nanobot lines.

    Imagine billions of nanobots programmed to stay very close to a human's skin, but not to touch it. They could be waterproof and/or airtight from the outside, but allow various things to escape from the inside.

    Oh well. Somebody has probably already written a whole series of sci-fi novels about it.

    --
    Raise your children as if you were teaching them to raise your grandchildren, because you are.
  56. The dangers are obvious by hedge_death_shootout · · Score: 1

    If a very large bit of nanotechnology was to fall on somebody, they could be very badly injured.

  57. What is nanotech? by exp(pi*sqrt(163)) · · Score: 3, Insightful
    I used to think nanotech meant things like microscopic sized self-reproducing robots. One might imagine an army of these reducing the world to goo - but that's so far off in the future there really is no need for regulation.

    But when I peruse web sites of companies claiming to sell nanotech what I actually find are companies selling small amounts of powder that has been ground up really small. For example a medical application of nanotech is really small bits of ground up magnet with antibodies attached giving a nice way to detect antigens through a magnetic field. Or another application comes from the fact that really small particles have a high surface area to volume ratio making good reagents and catalysts for chemical processes. So nanotech is really just finely ground stuff. (It sounds a lot less sexy when you actually say the truth free of jargon.) And that, IMHO, is far more dangerous than imaginary robots because it can get in your lungs and lodge in other parts of your body. But this doesn't necessarily need specific regulation, we can just use existing regulation for particulate pollution more finely grained (no pun intended) to limit how much nanoparticle sized stuff may be released into the air.

    --
    Doesn't it make you feel good to know that our freedoms are protected by politicans, lawyers and journalists.
  58. It should by JustOK · · Score: 1

    It should be micromanaged.

    --
    rewriting history since 2109
  59. So how do new products get evaluated? by metoc · · Score: 1

    So how do new products get evaluated?

    You would think that after all the lesson learned, and the work put in to get asbestos and PCBs off the market, there would be a mechanism in place to keep it from happening again.

  60. Just because nanotech can operate in human cells by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    and destroy them and cause immense and incalculable damage doesn't mean we should regulate them ...

    because we live in an age of immense stupidity, so we should never ever ever regulate them ever.

    um, is my IRONY key turned on here?

  61. Good discussion sites for this topic. . . by Slicebo · · Score: 1

    I can recommend two websites that have useful, factual information on safety and regulation issues for nanotech (molecular manufacturing): Foresight Institute click here and Center for Responsible Nanotechnology click here

  62. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  63. Re:Just because nanotech can operate in human cell by WillAffleckUW · · Score: 1

    no, i think your irony key is turned off - must be a nanobot operating inside your keyboard ... or is it the neuron firing your finger ...

    --
    -- Tigger warning: This post may contain tiggers! --
  64. Would regulation even work? by t_allardyce · · Score: 1

    The real issue is the question of the possibility that nano bots could be built that replicated infinitely consuming a wide range of materials as they went. It would only take a single nano bot in the entire world to do this, so regulation isn't going to help, unless it can be guaranteed 100% effective, not 99.999999999999%, this theoretical nano bot would of course have to be programmed not to eat other similar nano bots and they would also need to get into a good formation (a sphere?) or they would face food shortages as they tried to fan out. If they could travel that would also help - maybe through wind or water or by being purposefully spread around the world. They would also need to be either fast or left unattended until they got a good population, otherwise they could just be collected up in a suitable container and ejected into space (preferably towards the sun) before they ate through it. But this whole thing could be translated to any sized robot - insect or animal sized bots could start eating things to reproduce continuously too, its just that nano bots sound scarier because you won't see them until your body is disintegrating.

    --
    This comment does not represent the views or opinions of the user.
  65. Where's the trust? by Lovesquid · · Score: 1

    Of COURSE nanotech should be regulated. Everything should be regulated. Big government all the way. After all, who better to tell us what to do than those who know what's best for us, right?

    1. Re:Where's the trust? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      "...who better to tell us what to do than those who know what's best for us, right?"

      And by that you mean the scientists' corporate masters, right?

  66. mmmmmm... by Bohnanza · · Score: 1

    free goo.

    --

    -----

    Sorry, I'm only a 1336 h4x0r.

  67. Re:Solution to nano-dust: Nanotech by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So we should allow potentially dangerous substance to be used in products and let people buy them unknowingly?
    Imho Research should be allowed however until we know more about the possible effects (or lack thereof):
    1) Researchers should take precautions to prevent release of the substances into the environment.
    2) Products which while functioning release these particles should be restricted heavily.

    Otherwise, we're going to have another lovely set of lawsuits like those with asbestos however these actually may kill the industry. Bad PR + having to pay lot's of money are not things an industry can just shrug off.

  68. Paradox of time travel by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If you use a time machine to go back in time and kill your mother before you are born, how will time cope with the fact that you will not be born and thus not exist to go back in time in the first place?

    1. Re:Paradox of time travel by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'd rather go back in time and kill your mother, thus preventing inane commments like this from ever being posted.

    2. Re:Paradox of time travel by Sj0 · · Score: 1

      Have you considered the possibility that two interlaced sub-universes could be created, flickering with every time quanta?

      First you exist, then you don't. then you do. I've thought long and hard about this, and either nobody has ever created a time machine(because if you created a time machine and intentionally went back in time to change something, you'd have no reason to go back in time to change that because it's already been changed, so you wouldn't, so it would, so either the universe breaks somehow, or an additional split universe begins to interlace.

      Naturally, anyone with greater knowlege of glactic or non-classical physics should feel free to prove me wrong. God knows I don't know everything. :)

      --
      It's been a long time.
    3. Re:Paradox of time travel by Short+Circuit · · Score: 1

      That would lead to interesting science fiction about "temporal demultiplexers" and "temporal multiplexers" ... jaunt between timelines at will.

  69. grey goo? by deathazre · · Score: 1

    grey goo like the stuff that you get when an oil cooler starts leaking on a diesel engine?

    let's try to avoid that crap, thanks. I've dealt with it enough times.

    --
    Karma: Negative (Mostly affected by dorm trolling)
  70. Pollution potental is not much worse???? by postbigbang · · Score: 1

    Small things become airborne, or they become parts of aquifers, or find other ways to spread to places unintended. Look at what happens when a tiny amount of perc pollutes an aquifer-- it spreads in just weeks. Trichloroethane, MEK, all of these spread quickly and wreck ecosystems. The potentials are huge-- especially for countries that will look the other way to regulation and even common sense to have what they believe to be an economic gain.

    The possibilities are plainly gruesome. Without basic metrics in place, it's all rife for abuse-- with the usual motivators.

    --
    ---- Teach Peace. It's Cheaper Than War.
  71. What? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That doesn't make sense. If someone proveably cures the common cold, there will be no stopping the population from using it.

  72. This is ridiculously bad journalism... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The article quotes a new study that says that buckyballs caused brain damage in fish, implying that buckyballs were regarded as harmless before this study. It has been known for many, many years that buckyballs are very potent carcinogens. This isn't new.

    And frankly, if you want to regulate something, go regulate university Political Science departments and religions.

    Hundreds of millions of people have died at the hands of political theories like Nazism, Communism, Maoism, Stalinism, etc., and this continues today.

    Millions of people have been murdered in the name of religious fanaticism, and this continues today.

    Nanotechnology is very innocent by comparison.

  73. Point taken, but you miss something, too. by Damek · · Score: 1

    "...experts' opinions are going to be the most well-informed, and therefore the most valuable."

    "Experts" are also generally going to be biased towards wanting to play with the new toys they thought up. They are also generally going to being paid by companies who seek to make a profit out of their investments because they've invested so darn much they don't want to lose the money. This is why the "public" needs to be involved.

    I'd rather a mob of people go off half-cocked and hold back a bit of progress for a little while than a mob of corporations go off half-cocked and thrust something onto an unprepared world dangerously fast.

    The public's opinion can easily be swayed by corporations with hidden agendas, and somehow I doubt that human advancement will win out against massive profits and sensationalism.

    "Earned" authority? I earned mine, too. I'm a citizen. If there really is nothing dangerous, we'll be educated in the long run and the benefits will win out over the fears.

  74. What's new by mishmash · · Score: 1

    Most of "Nanotechnology" is just hyped up stuff that used to be called "Chemistry" or "Molecular Biology".

    In 2003 the UK Science and Technology Committee took evidence from Molecular Biologists and Chemists on the Question of if there was a need to regulate Nanotechnology.
    The transcript is available here.

    1. Re:What's new by panaceaa · · Score: 2, Funny

      Most of "Nanotechnology" is just hyped up stuff that used to be called "Chemistry" or "Molecular Biology".

      Yes, and nanotech regulation used to be called micromanagement.

      PHB's just love to make themselves look important :).

    2. Re:What's new by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Most of "Nanotechnology" is just hyped up stuff that used to be called "Chemistry" or "Molecular Biology".

      You oversimplify.

      Most Chemistry and Molecular Biology is just a hyped up term for alchemy - gee, lets mix stuff and see what happens.

      Nanotechnology is finally turning alchemy/chemistry into a science and engineering disipline -- put this atom exactly here and expect this property.

    3. Re:What's new by Angostura · · Score: 1

      Insightful, my man. Way back when 'nanotechnology' was a useful word describing a novel method of building mechanisms atom-by-atom.

      Now it is used by every marketeer as a way of describing things built out of atoms i.e. everything.

  75. Moving the goal posts? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I think "Extreme Shortages of Food" requires more than 815 people out of 6 Billion. Not to sound harsh, but some of the past predictions had to do with India being completely unable to grow food... basically, the arguement Ehrlich and his ilk put forth was global STARVATION, due to ecological famine, not famine caused by people with AK-47s starving their country men (Ethopia, Rwanda, Somaila, Sudan, etc.)

    The point is you can't move the goal posts; You need to compare the percentage of starving people of the total human population over a period of time. If you look at those indicators, fewer people are starving now than pretty much any other time in human history as a percentage of total population.

    Next point, "Europes Children are Dying from Pollution".. Did you actually read this before posting?

    It clearly states that the major cause of death is accident realted, IE Auto accidents and falls. Hardly "Pollution".

    The real question is: Will these children have a greater life expectancy than their parents? Will they be stricken by Polio or Malaria? Not have access to state of the art medical facilities due to extremely high engry costs associated with over regulation...

    1. Re:Moving the goal posts? by foobsr · · Score: 1

      Next point, "Europes Children are Dying from Pollution".. Did you actually read this before posting?
      It clearly states that the major cause of death is accident related, IE Auto accidents and falls. Hardly "Pollution".


      Not commenting that motor vehicles in densely populated regions may be perceived indeed as an instance of a pollution of sorts (no, I am not a car hater, I drive a vintage DB 180D and an authentic MINI - not a BMW), I might add that YES, I read the article, and, NO, I did not pick a single sentence.

      CC.

      --
      TaijiQuan (Huang, 5 loosenings)
  76. Need power source by wiredlogic · · Score: 1

    The grey goo problem isn't a possibility until someone can come up with a a power source for said goo. The obvious solution to this problem is to imitate biological metabolism and find a process for converting chemical energy into electricity that can be used on a microscopic scale. We only need to be concerned once we have self-replicating nanomachines that can directly consume organic material.

    --
    I am becoming gerund, destroyer of verbs.
  77. Nanotech Regulation by TiggertheMad · · Score: 0

    Hey, lets try not to let the government micro-manage this field yet. It's still pretty small.

    Bwhahhahahahhaha..ah..er.ahem.

    --

    HA! I just wasted some of your bandwidth with a frivolous sig!
    1. Re:Nanotech Regulation by ifwm · · Score: 1

      Horrible, yet still far superior to the other attempts.

  78. Where's the Debate? by HalfThat · · Score: 1

    Fortunately the debate is already underway. I'm sure many of us recall Bill Joy's piece in Wired a few years back:

    http://wired-vig.wired.com//wired/archive/8.04/joy _pr.html "Why the Future Doesn't Need Us"

    In short, Joy, one of the founders of Sun Microsystems, suggests that as technological systems grow increasingly complex humanity will loose its ability to control the systems it depends on.

    Sci-fi authors' take on this is either grey-goo or terminator -- apocalyptic visions.

    Reality will probably be much less exciting, but that doesn't mean we shouldn't be concerned.

    Wolfe's opinion is a sterling example of how nanotech -- and not nanotech itself but even the idea of nanotech has potential to strip away human control.

    He says that we should abandon our traditions of public discourse because public discourse will get in the way of economic and scientific "progress."

    But isn't thought and discussion, even if it is sometimes hyperbolic or overly concerned, an essentially human activity that we should preserve, even if the cost involves moving slowly with technological advances?

    Additionally, shouldn't we scrutinize the end results of this kind of progress? As with stem cell and other biotech research, nanotech promises to be hugely expensive, concentrate intelectual capital in the hands of a few major players, and in return give us more viable human beings with more stuff to consume.

    No thank you.

  79. Re:Solution to nano-dust: Nanotech by Lovesquid · · Score: 1

    So we should allow potentially dangerous substance to be used in products and let people buy them unknowingly?

    Yes. Yes, we should.

  80. The Djinni's Out of the Bottle by pr0t0 · · Score: 1


    It's too late for anyone to even think about putting a stranglehold on nanotech. I humbly submit three must-have technology arenas that depend on it: aircraft, auto, and chip design. manufacturers.

    Current military jet propulsion is just about at it's limit. The engines could burn hotter, but that would mean melting the turbine blades, which I believe are a titanium alloy. The only way to currently combat this is to coat the blades in a ceramic, but getting the ceramic to stick to the alloy is problematic. Nanotechnology allows researchers to test the coating and how different additives such as boron can help. If the engine can burn hotter, than the aircraft can go quite a bit faster.

    Fuel cells are arguably the way the automotive industry will derive power for vehicles 25 to 50 years from now. A huge part of the problem with fuel cells is the total inefficiency of the product. This is not due to a design flaw however, just a manufacturing one. Looking at the metallic-ceramic interface at the micron and nanometer lengthscales reveals that the two substances barely touch...a large source of the inefficiency.

    Finally, if you want photonic or plasmonic computer chips, you're going to have to rely on nanotechnology. Current research being conducted is using carbon nanotube interconnects in the circuit. These allow electrons (or photons) to move throughout the system with little to no loss of the data carrier (the *on).

    There are other must-have applications that may seem to have a negative environmental impact, but actually help it. Corrosion resistant materials for instance. Ask yourself how the Yucca Mountain containment facility will keep from developing even the tiniest hole due to corrosion, over 10,000 years?

    Just food for thought. If you are insterested in separating the science from the fiction, check out the research being done at OSU's Material Science Engineering School[osu.edu]

    --
    I'm sorry, but your opinion seems to be wrong.
  81. This so-called "Green Gang" bullcrap by mu-sly · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I'd like to pick a bone with this labelling people with environmental concerns as some kind of wierdo hippy gang.

    We live on a planet that is vital for our existence, yet we (as a species) seem to take every opportunity to destroy it or damage it, because each individual small piece of damage doesn't seem much on it's own. It seems that only once it's too late and we've poisoned the whole place will we think about changing our ways.

    Quite frankly, if you aren't really, really concerned about protecting the environment that gives you and those you love the chance to live, then you don't deserve a life here at all.

    When making money comes ahead of protecting our home, that's when you know we are fucked. But then, only a complete asshole would put profits ahead of planet anyway.

    I'm not going to comment on the nanotechnology issue as I'm still undecided, but trying to label people who care about the environment as a minority freak group is just bullshit.

    Everybody needs to care about the environment we live in, because if we don't, there will come a point where the environment we live in will be damaged beyond repair, and we will no longer be able to live in it.

    Unlike nanotechnology, this isn't fiction. It's already happening, and will continue to get worse unless we act right now to improve our ways. No amount of technology can save us from the terminal stupidity of our species, and making fun of people for looking out for our home is about as low as you can go.

    1. Re:This so-called "Green Gang" bullcrap by detritus` · · Score: 1

      Quite frankly you need to read up a bit before you start talking about protecting the environment. Do you realize that this nanotechnology could represent the great chance for usuable solar energy? (~70% effeciency with IBSC as opposed to the 12% or so we get today). And that these nanoparticles also may be used to clean up chemical waste/spills/etc as they can basically isolate the pollutant inside a carbon cage. Or that nanotechnology can provide insulation that is 39X more effective than current ones? (read aerogels) but hey, we should ensure that its basically impossible to do basic research on nanoparticles just in case a theoretical problem may exist, and even if a danger did exist well hey, maybe the risk is worth it? You're probably one of those people who thinks asbestos is one of the most dangerous chemicals out there and should be banned everywhere... read up on it, its not that dangerous if you use the right form of it (the kind that can dissolve in the human body and be eliminated, unlike current fiberglass insulation which can never be degraded). Read the skeptical evironmentalist once maybe too, show you how "bad" our world really is... let the left wing modding begin

    2. Re:This so-called "Green Gang" bullcrap by mu-sly · · Score: 1

      Quite frankly, I think you need to actually read what I wrote. I never said nanotechnology was bad, in fact, I actually stated that I wasn't going to comment on nanotechnology, as I'm undecided. Sure there are extremists who want to ban it outright, but I certainly don't agree with them. We need to study it, a hell of a lot, as I'm sure there are both good and bad uses, as with all technologies.

      However, as has happened with GM crops, the commercialisation has taken place before the effects were properly studied. Maybe it is harmless, but maybe we won't really know until it's too late. We can't afford to go on making those kind of mistakes, because sooner or later we are going to screw up and wipe ourselves out.

      What I'm advocating is neither left or right wing, it's a simple matter of the fact that we live here, and we should all be doing our utmost to ensure it stays that way, by protecting against damage to our environment.

      So by all means study nanotechnology, just make sure it doesn't get out into the environment before it's long-term effects are properly known about.

    3. Re:This so-called "Green Gang" bullcrap by detritus` · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately you'll never know the long term effects of anything until its been out in the the environment for the long term... it sounds like a great idea until you realize this sort of protectionism results in a HUGE slowdown in research. Look at drug companies... while i agree the whole cox-2 deal might be a little shady, they almost have to do that now, with the HUGE amount of research that must go into every drug, and even with all that research they can be sued senseless if some person with a rare allele dies. the development cycle/cost have resulted in almost no new "wonderdrugs" being introduced into the market in the last 10 years... and without those blockbusters the money going into the company declines, research declines, etc... lawsuits go up becaue 1 person out of a million had an adverse reaction, and the end result is the drug companies are on the brink of collapse.

  82. Balance by patonw · · Score: 1

    There's a lot of room between over and under-regulation. If the "green gang" really had that much power then we would have no computer industry, no energy generation, no biotech, etc. etc. etc. On the other hand if they didn't have any say at all then we'd be looking at an uninhabitable planet... from space. Companies will do what they need to to strengthen their bottom line, even at the expense of the greater good. As for the risks, there is a likelihood that computers connected to the internet could become a self-aware consciousness that would see humans as a threat and destroy all of humanity then enslave every single world in this galaxy. Even though that hasn't happened people use computers to hack, commit crimes and steal other people's identities. Yet, we churn out computers by the millions. Every technology has it's drawbacks. And for every technology the dire sounding worst case scenario is always going to be some far fetched doomsday prediction that has a snowball's chance in hell of actually happening. I don't think people understand how advanced nanomachines would have to be to be able to produce grey goo. Nanomachines that can replicate and energize themselves from the environment have existed long before we came around. Artificial ones will continue to be the holy grail of nanotechnology long after it has become a part of everyday life. It's one thing to be able to manufacture nanomachines. It's another thing to have nanomachine's self assemble in a controlled environment with a carefully defined mix of precursors. It's a completely separate thing to have nanomachines that can gather these resources from the wild, refine them and build copies of themselves. Yes, people will abuse nanotech. There have always people that have abused any technology from blacksmithing to chemistry to computers. These people will probably use nanotech for illegal self-enhancement or more underhanded activities but you don't punish the technology, you punish the criminal.

  83. So let's regulate it by Mr.+Underbridge · · Score: 4, Insightful
    First, please provide a legal definition of nanotech for me.

    That's where the stupidity in the proposed falls. Nanotech is a bunch of very disparate materials that have been lumped together 1) by people who don't understand them, and 2) researchers trying to make their work sound more interesting than it might actually be.

    Nanotech is pretty much nothing and everything. This is just baseless fear of the unknown. We've been doing nanotech for years, it's called pharmaceuticals. Just like any other material, safety needs to be determined on a case-by-case basis.

    1. Re:So let's regulate it by It'sYerMam · · Score: 1

      Except that these so called nanoparticles exhibit very different behaviour to their normal, un-nanoish counterparts. This means that, although lawksing about how dangerous nanotech is is silly, nanosubstances should be treated as an entirely new chemical compared to the normal version.

      --
      im in ur .sig, writin ur memes.
    2. Re:So let's regulate it by Mr.+Underbridge · · Score: 1
      Except that these so called nanoparticles exhibit very different behaviour to their normal, un-nanoish counterparts.

      1. Nanoparticles are only one subset of things that are sometimes called "nanotech." 2. nanoparticles are just kind of small, but that alone doesn't make them unique. We've been dealing with materials that are kind of small for a long time. The difference is that nanotech is supposed to be small and regular. That doesn't make it dangerous.

      This means that, although lawksing about how dangerous nanotech is is silly, nanosubstances should be treated as an entirely new chemical compared to the normal version.

      They are new or variants of materials, yes, but their size doesn't play an inherent role in their safety.

      Bottom line, ANY new material regardless of size should be tested for safety in potential applications before being manufactured for general consumption. So-called "nanotech" is no different. But it's the media spin about how exotic these materials are that's causing unneeded hysteria.

    3. Re:So let's regulate it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      >This is just baseless fear of the unknown

      Says the guy with Tubgirl as his homepage and a goatse link marked "free ipod" in his sig....

    4. Re:So let's regulate it by It'sYerMam · · Score: 1

      Well, if New Scientist carries media spin, then I guess me technical info is skewed, however:
      From what I hear (from New Scientist) nanoparticles behave far differently from the original substance that treating them as a new variant doesn't appear strict enough. (Although, I don't know what you determine variant as)
      As for other parts of nanotech, yes, some has been around for ages, such as manufacturing silicon chips - a lot of nanotech is harmless. However, when considering injecting things into people (as is the case with using buckyballs to coat drugs), we have to know a better idea of the consequences than we do, now.

      --
      im in ur .sig, writin ur memes.
    5. Re:So let's regulate it by Rei · · Score: 1

      That's not really true - there are some inherent risks that relate to size. Namely, in this case, lodging in the lungs: certain sized particles lodge far easier than others (and CNTs are well in this range).

      --
      What a crazy random happenstance!
  84. No societal debate - do RESEARCH. by Foktip · · Score: 1

    I have more faith in research facilities in terms of hazard safety than i have in fabrication facilities... so, yes the government should help research safety practises. In the meantime, they should be (or remain) over-protective. No nano-products should be planned/manufactured until the safety regulation is in place, and the research is finished.

    Quoth, TFA: "...leave nanotech development alone... allow individual regulatory agencies to weigh in on specific products..."

    Some people are just ignorant assholes. That works for safe/predictable products with known chemical elements, like, i dont know, PLASTICS. Oh, and some products flourish without regulation too... like THE INTERNET. But Nanotech is a whole new ballgame!!!

    1. Re:No societal debate - do RESEARCH. by ramblin+billy · · Score: 1


      "Some people are just ignorant assholes."

      Yep. And some people are cutthroat mercenary bastards. Care to guess to which kind the author of TFA belongs?

      I don't think plastics or the internet are good comparisons to nanotechnology. The plastics industry has had problems of its own and IS heavily regulated. The internet is by nature a cooperative system which requires a degree of self-regulation to function. A pile of grey goo is...well, you said it...a whole new ballgame. It doesn't seem unreasonable to make a few rules before we start playing the game.

      billy - hoping for extra innings - not sudden death

  85. patterns by DaNacho · · Score: 1

    Haven't people learned from the regulations of the past? If you regulate a thing, only the people who would do harm with it will have it.

  86. We've been breathing buckyballs etc. since caves. by Ungrounded+Lightning · · Score: 2, Insightful

    We've been breathing buckyballs, nanotubes, an other nanoscopic carbon structures since the domestication of fire. It's called "soot", and is where buckyballs were first discovered.

    Harmfull stuff, too. Humans have evolved to be MUCH less damaged by such things as a result of long use of fire in enclosed places. (To the point that some dioxins amount to deadly poisons for EVERY animal but people, for whom they're just a medium-grade carcinogen/teratogen at exposure levels high enough to overwhelm the detoxification enzymes.)

    Granted industrial production of nanoscopic materials means more exposure to a wider variety of stuff. But biochemical/nanomechanical warfare has been in progress since the advent of single-celled life. Most nanotechnological hazards are likely to be a matter of degree, not something totally new - even if particluar materials ARE totally new.

    --
    Bantam Dominique roosters crow a four-note song. Once you've heard it as "Happy BIRTHday" you can't NOT hear it that way
  87. The Gray Goo will NEVER happen! by clonan · · Score: 1

    People seem to think that nanotech is magic.

    It really isn't, it obeys the same laws as the rest of the universe. A big law being THERMODYNAMICS.

    One aspect of the peky little law is that the tighter you try and control something the more energy it takes.

    Nanotech is based on controling the EXACT 3 demensional placement of atoms....about as highly controled as you can get.

    Nanotech is going to requier HUGE amounts of energy....

    No translate that to the real world...a Nanite is kept in a container specially designed to supply the energy for it to function.

    It gets out and discovers that there is not enough free energy around to build additional nanites faster than they are destroyed by nature.

    Nanites will be very usefull for very specific reactions but the assembilers will be almost useless outside of a controled environment.

    1. Re:The Gray Goo will NEVER happen! by Aardpig · · Score: 1

      One aspect of the peky little law is that the tighter you try and control something the more energy it takes.

      Precisely which law of thermodynamics is this?

      --
      Tubal-Cain smokes the white owl.
    2. Re:The Gray Goo will NEVER happen! by clonan · · Score: 1

      2nd law of thermodynamics.

      "entropy is always increasing"

      Apply this to any situation and you will find that the higher the order in the system the more energy it takes to keep the system in that higher state of order.

      Now in normal life this isn't THAT big an issue....but when you are takinging about manipulating single atoms at an angstrom level of accuracy the energy requiered to construct and then maintain it gets to be incredibly.

    3. Re:The Gray Goo will NEVER happen! by Aardpig · · Score: 1

      Apply this to any situation and you will find that the higher the order in the system the more energy it takes to keep the system in that higher state of order.

      That's simply not true. The second law states that 'entropy can only remain the same, or increase, in a closed system'. For the entropy to remain the same requires no input of energy. For instance, a porcelain teacup sitting atop a table is a high-order state, yet no energy is required to maintain this state.

      --
      Tubal-Cain smokes the white owl.
    4. Re:The Gray Goo will NEVER happen! by clonan · · Score: 1

      Please refer to the wikipedia refference to thermodynamics:

      http://www.nwcreation.net/wiki/index.php?title=2nd _Law_of_Thermodynamics

      #1 a teacup sitting on a table is not in a very high entopy level compared to the requierments of nanotech.

      #2 you are assuming the only things in the system are the table, the tea cup and gravity...the reality is that the only closed system is the entier universe. The table will eventually rot dropping the teacup. The tea will evaporate off (increasing entropy) etc.

      #3 nanotech is more like the "magic" acts that include someone spinning a saucer on top of a 10 foot pole...in a closed system, with no friction, no air resistance and perfect balance, that is a stable setup. This is not a realistic statment.

      #4 At atomic scales all atoms have a "jitter." The are always bouncing around. It takes energy to place them into the correct position and depending on the stability of the bond the random jitters of the neighboring atoms can impart enough energy to break the bond you just established.

      #5 Only when everything in the system is at exactly the same entropy level (as in when there is NO free energy in the system) will the entropylevel stay the same. In all other cases it will trend upwards.

    5. Re:The Gray Goo will NEVER happen! by Aardpig · · Score: 1

      Nothing you have said refutes my statement that maintaining constant entropy does not require an input of energy. I suggest you re-learn your thermodynamics, preferably from a better source than Wikipedia.

      --
      Tubal-Cain smokes the white owl.
    6. Re:The Gray Goo will NEVER happen! by clonan · · Score: 1

      I would quote my physics books but it is harder to provide a link to a hardback book ;-)

      but here are a few more links:

      http://theory.uwinnipeg.ca/mod_tech/node78.html
      http://www.christiananswers.net/q-eden/edn-thermod ynamics.html
      http://www.cartage.org.lb/en/themes/Sciences/Chemi stry/Miscellenous/Helpfile/spontaneityentropy/2ndl aw.htm

      Google has 15,897 more if you like. Every one I reviewed said entropy can ONLY increase.

      As per your statement, I beleive I DID refute your claim.

      You put forth a tea cup as a model for your claim that entropy remains constant.

      I provided two counter examples that directly refute your claim. One immediate and one very long term. Tea evaporating and wood rotting. Both of these will increase the entropy of your system unless energy is used to counter act it.

      I also provided an atomic view of the world that directly refutes your claim vis-avis nanotech.

      This principle is represented in the "activation energy" of chemical reactions. You can graph it by drawing a line followed by a hump with another line following the hump at a different height than the first.

      In a chemical reaction you must put enough energy into the molecules to get them over the hump. The hump represents how dificult it is to get the atoms where they need to be. The height of the lines represents the energy level of the products based on bond energy and entropy level.

      Now, please remember that atoms are not all at the same energy level. Temperature only represents the AVERAGE energy level. Now if the hump is close to the line on one side, the chance of a random higher energy molecule hitting your fancy nanite and giving it enough energy to break apart goes up dramatically.

      As per YOUR physics knowledge, I will admit there is the possibility of a system which does not spontaneously increase entropy. However this system absolutly requiers a closed system and pre-existing uniform entropy. Your example has neither of these. Now systems like this has ever been observed or created and no one anticipates finding them.

      I suggest that you review your physics books and sample problems before you try and design an entropy static system.

    7. Re:The Gray Goo will NEVER happen! by Aardpig · · Score: 1

      So you explicitly refute the existence of reversible processes, that are allowed for by the second law?

      --
      Tubal-Cain smokes the white owl.
    8. Re:The Gray Goo will NEVER happen! by Aardpig · · Score: 1

      OK, I checked out this link, and I found the statement "The entropy of an isolated system never decreases with time". That, I agree with. But the converse of this statement, that the entropy of a closed system *must* increase with time, simply isn't true, and the second law makes no such claim.

      Oh, and one other point: at an atomic scale, entropy is an ill-defined concept. What is the entropy of an electron? An atom? A molecule? Entropy is only well defined when we have a large enough sample of particles for statistical mechanics to begin to apply.

      --
      Tubal-Cain smokes the white owl.
    9. Re:The Gray Goo will NEVER happen! by clonan · · Score: 1

      Not at all. Absolute reversible processes are certainly allowed...in theory.

      As I mentioned we can concive of entropy stable systems however realisticly we can not build them.

      I would also like to point out that the example you gave and nanotech absolutly are both non-reversible processes.

      A reversible process will spontaneously revert to prior components...a molecule will fall apart...now at the same time thoes components are staying coming together for a net change of zero.

      The concentrations of products vs reagents are actually entropy driven...The system will come to equilibrium when the push of entropy (having multiple chemicals floating around) balances any energy released by combining them into a single process.

      HOWEVER reversible processes do ZERO work (Conservation of Energy). In order to create your nanites you will have to pour energy into the system to get the balance to favor your devices (same with the tea cup). Once everything is created which is actually a bunch of farily low energy reactions that are easily reversed you then essentially put a lock on it with a high energy reaction.

      NOW, since you poured energy into these guys to create them, this energy is stored in the structure in the form of minimized entropy and chemical bonds. However the high energy lock STILL will still maintain a ration of products vs reactants. Once the lock falls off the entier structure will quickly fall apart driven by the entropy release....this is freshman chemistry btw.

      The logic behind this is simple....Very complicated structres must be built to exatcing standards. Every piece must be exactly the right size and placed in exactly the right place at exactly the tright time or the whole building falls down.

      Chemistry is no different....you start out with say 1000 different chemicals that are used to build these nanites. You start by adding chem A to chem B to get chem AB. To make this reaction go efficiently you will need to adjust the temperature, pressure etc. Now you add chem C to chem AB to get ABC. This requiers different temp and pressures.

      Now once it starts falling abart you are unlikly to get the right local temperature/pressure at the same tome as the correct chemicals get close enough. You will end up with a big mix of all the various components of your machines floating about...useless. There will be a few that sponaneously come together but the rate will be so slow as compared to the falling apart as to be non-existant.

      This is exactly why the gray goo will never happen. It will take the machines EXACTLY the same amount of energy to build one of itself as it takes us to build one (again conservation of energy) however we can seperate the various components in beakers etc making it easier. Nanites will not have this luxury.

      This is of course why we don't have them now...

    10. Re:The Gray Goo will NEVER happen! by clonan · · Score: 1

      As I acknowledged earlier, I am not saying that in theory an entropy stable system is impossible....rather I am saying that there is no possible way to BUILD such a system.

      Now of COURSE you cannot define the entropy of an electron. This is again based on the first law of thermodynamics, conservation of energy. A single object isolated from EVERYTHING else will never change.

      However put two things in that system...any two things and you can't predict what will happen based on prior knowledge. This is exactly why the 2nd law was created. By it's very deffinition entropy can only effect two or more things.

      Now actually, you CAN determine the entropy of an atom or a molecule. These things are created out of subunits which can exist on their own. There are spontaneous nuclear reactions (radio-active materials are obvious but you can also get spontaneous fusion and fission) and a big driving force behind them IS entropy. In my other post today I went through and carefully explained the entropy driving molecules, atomic reactions are similar but you also now have to take into account the entropy of the energy leaving/entering the atom in the form of mass loss and radiation.

      Now I will redily admit that we currently cannot directly measure the entropy of a single atom/molecule. We must infer the AVERAGE entropy in a system based on meausrements of a large sample. This however does NOT mean that individual atoms/molecules do not have entropy...it on;y means we can't measure it directly.

    11. Re:The Gray Goo will NEVER happen! by clonan · · Score: 1

      Also, sorry about the spelling errors....it is early in the morning here :-)

  88. Josh Wolfe is unqualified to judge. by dr.+loser · · Score: 3, Interesting

    To establish my credibility: IAAPP (I am a physics professor). I'm an active researcher in nanoscale electronics, and I teach a two-course sequence on nanoscale physics and engineering.

    Josh Wolfe is emblematic of what is wrong with media perception of science today. He has no undergraduate or graduate training in any physical science at all. His background is in business, and he works for a VC firm. He has no scientific credibility.

    He is, however, articulate, bright, and very slick. That is why this guy, with less training than the undergrad working in my lab, is able to get national attention from the media (be it Forbes, or CNN, or MSNBC, all of which have deferred to him as an "authority on nanotechnology").

    He has every right to speak his mind, and when it comes to investing in high technology companies, I think he knows his stuff. However, there is no way this guy should be viewed as an appropriate authority to whom policy makers should pay attention.

    (By the way, I actually agree with his position on this issue. I simply take issue with the idea that he is viewed by the media as worthy of a bully pulpit on this.)

  89. who is foaming at the mouth? by hildi · · Score: 0

    you cant even write a coherent comment that has a proper thesis nor points to back it up.

  90. No, it's not a mob rule by October_30th · · Score: 1
    So, your proposal would be that when voting on a certain subject the people who qualify as experts on it would have more votes than a Joe Sixpack?

    Maybe, but I'd rather have the mob rule where everybody has a single vote than that nonsense.

    --
    The owls are not what they seem
    1. Re:No, it's not a mob rule by hesiod · · Score: 1

      > So, your proposal would be that when voting on a certain subject the people who qualify as experts on it would have more votes than a Joe Sixpack?

      No, what I'm saying is that there should be NO vote at all. Was there a freaking vote when computers were made? Some believe that they have ruined our species. Was there a vote when ANYTHING AT ALL WAS MADE???? So why the f#%* vote on this?

      The people who decide whether or not something should be done are the ones who should know well enough whether it ought to happen. If they are wrong, there is someone we can point to and say well, this guy said it was safe, it's his responsibility to fix it. If the general public votes and says something is right and it turns out that it starts wiping out the population, everyone looks at everyone else while the politicians point fingers from their bomb shelters.

  91. why by samantha · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Why are we discussing this in this forum where only a few are well informed on the subject? Nanotech will be regulated to some extent and there are active knowledgeable groups like the Center for Responsible Nanotech and the Foresight Institutte that are able to say what is likely to be needed with credibility.

    1. Re:why by dr.+loser · · Score: 1

      I agree with the sentiment of your post, but not the specifics. The people behind the Center for Responsible Nanotechnology have no scientific credentials at all. They are not qualified to speak credibly on this issue, despite intensely active self-promotion.

      The Foresight Institute is better, but they, too, are still way too into Drexlerian molecular manufacturing fantasy land to be down-to-earth.

      The real folks to listen to on this subject are people like ICON, who are actually the ones developing standards for nanomaterials.

  92. Give me life extention and body customization etc. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Your dreaming if you think that you will be able to control the back market that will emerge when nanotech can halt and reverse aging so people can be permanently young. Once people realize that nano can do this, there will be the biggest stampeed in history for the nanobots to do this...not to mention, the subculture of body modifications (custom werewolf look?) etc, want to look like the minotaur? etc. how about the poeple who will want to llok like the latest hollywood babe or hunk? now, not only will actors make money on their movies, but if you liscence your "look", you could make a fortune too, but of courxe, we will need a reliable method of identification (brain scan?) to find out who is the real deal..of course, boosting your brain power would be really cool for the slashdot crowd and if the world were populated with lots of good looking hot babe and guys who are also really smart, that would be cool...who knows, if everyone could get brain boosts, then the days of really dumb jocks would be history and the world would be full of more slashdot type of people too??

  93. Drugs sex, biology and bombs by SirLanse · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Lots of basic materials science is regulated. It is overseen and done in secure facilities. If the nano hypers say it cures old age, require drug company oversight. Apply appropriate means based upon the claims being made. You inhale billions of tiny particles all the time. So if you are really afraid, STOP BREATHING!

  94. Socetal Debate and Trust in Experts by logicnazi · · Score: 2, Insightful

    This article mentions a few ancedotal accounts and scary potentialities. Hardly enough to get worked up about yet or cast blame on the enviornmentalists. If we want to castigate the enviornmental movement there are plenty of other places to start, for instance their refusal to prioritize issues which makes it very difficult to achieve victories on global warming (for instance here in the bay area the enviornmentalists want to tear down a dam to rescue the scenic landscape before offering another renewable energy replacement for the hydroelectric power). I think there are plenty of instances happening right now where enviornmentalists are putting emotion before reason to the ultimate detriment of the enviornment and we should worry about these far before this tenous concern about regulating nanotech.

    However, I think the article is right to challenge the reflexive call for social discussion and debate about these issues. This isn't restricted just to nanotech but to virtually all scientific and even complex policy questions. It appears that somewhere along the line the fact that the voters have the right to vote on whatever opinion they have was confused with the idea that its okay for the voters to have whatever opinion they want and that it is somehow discussion amoungst the general populance which should decide issues of public policy.

    Quite simply the average voter just doesn't have the training or expertise to understand these issues. Thus it is NOT societal debate which should decide the question but scientific debate. Just as it is a bad idea to let public discussion drive the debate about how much arscenic we should have in our water rather than scientific experimentation (the public will probably come up with the unrealistic standard of 0).

    Of course at the end of the day the public needs to decide which experts to trust but it should be emphasized that this is the role the general voter should aspire towards. The voter should not aspire to making up their own mind based on emotions and intuitions they have about nanotech (or GMOs or whatever) but based on the degree of trust and credibility they have in the various experts.

    --

    If you liked this thought maybe you would find my blog nice too:

  95. Muahahaa p0wn3d! by Quixadhal · · Score: 1

    Scanning for biological virii... clean.
    Scanning for nanotech virii... WARNING!
    MMORPG_p0wn3d virus detected.

    p0wn3d nanotech agents embed themselves between the nerve endings of the first three fingers of each hand, thus slowing reflex response time by up to 0.25 seconds. Created by a frsutrated MMORPG player who always lost in every duel, this virus allowed him to win occasionally.

    Why would we need regulation?

  96. Ironically by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Wolfe is worried that the 'green gang' (his term for environmentalists) are going to regulate nanotech out of existence before the technology even works in the lab. It seems like much of the discussion of nanotech is hype, including the potential benefits, such as immortality and the potential dangers such as grey goo

    It won't be banned because of the potential dangers. (cf nuclear power)

    However, nanotech does hold some promise of environmental benefits such as cheap solar power.

    This is why it will be banned-- its potential benefits and their corresponding upset to the balance of power.

  97. This is NOT nanotechnology---Article is WHOREBAIT by avandesande · · Score: 0, Troll

    The article has nothing to do with nanotechnology. Currently these materials are created using chemical methods, are being isolated using chemical methods, and the result are gasp! CHEMICALS.
    Any of the complaints about toxicity in fullerenes are the same complaints that have chemical industry has faced for years.

    Yes, fullerenes may one day be used as building blocks for nano materials but IMO the 'problem' is a chemical one, not having anything to do with nanotechnology.

    --
    love is just extroverted narcissism
  98. Grey goo is impossible by Julian+Morrison · · Score: 2, Informative

    ...for the same reason you don't fear the bacterial equivalent. Fuel energy is scarce, as are vital resources, so the search for food takes up approximately 100% of a small organism's time and effort.

    For nano to be useful it will either have to be in a food-rich environment (eg: inside the human body) or else plug into the power socket in the wall. Grey goo (were such a thing invented) would munch through the power cord, and just stop.

    1. Re:Grey goo is impossible by Peaker · · Score: 1

      According to E=mc**2, fuel energy is not scarce at all, its just difficult to use.

  99. Nano-Eco-Hitachi-Battery by KrackHouse · · Score: 1

    Hitachi's new nano-battery looks like it'll do more to clean up the environment more than any amount of well meaning legislation. I did the math and unless I'm horribly mistaken it could wipe out our dependence on gasoline, saving the average american about $2,000 pre-tax dollars a year.

    Wrote about it on my old blog here.

    --
    What if Digg added local news and a Slashdot inspired comment karma system? ---
    http://houndwire.com
  100. We only get one you know by evilbessie · · Score: 1

    The point is not whether we regulate nanotech out of existance, but we should be cautious. CFC's, asbesdos, thalidomide, smoking. We are not perfect and we do not know what effect, if any, nano particles in the atmosphere have. Until a clearer picture of our understanding arises we should be cautious, we're usually wrong at some point maybe this time we can try and stop the worst happening before it does.

    Nanotech may be the answer, but until we know it won't wipe the human race off the earth let's not rush in like a bull in a china shop.

    enjoy
    -------
    Protect the enviroment, it created you.

  101. From one of environmental researchers... by deuist · · Score: 4, Informative
    I don't know how many people will read this comment (my karma is pretty low), but I work on a toxicology project where we're examining the effects of nanoparticles on cell cultures and, in some case, we also perform animal studies. Let me the first to say that no nanotox studies have ever been performed on large mammals or humans. The best data we have so far comes from in vitro cell cultures, fish, or rats. Therefore, we don't know the true impact that these materials will have on humans. Further, much of the research is inconsistent and all over the place. In our lab we show that nano aluminum (a common ingredient in making military weapons) will kill lung cells in a Petri dish. However, when we force rats to inhale these same particles, we cannot measure an inflammatory response, much less a toxic effect. Unfortunately, extremists from the environmentalist camp (i.e., the ETC Group) want to see nanotech banned before its even has a chance to be studied in a lab. I think --- and this is my professional opinion --- that we need to continue doing tox studies while allowing industries to put their products on the market.

    As a bonus, here are some of the results from some others' research on nanotech:
    * When rats inhale carbon nanotubes, the tubes bypass the blood-brain barrier and cover the brain. The resultant rats had black brains!
    * Titania dioxide, a common ingredient in paint, sun screen and tooth paste, is very toxic to cells and rats.
    * Silica dioxide, also a common ingredient in paint and food, is not toxic.
    * Fullerenes (aka, bucky balls) are deadly to fish (verified by Richard Smalley from Rice University --- he created bucky balls)

    Note that all of these materials exhibit very different properties from the bulk. You won't get sick from most of these products if you use the same concentrations of material, but simply change the size of the particles.

    Our work will be published early next week on http://www.nanotoxicology.ufl.edu/.

  102. Re:We've been breathing buckyballs etc. since cave by Rei · · Score: 1

    We've been eating cyanide for ages, in plants, as well. But there's a huge difference between that *one* plant component and all of the others that you consume. If you *purified and isolated* the cyanide, it is a potent poison.

    The exact same thing holds true for CNTs.

    --
    What a crazy random happenstance!
  103. Re:Solution to nano-dust: Nanotech by hesiod · · Score: 1

    > So we should allow potentially dangerous substance to be used in products and let people buy them unknowingly?

    That's why people call environmentalists "whackos," because they see everything as "If it's not my way, it must be the complete opposite."

    Who the fuck said "unknowingly?" What if I WANT nanotechnology in my products, and know it. Is it then safe?

  104. MOD PARENT UP by CustomDesigned · · Score: 1
    Excellent questions. In addition to John Q. Public, I also like to see questions about the impact on Paoulo Primitive (who lives a primitive lifestyle whether by choice or circumstance). I hate technologies that "burn our bridges", and make the "live off the land" disaster fallback option more difficult, or even impossible. If the YellowStone Supervolcano blows in your lifetime, you'll be sorry for all the times we screwed the Native Americans, Eskimos and RainForest dwellers.

    Oh, concerning YellowStone, Native Americans in the Arizona area experienced several inches of Volcanic ash in early AD. This dramatically increased the fertility of the soil - and their crops once they discovered that leaving the ash layer in place and planting seed underneath was the best practice. The ash layer kept the ground warm and compensated for the cooling from the "nuclear" winter - sort of a super mulch. It might be worth making some contingincy plans for a YellowStone eruption, including compiling the experiences of survivors of similar events in the past.

  105. toxic waste is good for you by hildi · · Score: 0

    actual title of a book about what public relations for big corps has done to 'science' and to the public

  106. NO, here is some nasty shit by bird603568 · · Score: 1

    Hydrofluric acid (HF). THe really high molar like 6, 12 and above if there is any is really nasty. If you spill it on your self you have to use this paste that is i think Calcium hydroxide Ca(OH)2 but any base with enought should work. ANd the teacher told a stroy from when she was a hazmat and i scarded the crap out of us. We had do use 6mol HF and it was scary cutting it from 12. But the point it HF will burn straight to the bone. H2SO4 won't un less its a massive amount. Also anything with benzene is nasty im scard to go to part of the chem locker when i lab assist.

    1. Re:NO, here is some nasty shit by gnuman99 · · Score: 1
      MSDS for HF http://www.bu.edu/es/labsafety/ESMSDSs/MSHydFluori cAcid.html

      The fluoride ion readily penetrates the skin causing destruction of deep tissue layers and even bone.

      I would not have used HF acid, ever. This is especially true for some stupid lab. Safer acids should always be used like HCl, or even better, H2SO4 since you can smell that one :)

      If you spill it on yourself, flush the are with A LOT of water. Water works best to dissolve virtually any common acids.

      All fluorides are nasty. Yes, this includes Teflon (CF2-CF2) which kills hundreds of pet birds each year. Also, if it kills birds, it probably has some nasty effects on us http://tuberose.com/Teflon.html

  107. Re: 3rd World by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    AFAIK, the new term for undeveloped and developing countries is "Global South", which is not a great deal longer than "3rd World", but is a great deal less derogatory.

    (I usually hate PC language, but the term "3rd World" just doesn't apply after the end of the cold war)

  108. Agreed, chemistry,materials != nanotech by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yes, please define this so-called "nanotech". Making small particles or different materials or new molecules does not seem worth using a new term, but it's just a matter of the development of existing fields.

    Talk about nanosystems, then it's interesting.

    1. Re:Agreed, chemistry,materials != nanotech by Mr.+Underbridge · · Score: 1
      Talk about nanosystems, then it's interesting.

      Can be, although I will say that "systems" anything is the new somteimes-meaningless catch-all terms that's being used to impress. Kind of like nano is, though that's losing its coolness factor. I guess if you combine "nano" and "systems," then it's like some uber-buzzword that's guaranteed to get your grant approved.

    2. Re:Agreed, chemistry,materials != nanotech by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He's talking about the multi-volume book on nanotech by Eric Dexler. It's called "Nanosystems".

  109. US Law is just a local ordinance by pdxjjb · · Score: 1

    The whole discussion is totally irrelevant. U.S. law is just a local ordinance. Even if we could define it and agree on what to regulate, we'd merely be ensuring that progress in the regulated areas takes place elsewhere in the world. On the other hand, we already did this with stem cell research. Why not nanotech too? ;-(

  110. Learn about molecular nanotechnology here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Center for Responsible Nanotechnology

    Everyone should read that overview thoroughly, to get an idea of just how huge and how important nanotechnology is going to be in the next 20 or 30 years. It will be like a whole new industrial revolution, except 100 times bigger and crammed into a space of a few months. CRN believes we will almost certainly have full MNT capability within the next 20 years. How are we going to handle that power? It will mean incredible changes to the global power structure, economic and political systems. It will mean rapid advances in medical science, in genetics and biology, a completely new way of manufacturing, cheap (practically free) clean water, clothing, electricity, computers, mosquito nets, cell phones, internet access, and medicines for the developing world, etc. It will mean amazing changes to our world--the stuff of science fiction writ large.

    Suddenly we will have more power in our hands than we ever dreamed of. Near-instant manufacturing of anything we can think of to build. Home computers trillions of times more powerful than today's biggest supercomputers. The question will be what SHOULD we do, rather than what can we do.

    If we survive the first decade, the whole planet might even become a sustainable utopian paradise where people work because they want to, not because they have to. Who knows? Read that overview and start thinking critically about molecular nanotechnology and what we can do with it!

  111. De Rigeur Deregulation by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Nanotech is chemistry. Why shouldn't chemistry be regulated? Of course, it shouldn't be regulated wrong, but that's another word for "no regulation". Unless Wolfe can somehow indemnify us with his vital organs for when he's surprised to find that a chemical company has damaged us with a nanotech screwup, he's just another greedy opportunist.

    --

    --
    make install -not war

  112. Wow by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I for one welcome our new nano-police overlords!

  113. regulation by lawsuit or by code; safe harbor by davidwr · · Score: 1

    Now that we know that some nanoparticles ARE dangerous, we've already crossed the line of "when did you know it was dangerous." Absent regulation, the companies of today who create, or even do research, in nanoparticles without taking extreme precautions are just setting themselves up for a gazillion-dollar class-action lawsuit 15 years from now when researchers and others start dying.

    A better approach would be to identify "known risky" vs "suspect risky" vs "studied and no known risk" vs "unknown risk." Anything not known to be safe should be clearly labeled as such and employees who have to handle the stuff should be compensated accordingly, including the option to purchase lifetime health insurance at a non-high-risk premium, with the difference paid for by the employer or industry.

    Governmental regulation has one nice side effect: Since it puts people "on notice" of known risk, it theoretically provides a safe harbor against "unadvertised risk" lawsuits. Yes I know about the tobacco settlements and bazillion-dollar jury awards a few years back, but if I were on a jury, nobody who started smoking after the Surgeon General's Warning came out would get a penny unless the tobacco companies lied or withheld information from the public, and then it would be limited to cost of the lie or withheld information.

    The bottom line:
    Regulation should come in the form of:
    1) publicize risks
    2) publicize the fact that some risks are unknown or little-understood
    3) take reasonable, non-bankrupting precautions to protect everyone who has to touch non-clean or unknown-risk chemicals
    4) provide affordable health care options to those who have to work in the face of uncertain risks

    --
    Knowledge is how to play a game, intelligence is how to win, wisdom is knowing what game to play.
  114. White Goo. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I've got some white goo, ready your eye for proper inspection...

  115. Parent is wrong. by shadow_slicer · · Score: 1

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cyanide
    Cyanide is created by many plants, fungi, and algae.

  116. Should Nanotech Be Regulated? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    My first thought is "just a little". 0-8

    nano ... little .... ....

  117. NNI, ICON, Foresight, IMM, DNA and self regulation by tlambert · · Score: 2, Informative

    Full Disclosure: I'm a Senior Associate with the Institute for Molecular Manufacturing http://imm.org/.

    I have to say that this article seriously misses the mark.

    Recombinant DNA research self-regulation has been in place for 30 years now, and it has worked very well to prevent "Andromeda Strain" style accidents. The most recent full overhaul was in 1994:

    http://www4.od.nih.gov/oba/rac/guidelines/guidelin es.html

    There are people who are holding debates about similar regulation for molecular nanotechnology already: The National Nanotechnology Initiative http://www.nano.gov/, The Foresight Institute http://foresight.org/, The International Council on Nanotechnology http://icon.rice.edu/, and many others, including the IMM. The intent of these organizations is to establish guidelines for developement of nanotechnology, and to explore applications.

    Here is the first set of guidelines which have been established:

    http://imm.org/guidelines/current.html

    I fully expect that this will be updated, as the technologies involved become more capable.

    A good analysis of the actual societal implications is available from NNI here:

    http://www.nano.gov/html/facts/society.html

    Don't blow things out of proportion until they are actually implemented; the amount of regulation of any technology has historically always been as much or even much more than was necessary at the time.

    -- Terry

  118. Spies by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Nanobots" would make excellent spies.

  119. Regulation by AmberBlackCat · · Score: 1

    If they're talking about the US, I'm more concerned about what the regulators would do than what the technicians would do.

  120. there are more problems than you can imagine by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    www.crnano.org

    This is very informative site on the risks and benefits of nanotechnology. It also gives a clue in the direction that we are headed in.

  121. yeah by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Of course nanotech should be regulated. It's potential is far greater than nuclear technology, bombs.. it's harder to control, easier to get out of control too.. like biological warfare.

    Regulation does not have to threaten technological advancement, rather DEFINE THE DIRECTION in which this advancement should occur.. and ensure safety regulations.

    It's obvious that this guy hates environmentalists.. and somehow manages to generalized them as more evil than big industries fighting them, not to defend ethics but economic interests. While environmentalists can be fanatic and ignorant, if there's any uncertainty, it's better to be conservative.. better safe than sorry and "easy does it" attitude, might serve better to gain experience and investigate long term effects, rather than to push and rush things onto market in an effort to patent it and market it quickly to earn back the investments.

    I believe the interests of the public (public safety) should always outweigh the commercial interests of companies. Power corrupts and large businesses tend to get a little too cocky thinking they should have more rights than the rest of us.

  122. No by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    and No.

    You will hinder development.

    Regulation should only ever step in if there is an abuse that concerns the general public AND the general public cannot deal with it themselves.

  123. Re: 3rd World by TGK · · Score: 1

    You're right... 3rd world doesn't apply. Technicaly the term is "Highly Indebeted Poor Countries" (since they're not -=all=- in the Southern Hemisphere).

    High-ly In-debt-ed Poor... wait... that's like 47 syllables!

    Fuck it... 3rd world....

    --
    Killfile(TGK)
    No trees were killed in the creation of this post. However, many electrons were inconvenienced.
  124. Forced Re-Login for the Science Section? by pipingguy · · Score: 1


    I'd like to know why I'm often forced to login again if I visit the *.slashdot.org sections. It is quite annoying.

  125. free power for all by rice_burners_suck · · Score: 1
    promise of environmental benefits such as cheap solar power

    Heh... You want cheap solar power? I don't know why nobody thought of this one yet... Power made from water boiled by the sun. That's right... Build a big reservoir that contains clean water. The reservoir would be covered by a sort of greenhouse. That would make it quite hot inside when the sun is shining on it. But it gets better: The glass would be made to focus the light of the sun into this greenhouse, and into the water, thereby heating the water to boiling just by virtue of the sun shining on it. The water would boil, the steam would turn turbines, and electricity would be generated.

  126. Manking doesn't care by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Manking doesn't care about risk otherwise we would not destroy our planet...

  127. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  128. Damn the Trial Lawyers by Yanray · · Score: 1

    This is twice as dangerous since John Edwards has returned to private practice.

    --
    --"Sorry for the inconvience." Gods Last Words to his Creation
    DNA, So Long and Thanks for all the Fish
  129. Re:Solution to nano-dust: Nanotech by jackbird · · Score: 1
    So if you want to paint your house with lead paint, you should be able to? Should you then be allowed to sell that house? How about your office?

    You don't live in a bubble.

  130. Re:Solution to nano-dust: Nanotech by hesiod · · Score: 1

    > So if you want to paint your house with lead paint, you should be able to?

    Yes. However, if doing so puts children at risk, I'm not sure it would be a good idea, and you'd still have to take responsibility for that.

    > Should you then be allowed to sell that house?

    As long as the new owners know that it's lead-based, sure.

    As for the office, that is different, because there are already employee safety laws.

  131. Nano is just miniaturization - MUST be regulated by eriktderek · · Score: 1

    To not regulate nano is like letting cancer cells run amok. The power of all technologies are so immenselly powerful that it would be foolish to not regulate them. In nature all organisms are regulated - your immune system regulates the cells of your body. Anarchists - cancer cells are quickly killed or they take over. The internet is a system that came to be without regulation, and look at the problems that are evolving with security. Does anyone really think that regulating the inevitable miniaturization of technology will really slow anything down? China, Japan, Europe, Singapore, etc are all working on Miniaturizing. Even if we regulate will that make any diference for China? Perhaps not, but I think the rule should be the following that we can champion. You should be able to stop or dissasemble anything you build. That means no persistant nano molecules, and no grey goo either. Technology is like a runaway freight train, accelerating downhill. Nobody can stop it but a driver would be nice, and a brakeman.