AI designs for dangerous DNA can slip past biosecurity measures, study shows

toggle caption Malte Mueller/fStoap/Getty Images

Major biotech companies that churn out made-to-order DNA for scientists have protections in place to keep dangerous biological material out of the hands of would-be evil-doers. They screen their orders to catch anyone trying to buy, say, smallpox or anthrax genes.

But now, a new study in the journal Science has demonstrated how AI could be used to easily circumvent those biosafety processes.

A team of AI researchers found that protein-design tools could be used to "paraphrase" the DNA codes of toxic proteins, "re-writing them in ways that could preserve their structure, and potentially their function," says Eric Horvitz , Microsoft's chief scientific officer.

Sponsor Message

The computer scientists used an AI program to generate DNA codes for more t

πŸ“°

Continue Reading on NPR

This preview shows approximately 15% of the article. Read the full story on the publisher's website to support quality journalism.

Read Full Article β†’