"Cease & Desist" has not worked:
Despite a warning from the federal government about do-it-yourself gene therapy, two companies say they'll continue offering DNA-altering materials to the public.
The companies, The Odin and Ascendance Biomedical, both recently posted videos online of people self-administering DNA molecules their labs had produced.
Following wide distribution of the videos, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration last week issued a harshly worded statement cautioning consumers against DIY gene-therapy kits and calling their sale illegal. "The sale of these products is against the law. FDA is concerned about the safety risks involved," the agency said.
Does the Executive Branch want the market to decide, or not?
(Score: 2) by HiThere on Monday December 04 2017, @06:26PM (1 child)
These don't seem to be gene-line therapies, though, so the people are only hurting themselves. As long as nobody is paying them to do this, I don't see it as any worse than lots of other things people do that may hurt themselves, like mountain climbing or watching TV (sloth is deadly).
OTOH, as you point out people don't really know the risks (do they ever?) and here they seem a bit more opaque than usual, so there should be mandated warnings intelligible to the average high school graduate. (I.e., pages of lawyer-speak shouldn't be valid.)
Javascript is what you use to allow unknown third parties to run software you have no idea about on your computer.
(Score: 3, Insightful) by EvilSS on Monday December 04 2017, @07:13PM
And before anyone goes all whataboutism on the current state of the pharma industry, do you think they would be BETTER without the regulations currently on them? Really??