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by khaledkteily
2353 days ago
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I learned a lot through this, thank you for sharing. I run a sperm freezing company (YC S19) incubated at Harvard and we've always thought about freezing sperm as an extremely logical pairing with any life extension technology; sperm can be frozen indefinitely with no loss in quality (as far as we know), you could have 30-year old sperm frozen for us when you're 130. Since sperm develops mutations over time (~1 every 8 months) and DNA fragmentation is associated with all manner of congenital conditions like autism, younger sperm is generally speaking healthier. Just wanted to share since it's something we talk about internally quite a bit. What does it mean to live forever if you lose all your family members along the way? How will society change to accommodate? |
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