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by usehackernews 1986 days ago
CRISPR is a great example of a technology that has not yet made a meaningful economic contribution. Although the technique for editing DNA was discovered in 2012—and a Nobel Prize was awarded to its two discoverers this year—no treatment using CRISPR has been approved outside of clinical trials. So far, its impact has been limited to making researchers more productive—not a bad thing, to be sure, but not close to CRISPR’s full potential. As trials progress, however, I do think some CRISPR treatments will come online in the next few years, especially those targeting genetic disorders that we have very limited means of otherwise treating.

From Notes on Technology in the 2020s - Eli Dourado

1 comments

CRISPR most definitely made a huge economic contribution. It's used massively https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/?term=crispr and it allows to do things that would have been very difficult (and expensive, thus providing value) to do otherwise, allowing researchers to do new therapies and diagnostic tools that WERE applied in clinic.

That's a bit like saying containers haven't provided meaningful economic contribution because consumers don't use them very often.

I state that CRISPR benefits researchers. However, that is still a niche benefit relative to the long term societal benefits we anticipate from CRISPR.