Fellow Cryptos,
Urgent Investigation needed ASAP:
Article:
https://latestfinance.news/a-clone-factory-operated-by-robots-and-ai-is-to-be-built-in-china-801/
The main guy:
https://aien.nankai.edu.cn/2021/1108/c27509a413407/page.htm
Lets do what we can do. I AM GOING TO NEED HELP ON THIS ONE.
PM/e-mail me personally so we can start a formal project.
There certainly should be a peaceful and _ethical_ way to take action
against him and his projects.
There are some SERIOUS concerns his interests may include the cloning
of human beings for R&D purposes.
I will see if there's any 411 I can get out of him regarding his
projects.
Remember: 1.) NO HUMANS INVOLVED in his CLONING OPERATIONS. 2.)
Robotics and A.I. Cloning of organic lifeforms.
EXHIBIT A.1 : Project Coordinator, Liu YaoWei
A clone factory operated by robots and AI is to be built in ChinaJune
27, 2022
This year, Chinese researchers have succeeded in cloning five
piglets. It is said that no human was involved in its creation.
Instead, the animals are said to have been created entirely by robots
and artificial intelligence. This should soon be possible on an
industrial scale.
By Michael Foertsch
Science celebrated a controversial anniversary last year. A quarter
of a century ago, researchers first succeeded in creating the clone of
an adult mammal: the clone sheep Dolly, born at the Roslin Institute
near Edinburgh, Scotland. It was proof that creating a genetically
identical being is not only theoretically but also practically
feasible. The creation of Dolly was a challenging, difficult and
expensive process for the scientists. But according to Chinese
entrepreneurs, mammalian cloning is now ripe to become an industry.
And with the help of robotics and artificial intelligence.
According to a report by South China Morning Post a team of
researchers from Nankai University is planning a fully automated
cloning factory. In the future, rows and rows of pigs will be put
through the process of somatic cell nuclear transfer, like on an
assembly line generated – which was also used for Dolly. Because
China has become the largest consumer of pork in recent years – and
traditional pig breeding is not enough to cover the growing demand.
The technology for the clone factory is said to already exist and
work.
Also read: Samsung Clone iPhone? Galaxy S22 FE Unconfirmed, Global
USB-C and more | TC. factory
It was only in March that seven small clone piglets were born in the
College of Artificial Intelligence at Nankai University, which were
created without human intervention. “Every step of the cloning
process was automated, no human was involved,” says Liu Yaowei, who
helped develop the automated system South China Morning Post quoted.
According to the researchers, the automated system is significantly
more successful than human scientists when it comes to creating
transplantable clones. Because when the genetic material is
transferred into a cell, it can easily be injured, which is less
common with the mechanical procedure.
Ethical concerns?
According to the researchers, the planned clone factory should make
China less dependent on imported pork. This in turn is intended to
reduce the risk of introducing infections such as the ASF virus, which
has infected numerous domestic animals after pigs were imported from
African countries. In addition, a constant meat quality should be
guaranteed. It’s just an efficient process for producing meat, the
scientists say. The researchers do not express any ethical concerns
about the mass cloning of animals. In fact, pigs, sheep and cattle
have been cloned in increasing numbers in China for the past 20
years. Individual companies are already offering dogs from petri
dishes.
Despite criticism and controversy, a biotechnology factory by the
companies Boyalife and Sooam Biotech is still planned at the port of
Tianjin. This project has been announced since 2015. At some point,
pets such as cats and dogs for private individuals are to be cloned in
the facility. Cattle are also to be cloned to support industrial
livestock farming in the country. Chinese farmers are struggling to
raise enough cattle to meet current demand.
Bobby Vaughn
_Independent Investigative Research and Journalism_
A Call to Actions | PodCast Host
_https://www.acalltoactions.com_