EDNA is Introduced to China... What will 1.4 billion people think?

in #eos6 years ago

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Early this morning we were interviewed by some awesome EOS champion-advocates from China known as IMEOS

We think they asked some very pointed and insightful questions, and are grateful to them for helping get the word out about EDNA to a whole lot of people in the EOS space. Here is the transcript from the interview. Warning: It's a rather long read (I must have talked fast).

EDNA Interview with IMEOS Transcript
6 Aug 2018

How would you describe your DAPP? What problems does it solve fundamentally?

Currently the world of genetics is advancing faster than just about any technology out there, and there is no sign of it slowing down. Hundreds of papers are published everyday and it’s hard to even just read the titles, let alone keep a firm grip on the science. This is an amazing time to be human. As this science evolves we can expect to see changes in personalized medicine that to most people will sound like science fiction. We can expect this technology very soon to eliminate horrible diseases, extend our lives and generally improve what it means to be human. This is happening now and it’s very exciting, till you ask one question…

“Who controls it?”

Most all of your followers are probably aware that bad things can happen when centralized authorities gain control over our money. I would bet very few have thought about what might happen when centralized control is taken over our DNA. Who decides which of us gets all the magic cures and the 300 healthy years to live? Who decides if you can give your child an amazing IQ and physical advantages or not?

It has been said; “Information is power”. I might say “Genetic information is power over life.” Centralized authorities (by that I mean governments and mega-corporations) want that information. Want YOUR information. They charge you much less than it costs them to process your information just to get it. I’ve even been told that in my own state detectives are asking witnesses to crimes for a sample of their DNA. Not just suspects – Witnesses. Something seems very wrong here to me. When corporations (profit machines) and governments (who usually just want more power or to stay in power), want something from you, it might be a good idea to ask why before you just give it over.

EDNA exists to keep that power in the hands of those it rightly belongs to.
Your DNA is yours, and mine is mine.

Current published science understands clearly only about 1.5% of what’s in our DNA. If you will please pardon the metaphor; It’s like each of us is carrying around a treasure box, and even the very few of us that have peeked inside the box have only seen a tiny bit of what’s in there. Why would anyone give that box away without knowing what’s inside? Or worse, pay someone to take their treasure box away from them?

But this is what’s happening today. EDNA is here to help you hold onto your treasure and to help you learn what’s in your box.

What stage is the project at?

We have developed a prototype that can convert saliva samples to data in such a way that can be safely and economically stored un-encrypted. We have developed a procedure where samples can come to us that are labeled with nothing put a public key (so we have zero identity data), and we can populate the wallet for that key with the ability to reassemble the DNA. This puts control of the information in the hands of the DNA owner.

We recently completed a one for one Airdrop to all EOS holders who had 100 or more EOS on the Genesis Snapshot, and those with less than 100 who registered on our website.

We hired a great group of EOS developers to enhance our eosio.token contract to be able to offer extra tokens so we can offer extra EDNA token payments to people who are willing to stake their tokens for a week, a month or a quarter – so they can earn some passive income while they wait for the EDNA DAC to be formed and take over how someone can earn money holding EDNA’s and/or anomalously selling access to their DNA while still retaining ownership rights.

Just this week we’ve joined forces with an amazing distributed exchange, and yes, anyone with EOS can buy EDNA’s there. We think they’re a good bargain (for now). The exchange is DEXOS – they are in beta right now, but once people see what they are doing, I can’t imagine why anyone would want money on a centralized exchange ever again. Not when you can eliminate KYC and trade in a pure open source EOS contract wallet to wallet all instantly visible on chain. This technology has the potential to completely change how we use exchanges, and we at EDNA are very excited to be working with these innovators in the early stages.

We are not sitting still by any means, but what we need to have happen next is for the market to figure out a fair price for our tokens. This will allow us to expand the lab capacity to production levels, and open our doors to the world.

Your official website mentioned the ultimate aim of EDNA is to end human suffering caused by genetic disease, improve healthy longevity and to insure the future of DNA and DNA modification is governed by the Humans it will impact. What are the obvious advantages of using blockchain technology (especially EOSIO) for your project?

Anyone who fully understood the problem we’re trying to solve that we just talked about might think “Why not just lock my DNA up in a safe. Then I can give the hard drive only to my doctor or my genetic councilor?” As a huge privacy advocate for the past many years, I can certainly understand why someone would think that way… but there’s a problem. For DNA data to advance the science, it has to be compared to other peoples DNA, and often a deep look into medical records and histories also needs to happen. How do you do that and still protect a persons identity so that insurance companies or others who might want to use that data against a person? The answer for us is clearly EOS.

Nothing comes close when it comes to the ability of this platform to scale, and our design needs to scale big. Each of us has about 3 million genetic variants in our cells. To protect your DNA from “the bad guys”, we tumble those 3 million records with the records of thousands of other people, just like a privacy coin, but hundreds of times more tumbled. Most importantly, this protects you. It also allows the data to be stored in the clear where our code can make use of it. How we go about this is a long involved discussion, but to simplify it, we can form “pools” of genetic variations that can notify your wallet “Hey, some of your data just got placed into pool number hrsfrf446.” Users can then message over to that pool and start sharing information about themselves. Eventually members of the pool will figure out “We all have green eyes!” or whatever the variant might influence. This is a very new way to approach genetic research. Working from the data as a staring place, and moving toward the disease. My background is in big data analysis and design and I believe we have a better way to solve the problem of what’s in our DNA. Today it works exactly the opposite. Large funding sources give grants to researchers to work on a specific disease hoping to get a drug they can sell in the end. Our system lets us learn what in the DNA first, then if there is a profit to be made the DNA owners will gt a fair share, and there are billions upon billions of dollars there to be made.

To make this work we are going to need a giant number of transactions, so EOS is vital since no one has a gas tank big enough to drive us there or the highway wide enough. Side chains will most definitely be needed here, and even in the first baby-days of EOS amazing products like Boid are on the way to market. I’m quite certain we are on the right platform. There is simply no way we could build this securely and affordable without EOS.

How does EDNA combine biotechnology and blockchain technology into the vision?

99% of biotechnology is information technology. Today nearly all of the laboratory work being done with DNA is handled by robots called pipetteing robots. They do the job more accurately and faster than humans and they don’t get tired and they don’t make mistakes (under the watchful eye of a good scientist of course). That said, nearly everything being done with genetics is being done with data. If we go back and agree that information is power, then the blockchain is power that can be shared, and be kept private all at the same time.

There’s a glimpse of the vision: Your data is yours. You retain the right to control and profit from it, but it can be shared to benefit of humanity at the same time, all without compromising your identity. In my opinion, it’s a perfect match.

What do you expect EDNA to bring for the community?How it will be actually applied in the community?

That is a great question. EDNA (the company) in the end brings only an opportunity to the community. EDNA (the DAC) is the real prize. Our business model is to hand over to the DAC 80.5% of the funding we raise, as soon enough people join the DAC to insure it is diversified enough and ready to assume control of the project. The other 19.5% is there to give EDNA the company the ability to scale up enough to provide a secure sequencing service to the the community. At that point, EDNA (the company) becomes nothing more than a vendor that provides a service to the community for as long as the community decides it’s doing a good job. If the sequencing service does a bad job, they are free to tell EDNA to “get lost” and hire or even create a new sequencing vendor to take EDNA’s place. I think the approach we’ve designed is new. Since when have you ever heard of a company that starts up, then tells it’s customers “Here’s 80% of the money you spent to get us going, now you need to watch over how good a job we do and how we spend that money. You’re in control now. We work for you – and we’re not just saying that. It’s true.”

We really hope this model can work, and even serve to make the world a better more fair place to live in. Corporations do not have social conciseness. As a matter of fact, if you study corporate law; If corporations were to suddenly start acting like they care more about humanity or the environment than their bottom line, their shareholders can sue them, and the shareholders will win. If EDNA is successful, we believe it opens up a better way for everyone, not just people who care about DNA or crypto. It opens up a better way to live.

A few times I’ve spoken like this to people who run in much more powerful circles than I do. Sometimes they’ve said things to me like “You need to hire a better security force right now.” and “Greg, you have to disappear! Get a new identity and everything to protect yourself. I can help you.” My response is simple. I’m not worried, I used to be, but I’m not now. The concept of EDNA is out there on the web. I hold no patents on this, and there’s not much held back that a good programmer couldn’t figure out with a little bit of time and some hard work. So if the bad people kill me, or convince the world I killed myself, they win absolutely nothing. It’s too late. The game is over, and we won before we even really got started. People know about this idea. You can’t kill an idea.

Using metaphors, what role does EDNA play in the EOS community?

This will sound corny. It’s maybe even a little embarrassing to say, but EDNA is a mother. We’ve born a project, and we hope it will grown up strong, and eventually lead us all to a better place. Like any mother we want our child to do great things in the world, because we believe it will, and like any mother, it’s not our actions or lives that are important. We only want to grow old in our rocking chair, beaming with pride while we ask our closest friends “Did you hear what the EDNA-DAC did today?”

Privacy issues increasingly become a public concern in this big-data generation (Facebook, Cambridge Analytica, etc,). Do EDNA users have to worry about any privacy issues? How do you guarantee the privacy and security of your user data? How to find a balance between protecting privacy and losing data?

To answer this I need to get a little technical, maybe another metaphor in a minute can help. When a EDNA token holder redeems their tokens for DNA sequencing and placement on the blockchain. They order a collection kit from a different company (not EDNA). The kit is shipped to their home, and they use it (spit in it), write their public key on it and send it to us. EDNA never knows who sent this, or anything about this person except that DNA data goes in that wallet. That sounds really good. Except it’s not the whole problem. DNA is someones identity, so this system hasn’t protected a person 100% just yet. To understand how DNA is actually identity you need to know a bit about how forensic labs and databases work. Inside human DNA are some areas that are called Short Tandem Repeats or STR’s for short. These form a pattern inside DNA. When a crime lab wants to match some DNA from a crime scene with DNA stored in their database. They match 20 of these areas. If 20 out of 20 are a perfect match that’s the person who did the crime. If the lab finds no matches in their database (The CODIS Database in the US) The detectives might go collect DNA from anyone who’s a suspect, and check those people for matches in the database. EDNA has invented a way to scramble the data so there is no way (besides the private key) to say any single repeat belongs with another repeat. This means it’s impossible to to point at the blockchain data and say “That is person x’s data.” it just can’t be done. The EDNA algorithm is designed to scramble the DNA of 5,000 people together before going on chain. This means we’ve created a puzzle with 30 billion pieces, but it’s harder to solve than any puzzle you’ve ever tried. All of the pieces are square – there are no shapes that can be used to lock any two pieces together. There is no picture on the puzzle. Pieces only have one of 4 colors on them to tell them apart (A, C, T or G in DNA “colors”) Lastly, there are 3 million to the 5,000th power different ways to put the puzzle together and it would look right, but only exactly one way is correct, and there is no picture on the box the puzzle came in. In order to “prove you did the puzzle right”, you’d have to have already have had all 5,000 people sequenced and their data in your database, and if that were true, what on earth would make you want to do the puzzle?

I know that was a long reply. But this is what we believe people need to understand. “How protected am I?” Because EDNA never knows the identity of the DNA owner (just the public key), this data is useless to researchers, so it’s pointless for us to try and sell it. That will keep us honest – you don’t have to trust us, as long as we never know your identity, and we will never ask. This is not a perfectly private system, but we’re pretty sure it is as good as it can possibly get until everyone can have a DNA sequencing lab in their kitchen.

IMEOS has always been committed to presenting some excellent and interesting projects. For communication within the EOS community, especially the Chinese community, do you have anything want to communicate to the Chinese community through IMEOS and make people look forward to EDNA?

We are very excited to bring our humble project offering to the Chinese community, and very grateful to IMEOS for giving us the opportunity to speak though a trusted voice. At its very center EDNA is really a project about personal power and personal freedom. We feel that because of this simple truth, EDNA is something our Chinese friends can and will embrace, and we are very excited to see how they will respond. In just a matter of days we will offer EDNA token holders a way to earn passive income from staking EDNA tokens. It is a temporary offering designed to create and hold onto token value till the EDNA DAC can form, and begin selling genetic data to “white-hat researchers” to earn profits for the DAC. You will not need to put your DNA on chain to profit – only hold and stake your tokens, and never would you be forced to share your data. That is yours and yours alone.

We invite everyone to visit our website at https://edna.life to learn more. You can subscribe there to keep informed when DAC membership is open. Also, if you have questions or see a way to help us achieve our goals my in-box is never closed to anyone, and you can reach me directly at greg.simpson@edna.life

Again, a huge heartfelt thank you to IMEOS for letting us share our project today. Thank you!

Thank you Greg!

NO. thank YOU!

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Amazing explanation about EDNA @dna-with-greg ! Simply sumerizes and explains one of your previous videos. Also your interview the other day with Matt from Costa Rica crypto,

I believe this project will be a huge success for itself and EOS!

Regards, @gold84

Thank you for your encouragement. We have some great news to share in the coming days. Can't wait to fill you all in.

Thanks Greg! I don't know if I am buying well (I am not a financial expert), but I managed to get around 40k Edna token. I believe some people that held the token have not even checked what is it about. They are selling it by half a usd cent on dexeos.io today, and I believe that is not even close to a fair price for it. It is very undervalued now. I believe its a great time to buy!

Regards, @gold84

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