Engineered DNA can store massive amounts of data while also encrypting it, opening the door to ultra-secure, long-term digital storage.
What separates casual vibe coders from elite builders? It's not better prompts. It's systems. Here's the exact framework I use to keep AI projects production-ready.
Scientists are exploring how DNA’s physical structure can store vast amounts of data and encode secure information.
Former cryptocurrency investment company engineer pleads guilty to gaining access to its software ‘at the highest level’ for malicious intent ...
A research team led by UAB researcher David Reverter has discovered the molecular mechanism that describes in detail the ...
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The perils of playing God

For nearly four billion years, life on Earth evolved blindly. Natural selection tinkered, mutations accumulated, and ...
David McDonnell held a key role with Fujitsu before the Post Office rolled out Horizon in 2000. He warned of faults but was ...
Living organisms share an ancestor called the last universal common ancestor, or LUCA. LUCA is estimated to have lived ...
Anyone who engages in serious dialogue with a Large Language Model (LLM) may get the impression they are interacting with an ...
When he was just a teenager trying to decide what to do with his life, César de la Fuente compiled a list of the world’s biggest problems. He ranked them inversely by how much money governments were ...
While visible watermarks on AI images can be cropped and audio disclaimers can be edited out, the government's latest IT ...
Since the computer age began, storing and securing escalating data volumes has been a headache. But that problem could potentially be solved using DNA.