Here at Foresight our main focus is on longer-term technologies such as molecular manufacturing, but we keep an eye on what’s arriving along the nearer-term pathways as well. ย In 2007 I attended a workshop on “Nanotechnology for Chemical and Biological Defense” and the proceedings volume of that meeting, with the same name, is now available. ย An excerpt:
For the misuse of nanotechnology, the groups explored scenarios in which state or nonstate adversaries might use nanotechnology applications against the US and allies. ย These groups also considered proliferation challenges. ย The specific threats considered were new or nanoenabled biochemical agents; malfeasant exploitation of the toxicological or other deleterious health effects; evasion of vaccines, innate human immunity, or other medical countermeasures; and self-assembled materials and devices to molecular assemblers.
Scenarios involving “abiotic or mechanical self-replicating synthetic self-assembly” were regarded as beyond the timeframe covered by the book.
Those of us who answer questions from the public about potential abuse of nanotech frequently point out that there is a much more immediate concern coming from biological technologies. ย This book looks at those issues and how nanotech might help.
As one who rarely envisions biotech threats, I found the workshop scary. ย But it’s good that someone is paying attention to these concerns. ย Check out the book, edited by Margaret Kosal of Georgia Tech. ย โChris Peterson