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  • China-ASEAN innovation base launched to boost collaboration in emerging industries

    China-ASEAN innovation base launched to boost collaboration in emerging industries

    SHENZHEN, Nov. 29 — A collaborative innovation base for emerging industries between China and ASEAN countries was officially launched on Friday, marking a new step toward deepening cross-regional cooperation in emerging technologies, rules and regulations, and industrial standards.

    The China-ASEAN Collaborative Innovation Demonstration Base for Emerging Industries was announced at the 2025 ASEAN-CHINA GBA Economic Cooperation (Qianhai) Forum, held in Shenzhen, a reform pioneer in south China’s Guangdong-Hong Kong-Macao Greater Bay Area (GBA). The two-day event attracted over 1,000 participants from government bodies, business associations and enterprises in China and ASEAN countries.

    The first four demonstration bases will be established in Shenzhen, Guangzhou, Singapore and Kuala Lumpur, forming a network to facilitate industrial cooperation and regulatory alignment.

    During the forum, more than 20 cooperation projects were signed, covering sectors such as AI healthcare, distributed photovoltaic and cell therapy.

    Against a backdrop of slowing global growth and rising protectionism, China and ASEAN countries are strengthening economic integration and have been each other’s largest trading partners for five consecutive years, said Shi Zhongjun, secretary-general of the ASEAN-China Centre.

    To emphasize the forum’s role in fostering closer collaboration, he expressed his hope to build a tighter network for exchanges, deepen cooperation in areas such as digital intelligence, and deliver more tangible outcomes.

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  • Gold Prices Surge Yet Again in Pakistan

    Gold Prices Surge Yet Again in Pakistan

    Gold prices in Pakistan rose sharply on Saturday, mirroring the strong upswing in the international bullion market.

    According to the All Pakistan Gems and Jewellers Sarafa Association (APGJSA), the price of 24 karat gold climbed to Rs. 444,162 per tola after increasing by Rs. 5,300 during the day.

    The 10 gram rate also moved up, reaching Rs. 380,797 following a gain of Rs. 4,544. This comes after two days of stability, when gold held firm at Rs. 438,862 per tola on Friday.

    In the global market, spot gold jumped by $53 to hit $4,218 per ounce, including a premium of $20, reflecting heightened investor demand.

    Meanwhile, silver prices also recorded a notable increase. The per tola rate rose by Rs. 267, reaching Rs. 5,909 in the domestic market.


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  • Hong Kong reaps the fruits of fintech seeds sown nearly 10 years ago

    Hong Kong reaps the fruits of fintech seeds sown nearly 10 years ago

    When Alvin Kwock, co-founder of digital insurer OneDegree, took part in the inaugural Hong Kong FinTech Week in November 2016, it was held at a venue suitable for only a few hundred people.

    “As it was the first ever fintech event in Hong Kong, only fintech start-ups were interested, no big financial institutions paid attention,” Kwock said. “People did not have a clear idea of fintech as it was still in an exploratory stage.”

    In the years since, fintech in Hong Kong has gone through a sea change. “Now fintech is no longer confined to a few start-ups; it’s on the top of the agenda of banks and insurers,” Kwock said.

    Do you have questions about the biggest topics and trends from around the world? Get the answers with SCMP Knowledge, our new platform of curated content with explainers, FAQs, analyses and infographics brought to you by our award-winning team.

    The venue has moved from the PMQ (formerly the Police Married Quarters) to the massive Hong Kong Convention and Exhibition Centre, with the number of attendees growing 18-fold to 45,000 people. At the recent forum, speakers included some of the most high-profile figures in the financial sector like HSBC CEO Georges Elhedery and Standard Chartered Bank CEO Bill Winters.

    HSBC CEO Georges Elhedery (left) takes part in a discussion with Financial Secretary Paul Chan Mo-po (centre) and Standard Chartered CEO at the Hong Kong FinTech Week on November 3. Photo: Jonathan Wong alt=HSBC CEO Georges Elhedery (left) takes part in a discussion with Financial Secretary Paul Chan Mo-po (centre) and Standard Chartered CEO at the Hong Kong FinTech Week on November 3. Photo: Jonathan Wong>

    This maturation has intensified Hong Kong’s long-standing rivalry with Singapore. The two cities are competing to develop fintech, a rivalry highlighted this month as both hosted their 10th annual flagship fintech festivals.

    While attendance in Hong Kong may have been thinner than in Singapore, the city has an edge over its Southeast Asian rival, thanks to its vibrant capital market providing funding for fintech companies and serving as a gateway to the Greater Bay Area.

    Hong Kong secured the world’s top fintech ranking for the first time in the Global Financial Centres Index in September, while Singapore ranked fourth, according to the report by Z/Yen and the City of London that tracked 116 centres based on criteria like regulations, access to finance and talent.

    In the inaugural survey on fintech in 2017, Hong Kong ranked seventh and Singapore eighth. The same year, the Hong Kong Monetary Authority (HKMA) introduced the first phase of fintech development.

    Since then, the HKMA has issued eight digital banking licences, with the lenders offering online-only services. This week, British digital bank Revolut announced plans to launch operations in Hong Kong.

    The arrival of global players is a direct result of a concerted regulatory push – the HKMA’s fintech initiatives, the Insurance Authority’s promotion of virtual insurance, and the Securities and Futures Commission’s rules for virtual asset trading. Bourse operator Hong Kong Exchanges and Clearing’s listing reforms too have paved the way for start-ups to raise funds.

    “Hong Kong’s fintech development in the past decade has been nothing short of transformative,” said HKMA chief executive Eddie Yue Wai-man in a written interview. The 18-fold increase in the number of participants in this year’s FinTech Week compared with nine years ago was “proof not only of growing interest but also of a hub that has become a magnet for talent, ideas and ambition in fintech”, he said.

    However, a broader measure of digital competitiveness reveals ongoing challenges. Despite Hong Kong’s many advantages, Singapore ranked third and Hong Kong fourth in the 2025 World Digital Competitiveness Ranking released earlier this month.

    The report, however, noted that Hong Kong performed the worst in “IT integration”, placing 29th overall, due to low scores in government cybersecurity capacity and legal framework for privacy protection.

    Singapore, which topped the ranking in 2024, fell behind Switzerland and the US this year.

    The report said Singapore was strong in its digital regulatory framework and hi-tech patent grants, topping these categories. The institute also highlighted Singapore’s weakness in two areas, where it ranked 29th in technology, media and telecommunications stock market capitalisation and 61st in telecommunications investment.

    Analysts and fintech firms regard Singapore and Hong Kong as Asian fintech leaders, albeit with different roles.

    “Singapore offers a more accessible pathway for regional expansion across Asean, whereas Hong Kong’s competitive strength remains closely tied to the China-Hong Kong corridor and its leadership in regulated digital-asset innovation,” said Benjamin Quinlan, CEO and managing partner of Quinlan & Associates, a Hong Kong-based consultancy.

    Quinlan said Hong Kong had also made progress in digital asset and tokenisation initiatives, including the coming stablecoin regime and tokenised government bond issuance, which provided a unique competitive angle in this emerging sector.

    Singapore, by contrast, had positioned itself as a launch pad for the Association of Southeast Asian Nations, while the country had a clean regulatory environment and was innovation-friendly, supported by comparatively lower barriers to entry and a strong investor appetite, Quinlan said.

    The HKMA’s Yue said the gateway role to mainland China would continue to be a major advantage for Hong Kong’s fintech development, as companies took advantage of cross-border trading schemes in stocks, bonds, swaps, exchange-traded products and wealth management.

    Yue added that the development of fintech had benefited many sectors like digital banks, while also making it easier for small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) to get bank loans via the Commercial Data Interchange (CDI).

    The CDI, which was launched in October 2022 as part of the HKMA’s Fintech 2025 strategy, is a financial data platform designed to make it easier for businesses, especially SMEs, to access financial services. The CDI had facilitated over 71,000 loan applications totalling HK$58.1 billion (US$7.5 billion) for SMEs until the end of September.

    “Think of a wonton noodle shop that could use the CDI to share its historical turnover data from point-of-sale terminals with a bank, which could then use this alternative data for a more accurate credit assessment and loan approval, all without requiring traditional collateral,” Yue said. “We are also advancing trade finance digitalisation through CargoX to support SME traders in a complex global trade landscape.”

    Project CargoX is a public-private collaboration led by the HKMA to use cargo and trade data to improve trade finance.

    The HKMA’s Faster Payment System has over 18 million users. Photo: Handout alt=The HKMA’s Faster Payment System has over 18 million users. Photo: Handout>

    One of the HKMA’s first fintech initiatives was the launch of the Faster Payment System in 2018, with the platform currently boasting more than 18 million users. This was followed by licences for eight digital banks in 2019.

    Even in a market with more than 150 lenders, these virtual banks had 3.4 million customers, with HK$77 billion in deposits and HK$29 billion in loans as of June, according to the HKMA.

    To build on this decade of progress and solidify Hong Kong’s future position, Yue unveiled the Fintech 2030 road map this month. The five-year programme will launch more than 40 initiatives in four areas: data, artificial intelligence, resilience and tokenisation.

    The city has also incubated some prominent fintech unicorns – start-ups with a valuation of at least US$1 billion – like Airwallex, HashKey Group, WeLab, Micro Connect and ZA Group.

    Hong Kong currently has more than 1,200 fintech companies, a 10 per cent increase from last year, with the sector’s revenue expected to exceed US$606 billion by 2032, according to a recent report by the Financial Services Development Council.

    The UK’s Revolut will add to the tally.

    Revolut is a global disrupter with over 65 million clients and has a strong presence in the US, Europe and Asia, so adding Hong Kong was the next stop in the expansion, said Camilo Ramirez, head of financial services at Sia Partners Hong Kong, a consultancy.

    “While Hong Kong looks like a saturated market, it still lags behind in digital capabilities compared with Europe and mainland China,” Ramirez said. “With the HKMA launching the fintech road map, Revolut would land in a perfect environment to bring its innovative capabilities to Hong Kong at a pivotal and exciting moment for the financial services industry.”

    Alvin Kwock, co-founder of online insurer OneDegree. Photo: Handout alt=Alvin Kwock, co-founder of online insurer OneDegree. Photo: Handout>

    One Degree’s Kwock said the conversations around fintech had continued to evolve at FinTech Week. Initially, it was about exploring the use of fintech, which later shifted to digital banks, digital insurance and virtual assets trading, before moving to AI this year, he said.

    “Cybersecurity will be a key issue going forward as the city becomes a virtual-asset trading hub,” Kwock said.

    Meanwhile, home-grown fintechs like WeLab have been using their early-mover advantage to good use by expanding in Southeast Asia.

    WeLab serves 70 million customers via its WeLend online lending platform and two digital banks in Hong Kong and Indonesia, WeLab Bank and Bank Saqu, respectively.

    “Positioned at the nexus of two major growth corridors – northbound to the Greater Bay Area and mainland China, and southbound to the rapidly growing and digitally transformative markets of Southeast Asia, Hong Kong acts as a natural springboard for regional fintech expansion,” said Simon Loong, founder and group CEO of WeLab.

    Fintech has also transformed one of Hong Kong’s oldest banks. The 160-year-old HSBC has seen an increase in digital use across all banking transactions.

    “We are already a fully digital bank, prioritising digital channels to deliver daily banking services and engage with our customers,” said Maggie Ng, CEO and head of retail banking and wealth at HSBC Hong Kong.

    Ng said HSBC would take part in the HKMA’s Fintech 2030 projects. The bank had already introduced tokenised deposits for customers, and its digital asset platform, HSBC Orion, was used to launch the world’s largest digital bond issuance by the Hong Kong government this month, she said.

    The bank recently launched HSBC Gold Token, a tokenised gold product for retail customers in Hong Kong.

    Also this month, Hong Kong and Shenzhen launched a joint fintech action plan to promote cross-boundary financial innovation, setting a target of establishing over 20 fintech application scenarios by the end of 2027. Secretary for Financial Services and the Treasury Christopher Hui Ching-yu, who signed the initial pact with Shenzhen, said the two sides would implement various initiatives to facilitate high-quality fintech development.

    Paul Sin, chair of the web3 and technology committee for Greater China at CPA Australia, an accounting industry body, said Hong Kong’s Fintech 2030 initiative provided a clear road map for the next five years.

    One element that Hong Kong needed to develop was a decentralised identity (DID) system, which would allow financial firms to easily verify users’ identities.

    “Only when firms can easily verify clients’ identities using technology like DID can fintech solutions be both innovative and compliant,” Sin said.

    This article originally appeared in the South China Morning Post (SCMP), the most authoritative voice reporting on China and Asia for more than a century. For more SCMP stories, please explore the SCMP app or visit the SCMP’s Facebook and Twitter pages. Copyright © 2025 South China Morning Post Publishers Ltd. All rights reserved.

    Copyright (c) 2025. South China Morning Post Publishers Ltd. All rights reserved.


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  • Dar urges Ulema to promote unity in Muslim Ummah – RADIO PAKISTAN

    1. Dar urges Ulema to promote unity in Muslim Ummah  RADIO PAKISTAN
    2. Dar calls for Ummah’s unity to face contemporary challenges  Dunya News
    3. Acting Upon Teachings Of The Holy Quran Paves Way For Success In Both Worlds: National Assembly Speaker Sardar…

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  • Silicon Valley sets its sights on building the perfect baby

    Silicon Valley sets its sights on building the perfect baby

    If you could design your ideal baby, what would you choose? A lover of naps who sleeps through the night? A mind for math and an affinity for the viola? For the founders of fertility tech startup Herasight, this is not a hypothetical. 

    Herasight founder Michael Christensen is 6-foot-6, and even in a world where taller men are perceived as stronger and more competent, it’s a bit much. He wants his future children to be shorter and more comfortable on commercial planes. 

    “It’s annoying to be super tall,” he said. “Nothing is made for you.” 

    Chief science officer Tobias Wolfram has already banked frozen embryos with his partner in preparation for their future family. His great-grandparents lived past 100 with no cancer or serious health problems, suggesting a family tendency toward healthy aging. But there’s depression on his side of the family. 

    “I’d really like to make sure that’s not passed down,” he said. Wolfram has waited five years for Herasight’s technology to reach its current state, so that he can screen embryos for mental health indicators. 

    Jonathan Anomaly, a communications executive with Herasight, is approaching 50 and planning a family with his partner, 37. His grandmother was a genius, said Anomaly, but she suffered from five different autoimmune disorders that kept her homebound. He plans to screen embryos for autoimmune diseases, and like Christensen, Anomaly said he’ll screen for height. But he wants potential sons to be slightly taller than his 5 feet 9 inches. 

    This is the new era of family planning emerging across the Bay Area, a place known for its concentration of extreme wealth, high risk tolerance, affinity for new technology, and early-adopter mentality. Rather than having babies the Where Did I Come From? way, prospective parents are blazing an unprecedented approach to family planning. Gone are the wealthy parents who pay women for their eggs because they have desirable traits or who seek out sperm donors based on Ivy League degrees and athletic prowess. This is reproduction reimagined through the lens of algorithms and data science down to the genetic blueprint that makes up a human being. 

    This new method means opting for IVF from the start even if infertility isn’t an issue to create embryos. From there, prospective parents are investing thousands in different types of next-level embryo screening that can essentially spin up versions of your future children’s health prospects by showing their risk of inherited diseases, childhood cancers, schizophrenia, autism, and Types 1 and 2 diabetes. Other traits like height, body mass index, musical ability, and higher IQ points are also among the offerings at certain firms. And with billionaires backing fertility tech startups and funding new research related to conception and embryo selection, the boundaries between proven science, emerging possibilities, and aspirational hype become increasingly complex to parse.

    On the outer edges, scientists and researchers are studying the efficacy of penis transplants, and five have been performed worldwide so far, including one in the U.S. Uterus transplants have led to 29 live births, nearly all by C-section. A team of Chinese scientists successfully conceived mice with two male mice fathers—without DNA from a mother mouse. And more is on the horizon, including AI-enabled and automated IVF processes that could lower costs substantially and artificial womb development. A height and intelligence screening startup backed by Reddit and Seven Seven Six fund founder Alexis Ohanian plastered New York City subway stations with ads this month for Nucleus Genomics, imploring riders to “Have Your Best Baby.”

    The global IVF industry remains a nascent $28 billion enterprise, and investment in women’s health and IVF-related tech startups began picking up last year, with 2024 standing out as the largest year for investment at $2 billion, a 55% increase over 2023. 

    Some of these new add-ons to IVF are driven by people who just “want to know” about their embryos in the way people want to find out the sex of their baby before birth, said Barry Behr, director of Stanford’s IVF lab and a professor of obstetrics and gynecology who is known for his groundbreaking work in improving IVF and advancing the field of embryo selection. Other times, it’s about how to make more money from the IVF process or lower the cost for patients. Regardless of the motivation, for anyone who has had a child or relative who has been sick with a debilitating disease or condition, “you know how that makes you feel,” said Behr, who is an advisor to Orchid Health, which offers embryo screening. 

    “A parent would do anything—give a kidney, give a limb, or whatever you could give to a child to avert suffering,” said Behr. “So don’t tell me how anyone could even question doing something to your embryo that we do for other reasons routinely.” 

    Yet the rapid pace of innovation and investment has created a regulatory and ethical vacuum, experts have observed. “Technology will always outpace the law,” said Rich Vaughn, a prominent fertility lawyer who has seen the field evolve during the past two decades. “Technologies develop first; law and regulations make things legally safer for everyone, but they trail behind.”

    Moreover, the controversial process of embryo editing—which refers to changing the DNA of an embryo before it is implanted and is illegal in 70 countries or banned through funding restrictions—is being studied and backed financially despite the considerable risk involved. Coinbase cofounder and billionaire Brian Armstrong said he invested in embryo-editing startup Preventive, which has raised $30 million. Armstrong is joined by OpenAI CEO and cofounder Sam Altman’s husband, Oliver Mulherin. 

    Another startup focused on embryo editing is led by former Thiel Fellow Cathy Tie, who wants to genetically correct mutations in embryos before they are implanted to dramatically minimize the risks of inherited disease. (Investor Peter Thiel offers a two-year, $200,000 fellowship program to entrepreneurs who want to drop out of or take time off from college to focus on developing an idea.)

    “I believe that gene correction technology is much more effective in achieving those goals than embryo screening,” said Tie, cofounder of Manhattan Genomics. She plans to begin testing on nonhuman primates early next year before moving to human embryos, pending regulatory approval. 

    Tie believes many couples, especially those with relatively older women, wind up with too few embryos to choose from after they go through the process of stimulating their follicles and retrieving eggs. “Let’s say I’m a woman in my mid-thirties,” said Tie. “I’m lucky if I’ll get 10 eggs, and from that I’ll maybe get two embryos. Then a company will tell me one embryo is better than the other.” Despite public controversy over embryo editing, which alters genes that would be passed down to new generations and involves irreversible decision-making, Tie said she has received a lot of support from researchers, scientists, and IVF doctors. 

    Hank Greely, a Stanford law professor who specializes in issues surrounding biomedical technologies and authored The End of Sex, a 2016 book that predicted humans will eventually reproduce mainly through IVF, told Fortune screening for cosmetic traits like hair, eye, and skin color or nose shape isn’t far off. 

    People in Silicon Valley, where Greely lives,are most interested in influencing their offspring’s intelligence, personality, musical and sports ability, and proficiency in math. Right now those are areas scientists “know almost nothing about,” he said. 

    But the technology is moving at a swift pace, and some experts think the line between acceptable and not will evolve as well. 

    “There was a time when it wasn’t appropriate to show your knees, and now you can wear a thong at the beach,” said Behr. “The line moves with time.”

    The new line in tech-assisted IVF

    Reproductive tech startup CEO Noor Siddiqui has a personal inspiration behind founding polygenic screening firm Orchid Health. Her mother suffers from a rare genetic eye condition called retinitis pigmentosa, which led to progressive vision loss and her mother’s eventual blindness. Siddiqui, also a Thiel Fellow, said she was motivated to pursue embryo screening after watching her mother’s condition progress. Siddiqui also plans to have four children, and has screened her own embryos using Orchid’s technology. 

    The firm occupies the middle ground of the IVF tech market—pushing the boundaries of science, but mainly to prevent disease.

    For years now, prospective parents who use IVF to have babies have been able to opt for preimplantation genetic testing to make sure the embryo has the correct number of chromosomes. In addition to chromosomal abnormalities like trisomy 21—an extra copy of chromosome 21 that causes Down syndrome—tests also scan for life-altering diseases stemming from single-gene mutations like sickle cell anemia or cystic fibrosis. 

    Orchid offers “polygenic risk” scoring for their embryos. The startup counts Day One Ventures and Prometheus Fund among its backers, as well as angel investors including Figma CEO Dylan Field and 23andMe cofounder Anne Wojcicki. Eventbrite cofounders Julia and Kevin Hartz have also invested in Orchid, and the couple screened their embryos for inherited diseases including Alzheimer’s before having twins they dubbed “Cohort 2” after their first two daughters were in their teens. Published reports have anonymously quoted sources claiming that Shivon Zilis, who has children with the world’s wealthiest man, Elon Musk, has used Orchid’s services. 

    Orchid’s approach involves whole genome sequencing, and expands on traditional screening by sequencing nearly all of an embryo’s genome. Siddiqui said Orchid scans for more than 1,000 genetic diseases as one option for clients, while another option scans for 3,000 single-gene diseases, covering inherited and spontaneous changes in the embryo. Traditional tests scan for chromosome numbers and single-gene disease. She often compares it to publishing a book that a writer would want to be fully accurate. 

    “If your proofreader didn’t actually read your book to check for spelling errors, missing words, missing punctuation, would you be satisfied if they just told you all the chapters were present?” she said. Siddiqui said parents are also interested in the genetics of autism, and Orchid screens can detect genetic mutations in specific genes known to cause autism spectrum disorder, although it cannot predict all autism risk. Experts have warned that there is no reliable test for autism, although recentstudies have found a genetic cause in 25% to 50% of cases. 

    “We want the maximum amount of information to be provided to parents to mitigate the maximum amount of risk when it comes to genetics,” said Siddiqui. 

    Herasight, the startup with the three founders who each are hoping to screen for traits in their next generation, recently emerged from stealth mode after several years and conducts polygenic screening with a different technical approach that allows it to work with any IVF clinic. It screens the data for potential childhood and adult diseases and health problems, and in some cases height, IQ, longevity, and mental health conditions like depression. 

    The firm offers a free IVF calculator so prospective parents can get an idea of their chances at conception, from retrieving eggs through birth, based on more than 100,000 IVF treatment cycles recorded in the U.K. national registry. Herasight’s published studies show it can reduce disease risks by 20% to 44% when selecting among five embryos. The validation results come from the firm’s own research rather than independent studies, but Herasight has published its methods and data for others to review. The company’s research has shown what they call “positive pleiotropy,” which means when selecting against one disease, parents often reduce risks for related conditions, too. 

    “Everyone has a unique family history, so we don’t have one type of customer,” Christensen told Fortune. Sometimes a prospective parent will come to the firm, excited about screening embryos for IQ, and then they’ll discover a BRCA gene mutation, which can increase the risk of breast and ovarian cancers. Then that becomes the top priority in screening embryos, said Christensen. Anomaly said every embryo-screening choice represents a tradeoff. “Creating the perfect baby—that doesn’t exist,” he added. 

    Kyle Farh, a scientist with DNA sequencing and genetic analysis company Illumina’s artificial intelligence lab, said a huge gap in data interpretation remains at the moment because AI models simply need more information. About 1 million people globally have sequenced their genomes, and realistically about 1 billion people need to sequence their genomes for models to function more meaningfully. 

    “It’s a chicken and egg problem,” said Farh. “We can predict [traits], and we can show that there’s some significant correlation between our predictions and what happens in real life, but the correlation is still very poor.”

    But for parents looking to prevent a major life-altering disease, the technology has been transformative. Software engineer and consultant Roshan George and art director Julie Kang, who live in San Francisco, hired Orchid to screen their embryos after the couple discovered they shared a genetic mutation that could cause profound deafness in their children. One day after having their newborn daughter, Astra, it took about two minutes to find out if the thousands they invested in embryo screening had helped them toward the outcome they wanted for their child. A tech gave Astra a hearing test in their sunny Sutter Health hospital room, the culmination of months of genetic analysis and embryo risk scores. 

    “I mean, we spent all this money, we did this whole thing and got through all this,” said George. The test showed Astra’s hearing was normal, and the new parents were relieved and are planning for another child soon; they still have screened embryos, George said. 

    Cases of preventing disease are growing, which is giving these startups a boost. And in addition to screening for certain health risks, founders are hopeful that the impact on pregnancy loss for couples and families who go through IVF will be substantial. Certainresearch shows chromosomal abnormalities are responsible for about 50% of first-trimester miscarriages, and the hope is that screening allows people to prioritize embryos most likely to result in successful pregnancies. 

    But the use cases that scientists and ethicists fret about aren’t quite here—yet. “Even the most optimistic folks—and I think scientists and most geneticists are way too optimistic—think they can account for, oh, three or four IQ points,” said End of Sex author Greely. “Plus, we know plenty of ways to improve IQ test results with things like good childhood nutrition, childhood vaccinations so kids don’t get sick, and parents who read to their kids.” Brains are incredibly complicated, he said, and may ultimately prove too complicated to screen for intelligence and qualities like extroversion. 

    “It makes great headlines, it makes great clickbait, it makes great dystopian science fiction,” said Greely. “But the designer baby idea? At least when you’re talking about behavioral traits, it’s not very plausible—at least for decades.”

    But given the intensity and expectations of the tech-oriented set interested in this brave new world, NYU bioethicist Arthur Caplan notes there’s a danger that some parents might view their children as products and potentially even “commercial failures.” He questions how positive this will be for kids. “When you start saying, ‘I tested you, and I have a certain outcome that I expect,’ you’re taking away the kids’ future,” said Caplan. “You’re making them less free because you have expectations, and they better turn out that way.”

    Victoria Fritz and her husband, who used Herasight to screen embryos to try to prevent passing along her Type 1 diabetes, hope to do an embryo transfer in January, and are realistic about the prospect.

    “I feel like, regardless of what embryo we choose, we will hopefully have a happy, healthy child and be a happy family regardless,” said Fritz. The screening provides peace of mind, she noted, but “it doesn’t guarantee that your child is going to have a perfect, healthy life.”

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  • Massive financial irregularities exposed at Islamabad’s Federal Treasury Office

    Massive financial irregularities exposed at Islamabad’s Federal Treasury Office

    Illegal issuance of stamp papers, non-submission of stamp duty, court fee, foreign bills to national treasury exposed

    A scandal involving large-scale,…

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  • Stapokibart Shows Promise for Atopic Dermatitis in Children

    Stapokibart Shows Promise for Atopic Dermatitis in Children

    A PROMISING early-phase clinical trial has found that stapokibart, a monoclonal antibody targeting the IL-4 receptor alpha subunit, may offer a safe and effective treatment option for children aged 6–11 years with moderate-to-severe

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  • Effectiveness of Combined Preoperative and Postoperative Rehabilitation Versus Postoperative-Only Rehabilitation in Cardiac Surgery Patients: A Systematic Review

    Effectiveness of Combined Preoperative and Postoperative Rehabilitation Versus Postoperative-Only Rehabilitation in Cardiac Surgery Patients: A Systematic Review

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  • Why this Aids charity’s Hong Kong art show smells of resilience

    Why this Aids charity’s Hong Kong art show smells of resilience

    Victor clearly recalls the day 10 years ago that changed his life.

    It was a Sunday, and he had gone to Hong Kong charity Aids Concern, where he volunteers, to have a rapid antibody test for human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), an infection that…

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  • Baikonur pad damaged in Soyuz launch to ISS

    Baikonur pad damaged in Soyuz launch to ISS

    BERLIN — The Baiknour pad used for the launch of the latest crew to the International Space Station has sustained damage, raising questions about its ability to support upcoming missions to the station.

    The Baikonur Cosmodrome…

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