The low-tech plan to patch humanity's greatest weakness | Andrew Snyder-Beattie Podcast Por  arte de portada

The low-tech plan to patch humanity's greatest weakness | Andrew Snyder-Beattie

The low-tech plan to patch humanity's greatest weakness | Andrew Snyder-Beattie

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Conventional wisdom is that safeguarding humanity from the worst biological risks — microbes optimised to kill as many as possible — is difficult bordering on impossible, making bioweapons humanity’s single greatest vulnerability. Andrew Snyder-Beattie thinks conventional wisdom could be wrong.Andrew’s job at Open Philanthropy is to spend hundreds of millions of dollars to protect as much of humanity as possible in the worst-case scenarios — those with fatality rates near 100% and the collapse of technological civilisation a live possibility.Video, full transcript, and links to learn more: https://80k.info/asbAs Andrew lays out, there are several ways this could happen, including:A national bioweapons programme gone wrong, in particular Russia or North KoreaAI advances making it easier for terrorists or a rogue AI to release highly engineered pathogensMirror bacteria that can evade the immune systems of not only humans, but many animals and potentially plants as wellMost efforts to combat these extreme biorisks have focused on either prevention or new high-tech countermeasures. But prevention may well fail, and high-tech approaches can’t scale to protect billions when, with no sane people willing to leave their home, we’re just weeks from economic collapse.So Andrew and his biosecurity research team at Open Philanthropy have been seeking an alternative approach. They’re proposing a four-stage plan using simple technology that could save most people, and is cheap enough it can be prepared without government support. Andrew is hiring for a range of roles to make it happen — from manufacturing and logistics experts to global health specialists to policymakers and other ambitious entrepreneurs — as well as programme associates to join Open Philanthropy’s biosecurity team (apply by October 20!).Fundamentally, organisms so small have no way to penetrate physical barriers or shield themselves from UV, heat, or chemical poisons. We now know how to make highly effective ‘elastomeric’ face masks that cost $10, can sit in storage for 20 years, and can be used for six months straight without changing the filter. Any rich country could trivially stockpile enough to cover all essential workers.People can’t wear masks 24/7, but fortunately propylene glycol — already found in vapes and smoke machines — is astonishingly good at killing microbes in the air. And, being a common chemical input, industry already produces enough of the stuff to cover every indoor space we need at all times.Add to this the wastewater monitoring and metagenomic sequencing that will detect the most dangerous pathogens before they have a chance to wreak havoc, and we might just buy ourselves enough time to develop the cure we’ll need to come out alive.Has everyone been wrong, and biology is actually defence dominant rather than offence dominant? Is this plan crazy — or so crazy it just might work?That’s what host Rob Wiblin and Andrew Snyder-Beattie explore in this in-depth conversation.What did you think of the episode? https://forms.gle/66Hw5spgnV3eVWXa6Chapters:Cold open (00:00:00)Who's Andrew Snyder-Beattie? (00:01:23)It could get really bad (00:01:57)The worst-case scenario: mirror bacteria (00:08:58)To actually work, a solution has to be low-tech (00:17:40)Why ASB works on biorisks rather than AI (00:20:37)Plan A is prevention. But it might not work. (00:24:48)The “four pillars” plan (00:30:36)ASB is hiring now to make this happen (00:32:22)Everyone was wrong: biorisks are defence dominant in the limit (00:34:22)Pillar 1: A wall between the virus and your lungs (00:39:33)Pillar 2: Biohardening buildings (00:54:57)Pillar 3: Immediately detecting the pandemic (01:13:57)Pillar 4: A cure (01:27:14)The plan's biggest weaknesses (01:38:35)If it's so good, why are you the only group to suggest it? (01:43:04)Would chaos and conflict make this impossible to pull off? (01:45:08)Would rogue AI make bioweapons? Would other AIs save us? (01:50:05)We can feed the world even if all the plants die (01:56:08)Could a bioweapon make the Earth uninhabitable? (02:05:06)Many open roles to solve bio-extinction — and you don’t necessarily need a biology background (02:07:34)Career mistakes ASB thinks are common (02:16:19)How to protect yourself and your family (02:28:21)This episode was recorded on August 12, 2025Video editing: Simon Monsour and Luke MonsourAudio engineering: Milo McGuire, Simon Monsour, and Dominic ArmstrongMusic: CORBITCamera operator: Jake MorrisCoordination, transcriptions, and web: Katy Moore
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