Bitcoiners Are Biohacking a DIY Coronavirus Vaccine

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Anonymous bitcoiners are taking the search for a coronavirus vaccine into their own hands – bypassing academia, pharmaceutical companies and the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA).

The “biohacking” effort by a group known as CoroHope is crowdsourcing bitcoin (BTC) donations to fund its work. The group claims it has a biologist on board with 10 years’ experience building similar vaccines for the FDA. Prominent community members such as Blockstream co-founder Mark Friedenbach are vouching for the unknown team. (“It is not a scam,” he tweeted.)

And it’s drawing on bitcoin’s decentralized ethos for inspiration.

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“Cryptocurrency is uniquely able to help with this problem because, like us, it’s outside the traditional system. The original backers are bitcoiners, and we’d love to keep working with bitcoin and bitcoin developers on this problem. We need all the help we can get,” a CoroHope spokesperson told CoinDesk by email.

The group sees the FDA as a potential hindrance to finding a vaccine for the rapidly spreading coronavirus because the agency has a stringent approval process that, to the biohackers’ minds, doesn’t necessarily benefit the public.

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“FDA-compliant manufacturing is absurdly overregulated: paperwork for the paperwork, quadruple-checking, endless committees … just the worst of bureaucracy. So we can be more nimble,” the spokesperson said.

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They noted that it took the World Health Organization (WHO) until Wednesday to declare the coronavirus a pandemic, “which will end up having cost thousands of lives due to continued complacency around the world. Unfortunately, COVID-19 is a global pandemic and frankly we’re not interested in waiting for regulations to try to do good work.”

Like other bitcoin-adjacent endeavors (3D-printed guns, online black markets), this one is likely to be controversial.

FDA-compliant manufacturing is absurdly overregulated … just the worst of bureaucracy. So we can be more nimble.

“I have no concerns with someone trying to develop something in a novel way. Science is all about that,” said Nancy E. Kass, a professor of bioethics and public health at John Hopkins University.

“But it would be harmful, problematic, confusing and misleading to start saying that they have an effective vaccine if that vaccine has not undergone proper safety testing and efficacy testing,” she said, pointing to FDA rules as a guideline.