Article 74KB1 The Download: brainless human clones and the first uterus kept alive outside a body

The Download: brainless human clones and the first uterus kept alive outside a body

by
Thomas Macaulay
from MIT Technology Review on (#74KB1)

This is today's edition of The Download, our weekday newsletter that provides a daily dose of what's going on in the world of technology.

Inside the stealthy startup that pitched brainless human clones

Afteroperatingin secrecy for years, R3 Bio, a California-based startup, suddenly revealed last week that it had raised money to createnonsentientmonkey organ sacks" as an alternative to animal testing. But there is more to the story. And R3doesn'twant that story told.

MIT Technology Review discovered that founder JohnSchloendornalso pitched a startling, ethically charged vision: brainless clones" that serve as backup human bodies.Find out all the details on the radical proposal.

-Antonio Regalado

A woman's uterus has been kept alive outside the body for the first time

Ten months ago, reproductive health researchers placed a freshly donated human uterus inside a new device they call Mother." They connected the organ to the machine's plastic veins and arteries and pumped inmodifiedhuman blood.

The device kept the uterus alive for a day, a new feat that could lead to longer-term maintenance of wombs outside the body. Future versions of the technology could shine new light on pregnancies-and potentially even grow a humanfetus.Read the full story.

-JessicaHamzelou

The must-reads

I'vecombed the internet to find you today's most fun/important/scary/fascinating stories about technology.

1 AI datacenterscan significantly warm up surrounding areas
The heat islands" may already affect 340 million people. (New Scientist)
+Mistral has raised $830M to build Nvidia-powered AIcentersin Europe.(FT$)
+ But nobody wants a datacenterin their backyard.(MIT Technology Review)

2 Elon Muskreportedly joinedTrump's call with Modi about the Iran War
Itremainsunclear what Musk was doing during the conversation. (NYT$)
+ India has disputed the report.(Independent)
+ The war poses a grave threat to the EV market.(Rest of World)

3 Eli Lilly has struck a deal to bring AI-developed drugs to the market
It'ssecured a $2.75 billion drug collaboration withInsilicoMedicine. (Reuters$)
+ AI-designed compounds can kill drug-resistant bacteria.(MIT Technology Review)

4 More and more countries are curbing children's social media access
Austria is the latest to pursue a ban. (Engadget)
+ Indonesia has rolled out the first one in Southeast Asia.(DW)
+UK Prime MinisterKeir Starmer said he will also have to act."(Guardian)

5 Tech stocks just had their worst week innearly ayear
Thanks to a combination of the Iran war and legal disputes. (CNBC)
+ Tech insiders are split over the AI bubble.(MIT Technology Review)

6 Meta is launching new smart glasses for prescription wearers
It plans to debut them next week. (Bloomberg$)

7 Taiwan is probing 11 Chinese firms for illegal poaching of tech talent
Its semiconductors are entangled in the tensions with Beijing.(Reuters)

8 Bluesky has built an AI app for customizing social media feeds
It usesAnthropic'sClaude. (TechCrunch)

9 A psychologist is making music with his brain implant
He believes enjoyment is a prerequisite for BCI success. (Wired$)

10 The world's smallest QR code could store data for centuries
It'ssmaller than bacteria. (Science Daily)

Quote of the day

We should be thinking about protecting young peopleinthe digital world as opposed to protecting themfromthe digital world."

-YouTube CEO Neal Mohan givesthe New York Timeshis take on the debate around children's safety online.

One More Thing

Screenshot-2026-03-30-at-12.52.33.png?w=1754AJ PICS / ALAMY STOCK PHOTOAI's growth needs the right interface

You'dhave to be pudding-brained to believe that chatbots are the best way to use computers. The real opportunity is a system built atop the visual interfaces we alreadyknow, butnavigated through a natural mix of voice and touch.

Crucially, thiswon'tjust be a computer that we can use.It'llbe one we can break and remake to suit whatever uses we want. Instead of merely consuming technology like the gelatinous humans in Wall-E, we should be able to architect it to suit our own ends

This idea is already lurching to life.Read the full story to find out how.

-Cliff Kuang

We can still havenice things

A place for comfort, fun and distraction to brighten up your day. (Got any ideas?Drop me a line.)

+Thesefloating designswill elevate your perspective on architecture.
+ UurGallenku'sportraits oftwo worlds in one imagebeautifully build bridges.
+Thisis theanti-Karenthat the world needs right now.
+If only we could all find a love as pure asthis kittyclinging to itsfavoritetoy.

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