Photo: Jamie McCarthy/Getty Images for Glamour
Two years after the $9 billion start-up unicorn Theranos crumbled, Silicon Valley still appears to be struggling to learn its lesson when it comes to health and medical start-ups. Improbable-sounding companies continue to turn up with tens of millions of dollars in funding, no published research to back them up, and nothing but criticism from scientists. Last week, BuzzFeed News examined a new set of start-ups promising to detect cancer early via a simple blood test Freenome, Grail, and Guardant and found them on paths dangerously similar to the one Theranos was on just a few years ago. A year ago, Freenome promised to publish about its product in a scientific journal very soon to Fast Company, and still hasnt. Cancer researchers told BuzzFeed very plainly that such a simple test would be miraculous but seemed improbably advanced beyond our current technology, which was also the case with Theranoss miniature blood tests and Freenome made its lofty promises only months after Theranos started to fall apart. Like a Kickstarter project well over its anticipated delivery date, one begins to wonder if it was all fake.
Silicon Valley has a kind of blind spot when it comes to biotechnology, health-related start-ups, and other medical pursuits. The Theranos hype train was only stopped when The Wall Street Journal surfaced evidence that Theranos had misrepresented how far along it was in its research process to its investors, passing off mediocre test results as much more conclusive than they were. Venture-capital firms insist that the standard that needs to be met for investment is much higher for medical start-ups, which must prove that their technology works with data, not just a pitch. And yet somehow, when these start-ups finally surface to public consciousness, they dont appear to pass even the most basic smell test with literally any experienced researcher in the field.
There are some confounding factors to take into account: venture capitalists invest in ambitious businesses and expect a high failure rate; health start-up failures are highly visible in part because biotechnology businesses are more unusual, and because they tend to be involved with actual life-or-death human experiences. No one really cares about another Uber-alike (just as no one really cared about Uber until it had established itself) but almost everyone has a personal relationship with cancer, and everyone wants a solution to it as soon as possible.
But the fact that we all have bodies, and all need doctors may also be why Silicon Valley seems unable to avoid dabbling in medical technology. The intersection of future tech and health has become crowded with some of the countrys richest hobbyists. They love biohacking (theres even a subscription box). They believe, almost to a man, that the singularity is a question of not if, but when. Elon Musk is very seriously investing in arming biological humans against computers; Peter Thiel takes human growth hormone, a popular practice among transhumanists, and has expressed interested in getting blood transfusions from young people as a way of reversing aging (to his credit, there is some published scientific evidence this might actually work, however fundamentally sinister it sounds). Larry Page, Sergey Brin, Mark Zuckerberg, Sean Parker, and Martine Rothblatt have all sincerely expressed interests in similar pursuits. They often seem less concerned with protecting humanity than their own consciousnesses, designing brain-machine interfaces that will both preserve their own copious knowledge reserves and merge them with the larger internet, turning each tech CEO, investor, and founder into an army of IBM Watsons, but smarter.
There is a pervasive sense in Silicon Valley, bolstered by ten years of world-conquering success, that any sufficiently intelligent, sufficiently driven person can will what they want. The only thing slowing the unrelenting forward march of medical tech is funding. Solutions are an inevitability, and the realities of the human body are simply a set of inefficiencies that can, with enough time and attention, be brought to heel. The culture of Silicon Valley meritocracy affords its practitioners cynicism when confronted with realities other than their own: If you were dumb enough to trust new tech, or too poor to have more options, you deserve what you had coming.
Health tech is certainly valuable and ripe for profit. Machines and medical tests used in hospitals for treatment and diagnosis are wildly expensive, but their cost is determined both by demand (high; no one wants to die, and enough people have insurance) and research (expensive, very costly to get right and get through all the hoops of being brought to market). For further evidence, look at the pharmaceutical industry. Investors who sense a rich potential for profit if only they can insert themselves at the right place in the process are not wrong, in that sense.
But the move fast and break things mantra that has helped Silicon Valley disrupt countless industries over the last two decades is more dangerous when applied to medical science. The roadblocks that health tech companies run into are not qualitatively different from the ones that all tech companies run into. But when Uber or Airbnb run afoul of their respective laws, the result is abstracted lost money out of someones pocket the government, independent contractors, independent businesses, other segments of the market. When Airbnb keeps viable apartments off the market so they can be rented short-term to its users, the money can theoretically be remanded if someone determines that Airbnb is doing something wrong. The things being broken by the current generation of unicorns are regulatory regimes. (Valuable, useful regulatory regimes, to be sure.) The things being broken by health start-ups are laws of science and ironclad guidelines for research. When a health start-up moves fast and breaks things, it can directly result in the death, dismemberment, and injury of real people. You cant un-kill someone who died thanks to a bad diagnosis (at least, theres no start-up hawking that yet).
Theres always room to be wrong in business. But theres less of that room when it comes to medical treatment. That it appears all the same to even the highest-profile venture capitalists actually turns out to make a lot of sense.
The Snapchat 101: The Best, Coolest, Smartest, Weirdest Accounts on the Hottest Social Network on Your Phone
F**k.
The News Feeds enormous audience wont solve its waning relevance.
If Snapchat wants to be the Apple of augmented reality, Facebook is more than happy to be its Microsoft.
We give it three months before Facebook rips off the idea.
Move fast and break things doesnt work when those things are research procedures, laws of science, and human bodies.
A day in the life of YouTubes reigning teen queen.
Cabana lets you watch videos with your friends in real time.
You may be able to give a five-star review, and tip a dollar or two, at the end of an Uber ride in the near future.
Cant keep a good content farm down.
F**k.
How Robert Taylor, who passed away Thursday at the age of 85, essentially created the internet as we know it.
It is kind of contagious, the optimism. I guess it just becomes a part of you.
Add a little pinch of electoral participation.
As YouTube becomes big business for families willing to film everything, are the kids adequately protected?
This is bad news for a lot of PC owners.
Some assembly required.
Everything you need to make the best slime at home.
Lemme up there to hang out with these good boys.
True art takes courage.
When product placement goes wrong.
Read more:
Why Silicon Valley Keeps Getting Biotechnology Wrong - New York Magazine
- What's Going On With Liver Disease Focused Vir Biotechnology Stock Is Friday? - Yahoo Finance - November 16th, 2024
- Department of Biotechnology Launches Webinar Series on Biomanufacturing and Biofoundry Initiative - IBG NEWS - November 16th, 2024
- Multimodal scanning of genetic variants with base and prime editing - Nature.com - November 16th, 2024
- NEW INITIATIVE BY THE ITALIAN EMBASSY IN WASHINGTON ON BIOTECHNOLOGY WITH THE MILKEN INSTITUTE AND LEADING RESEARCHERS AND INDUSTRY EXPERTS -... - November 16th, 2024
- Vir Biotechnology Announces Positive End-of-Treatment Results for Tobevibart and Elebsiran Combinations in Chronic Hepatitis B from the MARCH Study at... - November 16th, 2024
- Albany State offers new Master of Science in Integrated Biotechnology program - The Albany Herald - November 16th, 2024
- What's Going On With Liver Disease Focused Vir Biotechnology Stock Is Friday? - Benzinga - November 16th, 2024
- iNtRON Biotechnology (KOSDAQ:048530) Is In A Strong Position To Grow Its Business - Simply Wall St - November 16th, 2024
- PDS Biotechnology Highlights Clinical Progress and Q3 Results - TipRanks - November 16th, 2024
- We Think Puma Biotechnology's (NASDAQ:PBYI) Robust Earnings Are Conservative - Yahoo Finance - November 16th, 2024
- Puma Biotechnology's (NASDAQ:PBYI) Performance Is Even Better Than Its Earnings Suggest - Simply Wall St - November 16th, 2024
- APHIS Announces Final Notice on Additional Exemptions for the Movement of Organisms Modified or Produced Through Genetic Engineering - USDA APHIS - November 16th, 2024
- Adaptimmune nears second approval for TCR-T therapy - European Biotechnology News - November 16th, 2024
- Lundbeck reports 18% revenue growth in third quarter - The Pharma Letter - November 16th, 2024
- BioNTech to boost oncology offering with buy of Biotheus - The Pharma Letter - November 16th, 2024
- Puma Biotechnology Third Quarter 2024 Earnings: Beats Expectations - Yahoo Finance - November 16th, 2024
- WPI Receives Federal Funding to Address Anticipated Demand for Biology and Biotechnology Professionals and Educators - WPI News - November 3rd, 2024
- Jonathan Dinman to Direct the Institute for Bioscience and Biotechnology Research - College of Computer, Mathematical, and Natural Sciences - November 3rd, 2024
- PDS Biotechnology Co. (NASDAQ:PDSB) Given Average Recommendation of "Buy" by Analysts - MarketBeat - November 3rd, 2024
- COP16, DSI mechanism for benefit sharing from the use of digital sequence information approved - Renewable Matter - November 3rd, 2024
- Artificial Intelligence in Biotechnology Market to Hit USD 7.75 Billion by 2029 with 19.1% CAGR | MarketsandMarkets - PR Newswire - November 3rd, 2024
- Axonis Therapeutics raises $115 million in Series A financing - The Pharma Letter - November 3rd, 2024
- Regeneron third-quarter 2024 earnings top expectations - The Pharma Letter - November 3rd, 2024
- AbbVie inks up to $1.4 billion deal with EvolveImmune - The Pharma Letter - November 3rd, 2024
- CEO and Chairman of the Executive Board - European Biotechnology News - November 3rd, 2024
- The transformative potential of biotechnology and AI in healthcare - The Armchair Trader - November 3rd, 2024
- U.S. Biotechnology And Pharmaceutical Services Outsourcing Market Size to Reach USD 16.68 Billion By 2033 - BioSpace - October 6th, 2024
- Vir Biotechnology, Inc. (NASDAQ:VIR) is largely controlled by institutional shareholders who own 53% of the company - Yahoo Finance - October 6th, 2024
- Resolution Therapeutics scores 63.5 million in series B round - The Pharma Letter - October 6th, 2024
- Wiregrass Institute for Biotechnology welcomes local military veteran from Southeast Health as its first computational biologist - AOL - October 6th, 2024
- Generating and characterizing a comprehensive panel of CHO cells glycosylation mutants for advancing glycobiology and biotechnology research -... - October 6th, 2024
- Sapience Therapeutics Announces Participation at the 4th Annual Needham Private Biotech Company Virtual 1x1 Forum - PR Newswire - October 6th, 2024
- Spyre Therapeutics lures Abivax exec to be its CMO - The Pharma Letter - October 6th, 2024
- Convergence is AIxBio: AI and the Bioeconomy - OODA Loop - October 6th, 2024
- Congress targets Chinese influence in health tech. It could come with tradeoffs - ABC News - September 13th, 2024
- Researchers, media engage to educate farmers on biotechnology - University World News - September 13th, 2024
- Congress targets Chinese influence in health tech. It could come with tradeoffs - The Associated Press - September 13th, 2024
- Comer Delivers Remarks in Support of Bipartisan BIOSECURE Act - House Committee on Oversight and Reform | - September 13th, 2024
- Announcement of $2 Million for the University of Delaware to Advance Biotechnology - WGMD Radio - September 13th, 2024
- Thailand's Competitiveness Enhanced Through Advanced Biotechnology at Thailand LAB INTERNATIONAL 2024 - BSA bureau - September 13th, 2024
- Biotechnology company Amgen expands global reach with technology innovation center in Hyderabad, India - BioProcess Insider - September 13th, 2024
- Adam's Biotech Scorecard: Can iTeos and GSK solve TIGIT's troubles? - STAT - September 13th, 2024
- Cizzle Biotechnology Advancing Lung Cancer Detection from R&D to Application with Moffitt Cancer Centre (VIDEO) - DirectorsTalk Interviews - September 13th, 2024
- MAIA Biotechnology Announces Positive Survival Updates in Phase 2 Study of THIO in Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer - Business Wire - September 13th, 2024
- MAIA Biotechnology Advances with Clinical Trials and Partnerships - TipRanks - September 13th, 2024
- Viridian Therapeutics reports positive results for veligrotug - The Pharma Letter - September 13th, 2024
- Chinese biotech firms refute US bill, stressing they have no access to Americans personal data - Global Times - September 13th, 2024
- Vir Biotechnology Enhances Portfolio with Sanofi Deal and Executive Appointments - TipRanks - September 13th, 2024
- Tesla BioHealing and Cell Biotechnology Partner to Advance Stem Cell Therapies - Vancity Buzz - September 13th, 2024
- Time to leverage intellectual property to drive innovation in seed and biotechnology sectors: Experts - The Times of India - May 5th, 2024
- Where Does Capricor Therapeutics Inc (CAPR) Stock Fall in the Biotechnology Field After It Has Risen 24.73% This Week? - InvestorsObserver - March 10th, 2024
- Where Does SpringWorks Therapeutics Inc (SWTX) Stock Fall in the Biotechnology Field After It Has Gained 12.41% This Week? - InvestorsObserver - February 18th, 2024
- Should Biotechnology Stock Axsome Therapeutics Inc (AXSM) Be in Your Portfolio Wednesday? - InvestorsObserver - February 18th, 2024
- Where Does Candel Therapeutics Inc (CADL) Stock Fall in the Biotechnology Field After It Has Gained 22.38% This Week? - InvestorsObserver - February 18th, 2024
- What is Biotechnology? Types and Applications - Iberdrola - January 25th, 2024
- Where Does Immunitybio Inc (IBRX) Stock Fall in the Biotechnology Field After It Is Lower By -9.32% This Week? - InvestorsObserver - January 25th, 2024
- Can Sana Biotechnology Inc (SANA) Stock Rise to the Top of Healthcare Sector Monday? - InvestorsObserver - January 25th, 2024
- Should You Buy Sana Biotechnology Inc (SANA) Stock After it Has Fallen 15.41% in a Week? - InvestorsObserver - January 25th, 2024
- Where Does Tscan Therapeutics Inc (TCRX) Stock Fall in the Biotechnology Field After It Is Lower By -9.81% This Week? - InvestorsObserver - January 25th, 2024
- Should Biotechnology Stock Mink Therapeutics Inc (INKT) Be in Your Portfolio Monday? - InvestorsObserver - May 9th, 2023
- Where Does Ambrx Biopharma Inc - ADR (AMAM) Stock Fall in the Biotechnology Field After It Has Risen 22.18% This Week? - InvestorsObserver - May 9th, 2023
- Should Biotechnology Stock Dermata Therapeutics Inc (DRMA) Be in Your Portfolio Thursday? - InvestorsObserver - May 9th, 2023
- Should Biotechnology Stock Tempest Therapeutics Inc (TPST) Be in Your Portfolio Wednesday? - InvestorsObserver - May 9th, 2023
- Biotechnology - Applications of biotechnology | Britannica - May 1st, 2023
- Where Does BioLine RX Ltd - ADR (BLRX) Stock Fall in the Biotechnology Field After It Is Down -3.67% This Week? - InvestorsObserver - May 1st, 2023
- Where Does Apellis Pharmaceuticals Inc (APLS) Stock Fall in the Biotechnology Field After It Is Higher By 4.17% This Week? - InvestorsObserver - May 1st, 2023
- Where Does Aldeyra Therapeutics Inc (ALDX) Stock Fall in the Biotechnology Field After It Is Lower By -11.45% This Week? - InvestorsObserver - May 1st, 2023
- Is Rain Oncology Inc (RAIN) Stock at the Top of the Biotechnology Industry? - InvestorsObserver - April 7th, 2023
- Does Sana Biotechnology Inc (SANA) Have What it Takes to be in Your Portfolio Tuesday? - InvestorsObserver - April 7th, 2023
- Where Does Ambrx Biopharma Inc - ADR (AMAM) Stock Fall in the Biotechnology Field After It Is Lower By -15.43% This Week? - InvestorsObserver - April 7th, 2023
- Where Does Protagonist Therapeutics Inc (PTGX) Stock Fall in the Biotechnology Field After It Has Risen 3.62% This Week? - InvestorsObserver - April 7th, 2023
- What is Biotechnology? Definition, Types and Applications | TechTarget - March 21st, 2023
- Where Does Novavax Inc (NVAX) Stock Fall in the Biotechnology Field After It Is Lower By -12.99% This Week? - InvestorsObserver - March 21st, 2023
- Should Biotechnology Stock Outlook Therapeutics Inc (OTLK) Be in Your Portfolio Thursday? - InvestorsObserver - March 21st, 2023
- SANA BIOTECHNOLOGY, INC. : Results of Operations and Financial Condition, Financial Statements and Exhibits (form 8-K) - Marketscreener.com - March 21st, 2023
- Where Does Revance Therapeutics Inc (RVNC) Stock Fall in the Biotechnology Field After It Is Lower By -2.17% This Week? - InvestorsObserver - March 5th, 2023
- Is TG Therapeutics Inc common stock (TGTX) Stock at the Top of the Biotechnology Industry? - InvestorsObserver - March 5th, 2023
- Where Does GT Biopharma Inc (GTBP) Stock Fall in the Biotechnology Field After It Is Down -20.73% This Week? - InvestorsObserver - March 5th, 2023
- Where Does Dyne Therapeutics Inc (DYN) Stock Fall in the Biotechnology Field After It Is Lower By -2.35% This Week? - InvestorsObserver - March 5th, 2023
- Is CytomX Therapeutics Inc (CTMX) Stock at the Top of the Biotechnology Industry? - InvestorsObserver - November 17th, 2022