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  • Nanotechnology for drug detection

    I tell audiences that the day is coming when nanotechnology will be able to tell what they ate or smoked. That day is coming closer, according to Nanowerk News: To this day, fingerprints are just the thing when a perpetrator needs to be arrested or a person needs to be identified. British scientists working with [...]
    Posted to News (Weblog) by Anonymous on May 18, 2007
  • Competing nanotechnology control frameworks

    We’ve written here before about the Environmental Defense/DuPont effort to create a framework to deal with nanotechnology environmental, health, and safety (EHS) risks. Now NRDC has issued its own report and framework. An excerpt from the report: The current approach to chemical regulation cannot be relied upon to prevent harm from ...
    Posted to News (Weblog) by Anonymous on May 17, 2007
  • Nanotechnology or not: Iron seeding of ocean seems premature at best

    Regular readers of Nanodot know that we often disagree with ETC Group — but not always. They have issued a press release condemning a plan by a private firm to seed the ocean with iron particles in an effort to fight global warming. An excerpt: As worrying, Planktos boasts on their website that the [...]
    Posted to News (Weblog) by Anonymous on May 3, 2007
  • Environmental groups dispute about nanotechnology

    We mentioned earlier a request for comment on a proposed Nano Risk Framework for approaching nanotechnology materials safety organized by Environmental Defense and DuPont. Now a different group of organizations has come out against that framework. Their statement is titled “Civil Society-Labor Coalition Rejects Fundamentally Flawed ...
    Posted to News (Weblog) by Anonymous on April 13, 2007
  • Open source security for nanotechnology

    In the long term, we’ll need effective security techniques for advanced nanotechnology-based systems. This will take a while to figure out, so come help us do it at an upcoming open source conference, Penguicon: Open Source-style Security for the Whole Physical World Christine Peterson, Bruce Schneier One of the biggest problems society ...
    Posted to News (Weblog) by Anonymous on April 5, 2007
  • Public still sensible about nanotechnology

    Public attitudes toward nanotechnology are being tracked closely — perhaps more closely than for any previous set of newly-arriving technologies. The surveys vary a bit, but here’s one by Prof. Steven Currall of University College London that fits my informal observations: One core finding of our research revealed that current ...
    Posted to News (Weblog) by Anonymous on February 6, 2007
  • Nanotechnology hazard symbol misleading

    We should assume that those participating the ETC Group’s nanotechnology hazard symbol contest are all trying to be helpful, and such a symbol may someday be of some use. However, of the three top symbols named as winners, the first one — by far the most vivid — has a real problem. First, see the [...]
    Posted to News (Weblog) by Anonymous on January 24, 2007
  • Nanotechnology prof boggles nano community

    On the plane back from last week’s U.S. National Nanotechnology Coordinating Office-sponsored workshop on ethics and nanotechnology, I dug into the report “Health and Nanotechnology: Economic, Societal, and Institutional Impact” (not on web, as far as I can tell). This was the result of a meeting sponsored by the U.S. ...
    Posted to News (Weblog) by Anonymous on January 15, 2007
  • Sensible Swiss views on nanotechnology benefits, downsides

    Switzerland’s Centre for Technology Assessment has issued its report Public Reactions to Nanotechnology in Switzerland (428 KB pdf), and — not surprisingly — it’s relatively balanced. From page 33 (page 35 of pdf file): “There’s a good and a bad side to everything” — This saying sums up quite well the way that the ...
    Posted to News (Weblog) by Anonymous on December 22, 2006
  • Nanotechnology regulations at city level: Unhelpful

    Red Herring reports that the city of Berkeley, California, has voted to approve its own nanoparticle regulations: On Tuesday night the Berkeley, California City Council passed an ordinance to regulate the use of manufactured nanoparticles, tiny subatomic [sic] materials that can be 100,000 times smaller than the width of human hair… Now ...
    Posted to News (Weblog) by Anonymous on December 14, 2006
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