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Potential funding source for life exension


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#1 Bruce Klein

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Posted 08 October 2004 - 03:28 PM


Potential funding source for life exension projects from the WTN Xprize site:

... Excerpt:

About The WTN X PRIZE

The concept of the WTN X PRIZES is to utilize the concepts,
procedures, technologies and publicity developed X PRIZE Foundation's
Ansari X PRIZE competition for space and the global science and
technology innovators identification process and community developed
by the World Technology Network (WTN) to launch a series of technology
prizes seeking to meet the greatest challenges facing humanity in the
21st century.

The X PRIZE competition focused on jumpstarting a private space
industry has re-proven the principle – strongly proven in the early
years of the 20th century for the aviation industry – that innovation
can indeed be catalyzed. That principle can and should be extended to
other global challenges and opportunities and together we at the World
Technology Network (WTN) and the X PRIZE Foundation are committed to
doing just that.

What challenges/opportunities should be selected?

Although the idea of using the X PRIZE concept work in other areas is
at first glance a simple and attractive one, a great deal of up-front
thought needs to go into what challenges/opportunities would be
selected. One could argue that there were certain qualities about the
challenges and opportunities in both the aviation field and the space
field that lent themselves extremely well to a private sector
competition of the sorts which have occurred. Variables to be looked
at might include:

* The maturity (or lack thereof) of the technology around which
the competition would be based?
* The maturity (or lack thereof) of the related industries from
which a new industry would be born
* The number of potential "competitors" potentially able to meet
the challenge or at least the depth of the pool from which potential
competitors could be drawn
* The level of the specificity of the challenge
* The financial resources potentially available to finance the
potential competitors
* The financial resources potentially available to finance the Prize itself
* How potentially compelling and exciting is the field around
which the challenge would be based
* The amenability of the target area to a threshold change in
public expectation
* The replicability of the challenge to other areas?
* The level of the presumed long-term benefit to business and society

The list of questions above is by no means exhaustive, but does give a
sense of how the selection of a new challenge is not as first as
simple as it may seem. It is absolutely key that the right challenges
are selected – sufficiently exciting to compel hearts and minds,
sufficiently ambitious to reach beyond what is already likely going to
occur soon and to have a truly substantial impact, and sufficiently
focused to have a good chance of succeeding within a reasonable
timescale.

Potential types of challenges?

Here is a very rough and incomplete list of the sorts of challenges
that might be appropriate:

* Medical challenges, such a cure for cancer or other major diseases.
* Technological "holy grails", such as artificial intelligence,
teleportation, molecular assemblers (true nanotechnology), cold
fusion, or a believable virtual reality system
* Major global challenges, such as the various UN Millennium
Development Goals (MDGs) announced by the world's leaders at the UN in
2000 at the Millennium Summit.

Why We Are Asking You For Suggestions?

There are over billions of people on the planet, almost each of whom
has a dream for a better world. The chances of us finding a truly
worthwhile series of challenges for the WTN X PRIZE competitions over
the coming years are that much greater the more suggestions we
receive. We are asking you because your dreams are the repository of
an enormous amount of creativity and hope. In the spirit of man's
first reach into space, we ask you to stretch your imagination to help
take humanity to the next level. Are you up to the challenge?

---
http://www.wtnxprize.org/

I've submitted to following:

Suggested Name of Challange:

WTN X Prize for Life Extension

Suggested Name of Challenge (i.e. WTN X Prize for ****)

As they succumb to the disease of aging, more than 150,000 people die each day without a choice. We all watch helplessly as our grandparents wrinkle and fade away. Yet aging is not inevitable. There are organisms in nature that do not age. Thus, the disease of aging can be approached as an engineering problem to be solved with human innovation.

In order to do this, we must reshape the problem of aging as something that is inevitable to something that is tractable. A prize that rewarded success in the fight to conquer aging is needed.

Rules:

The Methuselah Mouse Prize has already setup an excellent anti-aging site with excellent rules. The prize rewards the longest-lived lab mice.
http://www.methusela...g/structure.php

#2 Bruce Klein

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Posted 08 October 2004 - 03:31 PM

Interesting, I see MMP has XPrize CEO on Advisory:

http://www.methusela...n.org/about.asp

Non-Science Advisors

Peter Diamandis

Dr. Diamandis is the Chairman and CEO of the X PRIZE Foundation , a non-profit organization promoting the formation of a space-tourism industry through a $10M prize. He was a co-founder of Space Adventures, Ltd. , a leading space travel and tourism company, and a co-Founder and chairman of Starport.com, a leading Internet site for Space Exploration, acquired by SPACE.com in 1990.

In 1987, Peter co-founded the International Space University (ISU) where he served as the University's first managing director. Today he is a trustee of the $30M university located on its own campus in Strasbourg, France. While a student at MIT, Peter founded and served as chairman of Students for the Exploration and Development of Space (SEDS), the world's largest student space organization.

Peter Diamandis received his undergraduate and graduate degrees in aerospace engineering from the MIT and a medical degree from Harvard Medical School. He has conducted research in a number of fields, including molecular genetics, space medicine, and launch vehicle design. He has received a number of awards, including MIT's Kresge Award, the 1986 Space Industrialization Fellowship Award, the 1988 Aviation Week and Space Technology Laurel, the 1993 Space Frontier Foundation Pioneer Award, and the Russian 1995 K. E. Tsiolkovsky Award. to work.

#3 reason

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Posted 08 October 2004 - 06:58 PM

Yes, Dave Gobel and Peter Diamandis have a good connection.

You fly prize people could benefit here - I hope I don't have to point out the chain of synergies and connections. If you get a good business plan together, you have a real shot at getting in here.

Reason
Founder, Longevity Meme
reason@longevitymeme.org
http://www.longevitymeme.org

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#4 myamashita

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Posted 09 October 2004 - 01:36 PM

Just a thought, maybe we should move the entire Life Extension Prize section out somewhere more easily seen, like as a Focused Topic, or even as one on its own... for me anyways I had to use the search function to find it, I couldn't find it in the main directories.

#5 Bruce Klein

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Posted 09 October 2004 - 03:57 PM

As an intermediate, I've moved it to the top of the "Projects" category.

#6 Kalepha

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Posted 09 October 2004 - 04:30 PM

Hmm.. that's sort of weird, it still doesn't seem to appear within the "Projects" category in the Main Forum, "ImmInst.org," unless there's a problem on our ends.

#7 Bruce Klein

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Posted 09 October 2004 - 04:38 PM

Strange, i see it ok... i've poked it a bit, perhaps try refresh.

#8 Kalepha

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Posted 09 October 2004 - 04:46 PM

Ok, i tried to refresh a few times. Could "Life Extension Prizes" be expected to be found on either of these two pages?

http://www.imminst.o...um/index.php?s=
http://www.imminst.o...p?s=&act=SC&c=7

I can get to it through "Active Topics" now or by searching, but didn't see it on those pages.

#9 Kalepha

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Posted 09 October 2004 - 05:00 PM

Didn't want to make the image too big, but hopefully it's visible that "Life Extension Prizes" doesn't appear as one of the "Projects" categories:

Posted Image

#10 Bruce Klein

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Posted 10 October 2004 - 04:10 AM

thanks, nate.

found out what it was and placed forum in correct category

#11 treonsverdery

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Posted 19 October 2004 - 08:40 PM

Well we know what a Nobel Prize is I think I will try to create an Iceland Prize Iceland is a small Scandanavian nation with 200 to 300k people Right now it is known as an European Union country converting to 100pt hydrogen as well as recently earning more than a billion USD on rights to the country's collective genome I think the Iceland Prize will be this European Union Citizenship that is reauctionable. That is the prize is citizenship, then if the prizewinner likes they are able to find the highest bidder. Canada was swapping citizenship to anyone willing to invest 300K there. The wonderful thing here is that the prizes are highly valued with zero production cost. A list of items is particularly valuable. Iceland will create half or more of the list items requesting that the international community create more. Iceland is a nation of thoughtful people influencing the worlds agenda will appeal to them. Its wonderfully civilized giving the Scandanavian countries an even better reputation.

Treons Iceland Prize list
Humanity
anything that saves a human life anywhere at a cost of 2 Icelandic Kr
functional 10g mammal cryonics 10g tissue or an entire organism
a right now Pill that makes pregnancy a choice
a biochemical alcoholism cure
a comics prize visual literature
applied knowledge
Chemistry
clean coal
a LNG polymerization at wellhead technology to make liquid fuel
Applied Knowledge Iceland
anthing clever with their huge electricity potential
Fisheries preservation
Functional nonfisheries employment
Physics
mechanism to do photon electron teleportation at mW rates k

The prize function
idea paper software might be partial prize
functional process Icelandic prize
one or more functional plants or commercial items Eleven Icelandic citizenships

The purpose of the prize is to stimulate fresh new work all around the world with as much value to edison like Chinese researchers as to American engineers n traditional knowledge workers

Treon Verdery

#12 susmariosep

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Posted 28 January 2005 - 04:37 AM

Treons, do you have a category for the advocacy of rational, provisional, and optional religion? I think that prize will fit in very well with your aspiration for your country, namely:

Iceland is a nation of thoughtful people influencing the worlds agenda will appeal to them. Its wonderfully civilized giving the Scandanavian countries an even better reputation.


Sign me in for the Treons Iceland Prize for Humanity. I am specially encouraged by your promise that "The wonderful thing here is that the prizes are highly valued with zero production cost". I understand this as that it will cost me zero to arrive at the prize.

Thanks for your idea of an Iceland Prize named after yourself. Brilliant idea. It will accrue to the renown of Iceland, to the benefit of the International Community.

Susma




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