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Category Archives: Cloning

Tameside Range Rover thieves used technology without cloning keys, police reveal – theoldhamtimes.co.uk

Posted: February 11, 2022 at 6:25 am

THIEVES who stole Range Rovers in Tameside "used technology to gain entry" before driving them away without having to clone keys, police have said.

On Tuesday, police reported that a number of the high value cars had been taken from addresses in Hyde on Monday night in keyless thefts.

Officers have discovered a type of technology was used to get inside the vehicles and has warned owners to secure them.

A police spokesman said: "Further investigative enquiries have revealed that the offenders have used technology to gain entry and drive the vehicle off without having to clone the key.

"The only way of preventing thieves from removing a vehicle in this way is to fit a steering lock.

"If you own a car with a keyless ignition system please consider improving its security by utilising a steering wheel lock.

"While the district's Serious Acquisitive Crime Team are actively developing lines of enquiry to identify and arrest these offenders, you can work with us by making it more difficult to steal the car in the first place."

The spokesman added: "Please feel free to speak to your local officers about this if you have any concerns or drop us an email at tamesidesouth@gmp.police.uk.

"We will add you to our monthly newsletter showing what the team has been doing as well as providing crime prevention advice and information on crime trends in the area."

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Tameside Range Rover thieves used technology without cloning keys, police reveal - theoldhamtimes.co.uk

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CU was forced to cut down a famed 142-year-old tree. But its legacy will live on through tree cloning – Colorado Public Radio

Posted: February 1, 2022 at 2:56 am

It had just timed out and was starting to slow down metabolically, was starting to have more trouble processing energy and gathering energy, Aquino said. Starting to lose root tissue, lose root mass, and then, you start to get decay and other issues.

The signs had been present for years. After several large pruning operations to keep its canopy healthy, Aquino eventually decided they were spending too much energy and money on a losing battle.

We started to get to where we were losing a pretty major percentage of the tree's canopy and it sort of became evident that we needed to start planning for the removal of this tree, Aquino said.

The tree came down in mid-January, while CU classes were held remotely due to the spread of the COVID-19 omicron variant. Freezing rains poured over Boulder, but that didnt stop people from paying their respects.

The day after crews finished cutting it down, Aquino returned to the stump to find someones graduation tassel hanging from the bark. And that wasnt the only memorial he found that week.

Some folks left flowers, some people left some bundles of evergreen bows and things kind of bundled together with string and stuff, Aquino said. I know a lot of people have been visiting the tree. A lot of people told me they were going to.

Two of those people were Evan Cantor and his wife, Robin, who worked at the Old Main building for several years before retiring. Cantor described the tree as an old friend.

You'd take your lunch breaks, you go out there and sit underneath that tree or even just an afternoon break, he said. Sit under that tree and look up at it.

But what Cantor appreciated more was Old Main Cottonwoods constant presence through the decades of change and growth in Colorado, and Boulder in particular. A rare constant in a changing landscape.

Even the men's room, you'd be standing at a urinal and there's a mirror and you'd look up and there's the tree coming through the window on the mirror, Cantor said. It was just so ubiquitous. It seemed somehow protective.

Now Old Main Cottonwoods 142 years of growth are all but a stump. But Aquinos team hopes its legacy will live on.

On two separate occasions before its demise, his team collected small branches from the tree and passed them off to CUs greenhouse. John Clark, the greenhouse director, said if all goes to plan, those branches will turn into clones of the tree a next generation.

Basically we've taken those branches that he brought in, made some four-inch, six-inch and eight-inch cuttings, put some rooting hormone on them and put them in these grow tubes so that they can have soil around, have a little bit of moisture, but not stay wet, Clark said.

Clark said it's common to try and regrow clippings from a tree with favorable characteristics. Old Main Cottonwood fit the bill because it outlived and outgrew the 41 other cottonwoods it was bought alongside.

There are two batches of clippings. One from 2014, which resulted in six baby trees that will eventually be planted on campus. And one taken right before Old Main Cottonwood was cut down, which has about 25 cuttings. Clark hopes a little more than half of those will survive and get planted.

It's gonna be a five- to six-year process, Clark said. We've got them in these small tubes. Next year after they root we'll bump them up into two inch tubes, then up into three-inch tubes, then they will go into containers for the last two to three years and then they'll be planted outside.

At some point during the spring semester, CU will plant one of its clones in the same area and install a commemorative plaque where Old Main Cottonwood once stood.

And maybe, with some luck and good weather, one of those trees will live through another 27 U.S. presidents and thousands more smiling graduates.

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CU was forced to cut down a famed 142-year-old tree. But its legacy will live on through tree cloning - Colorado Public Radio

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Business Overview of Voice Cloning Industry Size, Emerging Trends and Forecast to 2022-2027 Construction News Portal – Construction News Portal

Posted: at 2:56 am

Latest Voice Cloning Market report added by In4Research provides major industry dynamics such as growth drivers, current and future trends, latest developments, threats, challenges, and opportunities in the global market are deeply analyzed. The competitive landscape of the Global Voice Cloning Market, along with the profiles of the major companies is presented in the report. Regional Market analysis covers North America, China, Africa, Germany, APAC, and more regions have been analyzed individually for a more granular view of the performance of each region in the Voice Cloning Market and the varying reasons for its positive and negative growth.

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Voice Cloning Market Breakdown based on Product Type:

Voice Cloning Market Breakdown based on Application:

Voice Cloning Consumption Breakdown Data by Region

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10.1 Overview

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Business Overview of Voice Cloning Industry Size, Emerging Trends and Forecast to 2022-2027 Construction News Portal - Construction News Portal

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Pet Cloning Market Size, Historical Growth, Analysis, Opportunities and Forecast to2028| Sinogene Pet Cloning, Sooam Biotech, ViaGen Pets …

Posted: at 2:55 am

LOS ANGELES, United States: The research study presented in this report offers a complete and intelligent analysis of the competition, segmentation, dynamics, and geographical advancement of the global Pet Cloning market. It takes into account the CAGR, value, volume, revenue, production, consumption, sales, manufacturing cost, prices, and other key factors related to the global Pet Cloning market. The authors of the report have segmented the global Pet Cloning market as per product, application, and region. Segments of the global Pet Cloning market are analyzed on the basis of market share, production, consumption, revenue, CAGR, market size, and more factors. The analysts have profiled leading players of the global Pet Cloning market, keeping in view their recent developments, market share, sales, revenue, areas covered, product portfolios, and other aspects.

Get Full PDF Sample Copy of Report: (Including Full TOC, List of Tables & Figures, Chart) https://www.qyresearch.com/sample-form/form/4296563/global-pet-cloning-market

The report includes company profiling of almost all important players of the global Pet Cloning market. The company profiling section offers valuable analysis on strengths and weaknesses, business developments, recent advancements, mergers and acquisitions, expansion plans, global footprint, market presence, and product portfolios of leading market players. This information can be used by players and other market participants to maximize their profitability and streamline their business strategies. Our competitive analysis also includes key information to help new entrants to identify market entry barriers and measure the level of competitiveness in the global Pet Cloning market.

Key Players Mentioned in the Global Pet Cloning Market Research Report: Sinogene Pet Cloning, Sooam Biotech, ViaGen Pets, Boyalife, My friend Again

Global Pet Cloning Market by Type: Deceased Pet Cloning, Alive Pet Cloning Pet Cloning

Global Pet Cloning Market by Application: Dogs, Cats, Others

The global Pet Cloning market is segmented as per the type of product, application, and geography. All of the segments of the global Pet Cloning market are carefully analyzed based on their market share, CAGR, value and volume growth, and other important factors. The report also provides accurate estimations about the CAGR, revenue, production, sales, and other calculations for the global Pet Cloning market. Each regional market is extensively studied in the report to explain why some regions are progressing at a high rate while others at a low rate. We have also provided Porters Five Forces and PESTLE analysis for a deeper study on the global Pet Cloning market.

Key Questions Answered through the Report

(1) How will the global Pet Cloning market perform during the forecast period? What will be the market size in terms of value and volume?

(2) Which segment will drive the global Pet Cloning market? Which regional market will show extensive growth in the future? What are the reasons?

(3) How will the Pet Cloning market dynamics change because of the impact of future market opportunities, restraints, and drivers?

(4) What are the key strategies adopted by players to sustain themselves in the global Pet Cloning market?

(5) How will these strategies influence the Pet Cloning market growth and competition?

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TOC

1 Report Business Overview1.1 Study Scope1.2 Market Analysis by Type1.2.1 Global Pet Cloning Market Size Growth Rate by Type, 2017 VS 2021 VS 20281.2.2 Deceased Pet Cloning1.2.3 Alive Pet Cloning1.3 Market by Application1.3.1 Global Pet Cloning Market Size Growth Rate by Application, 2017 VS 2021 VS 20281.3.2 Dogs1.3.3 Cats1.3.4 Others1.4 Study Objectives1.5 Years Considered 2 Global Growth Trends2.1 Global Pet Cloning Market Perspective (2017-2028)2.2 Pet Cloning Growth Trends by Region2.2.1 Pet Cloning Market Size by Region: 2017 VS 2021 VS 20282.2.2 Pet Cloning Historic Market Size by Region (2017-2022)2.2.3 Pet Cloning Forecasted Market Size by Region (2023-2028)2.3 Pet Cloning Market Dynamics2.3.1 Pet Cloning Industry Trends2.3.2 Pet Cloning Market Drivers2.3.3 Pet Cloning Market Challenges2.3.4 Pet Cloning Market Restraints 3 Competition Landscape by Key Players3.1 Global Top Pet Cloning Players by Revenue3.1.1 Global Top Pet Cloning Players by Revenue (2017-2022)3.1.2 Global Pet Cloning Revenue Market Share by Players (2017-2022)3.2 Global Pet Cloning Market Share by Company Type (Tier 1, Tier 2, and Tier 3)3.3 Players Covered: Ranking by Pet Cloning Revenue3.4 Global Pet Cloning Market Concentration Ratio3.4.1 Global Pet Cloning Market Concentration Ratio (CR5 and HHI)3.4.2 Global Top 10 and Top 5 Companies by Pet Cloning Revenue in 20213.5 Pet Cloning Key Players Head office and Area Served3.6 Key Players Pet Cloning Product Solution and Service3.7 Date of Enter into Pet Cloning Market3.8 Mergers & Acquisitions, Expansion Plans 4 Pet Cloning Breakdown Data by Type4.1 Global Pet Cloning Historic Market Size by Type (2017-2022)4.2 Global Pet Cloning Forecasted Market Size by Type (2023-2028) 5 Pet Cloning Breakdown Data by Application5.1 Global Pet Cloning Historic Market Size by Application (2017-2022)5.2 Global Pet Cloning Forecasted Market Size by Application (2023-2028) 6 North America6.1 North America Pet Cloning Market Size (2017-2028)6.2 North America Pet Cloning Market Size by Type6.2.1 North America Pet Cloning Market Size by Type (2017-2022)6.2.2 North America Pet Cloning Market Size by Type (2023-2028)6.2.3 North America Pet Cloning Market Share by Type (2017-2028)6.3 North America Pet Cloning Market Size by Application6.3.1 North America Pet Cloning Market Size by Application (2017-2022)6.3.2 North America Pet Cloning Market Size by Application (2023-2028)6.3.3 North America Pet Cloning Market Share by Application (2017-2028)6.4 North America Pet Cloning Market Size by Country6.4.1 North America Pet Cloning Market Size by Country (2017-2022)6.4.2 North America Pet Cloning Market Size by Country (2023-2028)6.4.3 U.S.6.4.4 Canada 7 Europe7.1 Europe Pet Cloning Market Size (2017-2028)7.2 Europe Pet Cloning Market Size by Type7.2.1 Europe Pet Cloning Market Size by Type (2017-2022)7.2.2 Europe Pet Cloning Market Size by Type (2023-2028)7.2.3 Europe Pet Cloning Market Share by Type (2017-2028)7.3 Europe Pet Cloning Market Size by Application7.3.1 Europe Pet Cloning Market Size by Application (2017-2022)7.3.2 Europe Pet Cloning Market Size by Application (2023-2028)7.3.3 Europe Pet Cloning Market Share by Application (2017-2028)7.4 Europe Pet Cloning Market Size by Country7.4.1 Europe Pet Cloning Market Size by Country (2017-2022)7.4.2 Europe Pet Cloning Market Size by Country (2023-2028)7.4.3 Germany7.4.4 France7.4.5 U.K.7.4.6 Italy7.4.7 Russia7.4.8 Nordic Countries 8 Asia-Pacific8.1 Asia-Pacific Pet Cloning Market Size (2017-2028)8.2 Asia-Pacific Pet Cloning Market Size by Type8.2.1 Asia-Pacific Pet Cloning Market Size by Type (2017-2022)8.2.2 Asia-Pacific Pet Cloning Market Size by Type (2023-2028)8.2.3 Asia-Pacific Pet Cloning Market Share by Type (2017-2028)8.3 Asia-Pacific Pet Cloning Market Size by Application8.3.1 Asia-Pacific Pet Cloning Market Size by Application (2017-2022)8.3.2 Asia-Pacific Pet Cloning Market Size by Application (2023-2028)8.3.3 Asia-Pacific Pet Cloning Market Share by Application (2017-2028)8.4 Asia-Pacific Pet Cloning Market Size by Region8.4.1 Asia-Pacific Pet Cloning Market Size by Region (2017-2022)8.4.2 Asia-Pacific Pet Cloning Market Size by Region (2023-2028)8.4.3 China8.4.4 Japan8.4.5 South Korea8.4.6 Southeast Asia8.4.7 India8.4.8 Australia 9 Latin America9.1 Latin America Pet Cloning Market Size (2017-2028)9.2 Latin America Pet Cloning Market Size by Type9.2.1 Latin America Pet Cloning Market Size by Type (2017-2022)9.2.2 Latin America Pet Cloning Market Size by Type (2023-2028)9.2.3 Latin America Pet Cloning Market Share by Type (2017-2028)9.3 Latin America Pet Cloning Market Size by Application9.3.1 Latin America Pet Cloning Market Size by Application (2017-2022)9.3.2 Latin America Pet Cloning Market Size by Application (2023-2028)9.3.3 Latin America Pet Cloning Market Share by Application (2017-2028)9.4 Latin America Pet Cloning Market Size by Country9.4.1 Latin America Pet Cloning Market Size by Country (2017-2022)9.4.2 Latin America Pet Cloning Market Size by Country (2023-2028)9.4.3 Mexico9.4.4 Brazil 10 Middle East & Africa10.1 Middle East & Africa Pet Cloning Market Size (2017-2028)10.2 Middle East & Africa Pet Cloning Market Size by Type10.2.1 Middle East & Africa Pet Cloning Market Size by Type (2017-2022)10.2.2 Middle East & Africa Pet Cloning Market Size by Type (2023-2028)10.2.3 Middle East & Africa Pet Cloning Market Share by Type (2017-2028)10.3 Middle East & Africa Pet Cloning Market Size by Application10.3.1 Middle East & Africa Pet Cloning Market Size by Application (2017-2022)10.3.2 Middle East & Africa Pet Cloning Market Size by Application (2023-2028)10.3.3 Middle East & Africa Pet Cloning Market Share by Application (2017-2028)10.4 Middle East & Africa Pet Cloning Market Size by Country10.4.1 Middle East & Africa Pet Cloning Market Size by Country (2017-2022)10.4.2 Middle East & Africa Pet Cloning Market Size by Country (2023-2028)10.4.3 Turkey10.4.4 Saudi Arabia10.4.5 UAE 11 Key Players Profiles11.1 Sinogene Pet Cloning11.1.1 Sinogene Pet Cloning Company Details11.1.2 Sinogene Pet Cloning Business Overview11.1.3 Sinogene Pet Cloning Pet Cloning Introduction11.1.4 Sinogene Pet Cloning Revenue in Pet Cloning Business (2017-2022)11.1.5 Sinogene Pet Cloning Recent Developments11.2 Sooam Biotech11.2.1 Sooam Biotech Company Details11.2.2 Sooam Biotech Business Overview11.2.3 Sooam Biotech Pet Cloning Introduction11.2.4 Sooam Biotech Revenue in Pet Cloning Business (2017-2022)11.2.5 Sooam Biotech Recent Developments11.3 ViaGen Pets11.3.1 ViaGen Pets Company Details11.3.2 ViaGen Pets Business Overview11.3.3 ViaGen Pets Pet Cloning Introduction11.3.4 ViaGen Pets Revenue in Pet Cloning Business (2017-2022)11.3.5 ViaGen Pets Recent Developments11.4 Boyalife11.4.1 Boyalife Company Details11.4.2 Boyalife Business Overview11.4.3 Boyalife Pet Cloning Introduction11.4.4 Boyalife Revenue in Pet Cloning Business (2017-2022)11.4.5 Boyalife Recent Developments11.5 My friend Again11.5.1 My friend Again Company Details11.5.2 My friend Again Business Overview11.5.3 My friend Again Pet Cloning Introduction11.5.4 My friend Again Revenue in Pet Cloning Business (2017-2022)11.5.5 My friend Again Recent Developments 12 Analysts Viewpoints/Conclusions 13 Appendix13.1 Research Methodology13.1.1 Methodology/Research Approach13.1.2 Data Source13.2 Author Details13.3 Disclaimer

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Pet Cloning Market Size, Historical Growth, Analysis, Opportunities and Forecast to2028| Sinogene Pet Cloning, Sooam Biotech, ViaGen Pets ...

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Police shot in Houston, halftime show dancer demands payment, and the practice of cloning pets – NewsNation Now

Posted: at 2:55 am

(NewsNation Now) Chris Swecker, a former assistant director of the FBI Criminal Investigations Unit, joins Banfield to discuss the three officers shot Thursday in Houston.

Officer Jason Riveras casket, draped in a green, white and blue NYPD flag, was carried into St. Patricks Cathedral on Thursday for his wake. Cardinal Timothy Dolan will preside over his funeral Mass there Friday.

Michael Daly, a special correspondent for The Daily Beast, joins Ashleigh to examine the shooting that left Rivera dead.

The Super Bowl is just weeks away. And while we dont know who will be playing in it yet, we know there will be a halftime show.

Taja Riley, a dance artist and activist, says its time halftime show dancers be paid for their labor.

Melain Rodriguez, client service manager for Viagen Pets, a company that has mastered the art of cloning pets dogs, cats and horses joins the show to discuss the sometimes controversial practice.

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Police shot in Houston, halftime show dancer demands payment, and the practice of cloning pets - NewsNation Now

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The Facts and Fiction of Cloning – WebMD

Posted: January 19, 2022 at 11:55 am

Understanding the real science behind the headlines and the hubbub.

Cloning. More than ever, the word stirs emotion and triggers debate, as what was once science fiction becomes scientific fact. Just what are researchers working on and why? Do we have anything to gain, or to lose, from their continued efforts?

For the first time, researchers have successfully cloned a human embryo -- and have extracted stem cells, the body's building blocks, from the embryo. Stem cells are considered one of the greatest hopes for curing diseases like diabetes, Parkinson's disease, and paralysis caused by spinal cord injury.

Before you decide where you stand on this debate, you'll need to understand where the science is today. To put it all in perspective, WebMD asked some renowned scientists to explain precisely what cloning is and what it isn't. Popular depictions -- from the ominous hordes of worker drones in the futuristic novel Brave New World to Michael Keaton's comic time-saving duplicates in the film Multiplicity -- have almost nothing to do with reality.

"Clones are genetically identical individuals," says Harry Griffin, PhD. "Twins are clones." Griffin is assistant director of the Roslin Institute -- the lab in Edinburgh, Scotland, where Dolly the cloned sheep was created in 1997.

Usually, after sperm and egg meet, the fertilized cell begins dividing. Remaining in a clump, the one becomes two, then four, eight, 16, and so on. These cells become increasingly specialized to a particular function and organize into organs and systems. Eventually, it's a baby.

Sometimes, though, after the first division, the two cells split apart. They continue dividing separately, growing to become two individuals with the exact same genetic make-up -- identical twins, or clones. This phenomenon, though not entirely understood, is far from unusual. We've all known identical twins.

Early on, says Griffin, the term cloning referred to embryo splitting -- doing in the lab what happens in the woman's body to create identical twins. "It was first done in cattle, but there are one or two human examples." Those human embryos were never implanted, he says. "Twins were not deliberately created, but they certainly could be."

When we speak of cloning nowadays, however, we're referring not to embryo splitting, but to a process called nuclear transfer. "The importance is that with nuclear transfer, you can copy an existing individual, and that's why there's controversy," says Griffin.

In nuclear transfer, DNA from an unfertilized egg is removed and replaced with DNA from an adult body cell -- a skin cell, for example. When the process works, the manipulated cell -- coaxed by the newly-implanted genetic material -- begins to divide and eventually becomes a genetic replica of the adult-cell donor. The process produces a new individual whose identical twin is not a minute or two older, but already grown up.

Now, researchers in South Korea and the University of Michigan have cloned a human embryo. This is not cloning to make a genetically matched baby, but cloning for research purposes -- also called therapeutic cloning or research cloning.

This new development means that therapeutic cloning -- the ability to create human clones for research purposes -- is no longer a theory, but a reality. And it's sure to reignite the controversy of whether to ban all cloning or to allow some cloning for therapeutic purposes.

Therapeutic cloning is not new. Scientists have used the technology to cure a variety of diseases in mice. Scientists have also studied the potential uses of human stem cells culled from embryos leftover in fertility clinics.

Previous attempts to clone human embryos to obtain stem cells genetically identical to the patient are believed to have failed despite reports to the contrary -- until now.

In this new study, researchers collected 242 eggs donated by 16 South Korean volunteers. Women also donated some cells from their ovary.

The scientists then used a technique called somatic nuclear transfer to remove the genetic material -- which contains the nucleus of each egg -- and replace it with the nucleus from the donor's ovarian cell.

Then, using chemicals to trigger cell division, the researchers were able to create 30 blastocysts -- early-stage embryos that contain about 100 cells -- that were a genetic copy of the donor cells.

Next, the researchers harvested a single colony of stem cells that have the potential to grow into any tissue in the body. Because they are the genetic match to the donor, they aren't likely to be rejected by the patient's immune system.

"Our approach opens the door for the use of these specially developed cells in transplantation medicine," says Woo Suk Hwang, a scientist who led the research in South Korea.

But some researchers doubt that this technique for human cloning could ever be used for widespread treatment of disease.

"The great vision of this field is to create personalized stem cells for individual patients," says Griffin. "You'd take the cell from the patient and create the cell type you want -- say pancreatic islet cells for diabetics -- by transferring it to an egg, creating an embryo, and growing them."

"If there were enough women to donate enough eggs, and enough [funding], I'm certain it could be done," says Steven Stice, PhD, professor and GRE Eminent Scholar at the University of Georgia in Athens. "But we collect hundreds of eggs a day from cattle to do our cloning. You could never expect to do that in humans. Technically, it's not feasible."

"In the U.K., 120,000 people suffer from Parkinson's disease. Where are you going to get 120,000 human eggs? The reality is that there simply are not enough eggs ... available to make therapeutic cloning a practical, routine therapy," says Griffin.

And offering women money would still not yield the necessary numbers. The egg-harvesting process is just too uncomfortable. "Egg donation is akin to bone marrow transplantation as far as how unpleasant the process is for the donor," says Griffin.

And then there's money. "You'd have to produce an individual cell line for each person to avoid the immune response," says Stice. "The cost would be horrendous. It will be very difficult to get to an application [of the technology] that won't cost hundreds of thousands of dollars [each time]."

In the end, both experts agree that therapeutic cloning is really unnecessary, given the existing supply of viable embryos left over from in vitro fertilization. "They would be discarded," says Stice. "They're donated with consent, and would never have gone on to form an individual. There are great opportunities with existing cell lines to get to the point of treating disease. We don't have to go to [cloning]."

So why continue? Because of the wealth of information it can provide, says Griffin.

But there's another angle to cloning.

For some, the technology is seen not as a source for stem cells to cure disease, but as a last, best hope for biological offspring, or, mistakenly and tragically, as a means of "bringing back" a lost spouse, child, or other loved one.

First of all, says Griffin, "only about 1 to 2% of cloned animals make it to live birth." And you can't even extrapolate that number to humans, because cows and sheep get pregnant much more easily than do women. What's more, many animal clones die late in pregnancy, or early in life, he says.

Sure, there are healthy animal clones that appear to be normal. "But the tests of normality in animals are not particularly rigorous. From a safety point of view alone, no one should be attempting to clone a child," says Griffin.

Even if technology advances to the point where human reproductive cloning, as it's called, were a viable option -- and as you've seen, we're not even close -- anyone suggesting that cloning can duplicate an existing human being is just plain wrong, says Stice.

Identical twins are most certainly two different people -- they even have different fingerprints despite sharing 100% of their DNA. In the same way, your clone would be a unique individual.

In fact, says Stice, your clone would be "even less [like you] than your twin. Most twins are raised in similar environments, whereas a clone of an adult will most likely have different experiences and different environmental factors affecting them [as they grow]."

No matter how far science takes us, one thing is certain, people are simply not replaceable.

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The Facts and Fiction of Cloning - WebMD

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Pet Cloning Becomes More Popular As Instagrammers Begin Replicating Deceased Pets – Newsweek

Posted: at 11:55 am

When photographer Courtney Udvar-Hazy's wolf-dog hybrid tragically died after being struck by a car in 2018, she decided she needed to clone her.

Udvar-Hazy's dog Willow had quite a following on Instagram when she unexpectedly died. But the account, @WanderwithWillow, is still very much active, except now Udvar-Hazy posts pictures of her pup Phoenix.

Phoenix, a two-year-old wolf-dog hybrid, is Willow's clone.

Udvar-Hazy contacted the same company that famously cloned Barbra Streisand's dog Samantha in 2018, ViaGen Pets. The Texas-based company launched in 2016 and utilizes the original pet's cells to create an embryo which is then transferred to a surrogate mother.

Udvar-Hazy ended up with Phoenix as well as an additional five identical puppies that she gifted to her friends, Input Magazine reported.

Currently, ViaGen Pets is able to clone dogs for $50,000, cats for $35,000, and horses for an initial payment of $45,000. But according to the website, although the clone might have the exact same DNA profile as the original pet, it will still develop its own temperament and personality.

According to the website, the cloning process is fairly expensive due to "state of the art housing," nutritious diets, and "expert" veterinary care that the cloned puppies and kittens are provided.

While the idea behind cloning a deceased pet sounds like something out of a sci-fi novel, the technology isn't actually all that new. The first-ever cloned dog, Snuppy, was born in 2005. Using stem cells from Snuppy, scientists were able to reclone him and create four more dogs in 2017. While one dog died, the other three are all healthy.

While many people still share a concern that cloning animals could affect their health, ViaGen Pets claims that cloned animals are no more susceptible to health issues than noncloned animals.

With more and more people opening up about cloning their beloved pets, ViaGen hopes that the process will become more accessible and normalized in society. For many, cloning a pet serves as a coping mechanism to deal with their grief. But the cloning process is by no means a quick fix.

Kelly Anderson, who runs the Instagram account @adogandacat, said it took about four years for ViaGen Pets to clone her Ragdoll named Chai after she unexpectedly died while in the care of a pet sitter.

Before Chai's death, Anderson had accumulated more than 64,000 followers and now she wasn't sure how to keep the page active.

Anderson explained to Newsweek that she was up all night the day Chai died and remembered a recent conversation she had with a friend about ViaGen Pets and their cloning process. She recalled calling them as soon as they opened the next day.

Since her cat had already been frozen at the vet and the cloning process required live skin tissue, they told Anderson they could make no promises that the procedure would be successful because of the frozen tissue.

"They recommend that you do it while the cat or dog or horse is still alive because it's a noninvasive kind of procedure," she told Newsweek. "I have preached that to everyone since going through this process. Preserve cells now, the worst that happens is you're out like $1,000 or so and don't have any regret in case something unexpected does happen."

But luckily for Anderson, the team at ViaGen Pets was able to gather enough cells to clone Chai. Now, Anderson said she has Belle who looks identical to Chai and is working to build her Instagram account back up with Belle.

Newsweek reached out to Courtney Udvar-Hazy and ViaGen Pets.

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It Depends Can trust cloning be used to transfer assets between trusts without duty or CGT? – Corporate/Commercial Law – Australia – Mondaq News…

Posted: at 11:55 am

Australia: It Depends Can trust cloning be used to transfer assets between trusts without duty or CGT?

18 January 2022

Cooper Grace Ward

To print this article, all you need is to be registered or login on Mondaq.com.

In this edition of 'It depends', senior associateKeeghan Silcock talks about whether you can use a trust cloningstrategy as a way to transfer assets between two trusts withoutduty or, potentially, CGT.

Hi, and welcome to another edition of It Depends. Today,I'll be talking about whether you can use trust cloningstrategy as a way to transfer assets between two trusts withoutduty or potentially CGT.

It depends. Trust cloning strategy is unique to Queensland. So,the first major it depends factor is where are the assets of thattrust located. If the asset you're looking to transfer islocated in Queensland, then trust cloning may be a strategy foryou.

So, what is trust cloning? Trust cloning, simply put, is whereyou have an existing trust that owns an asset and you want totransfer it out of that trust to a new trust. You set up the newtrust in a particular way. Importantly, so that it has the sametrustee as the first trust and the same trust interests as thefirst trust. And what that means is for a discretionary trust, youneed to have the same default beneficiaries or for a unit trust,you need to have the same unit holders. Or for an SMSF, you need tohave the same members of that SMSF and all of those trust interestsneed to be held in the same proportion as between those two trusts.If you satisfy those requirements and the transfer of the asset isdone correctly between trust one and the new cloned trust, then youcan, in Queensland, transfer an asset between those two trustswithout any duty.

However, there is no specific tax exemption that applies for CGTpurposes on the transfer of assets between the two trusts. Thismeans that the transfer of assets will attract CGT potentially,although it could be minimised or completely eliminated altogether,depending on the availability of particular concessions, such as asmall business, CGT concessions.

If you have a client who is wanting to shift assets out of atrust into a new trust in Queensland, we suggest seeking adviceabout whether trust cloning could be a strategy for them so thatthere is no duty payable on that transfer. Please feel free tocontact a member of our team who would be happy to assist withthat.

Cooper Grace Ward Lawyers

Cooper Grace Ward is a leading Australian law firm based inBrisbane.

This publication is for information only and is not legaladvice. You should obtain advice that is specific to yourcircumstances and not rely on this publication as legal advice. Ifthere are any issues you would like us to advise you on arisingfrom this publication, please contact Cooper Grace WardLawyers.

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It Depends Can trust cloning be used to transfer assets between trusts without duty or CGT? - Corporate/Commercial Law - Australia - Mondaq News...

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Swan Song Clenches the Morals of Your Mind and Heart – 25YearsLaterSite.com

Posted: at 11:55 am

When you really think about it, and that act right there already is a bit of the hard part for many, there may be no more universally shared feeling of the human condition than existential dread. No matter the spiritual or secular backgrounds possible, everyone pushes against those moments of reflection and crisis. The best movies that have addressed existential anxiety are some of the most challenging viewing experiences that stick with audiences long after their credits roll. Go ahead and add Benjamin Clearys Swan Song to that venerated list.

Furthermore, by channeling its abundantly unique story down a futuristic path, Swan Song also embraces the realm of potential science fiction. Moored by an immensely complex performance from two-time Academy Award winner Mahershala Ali, the crux of Clearys debut feature film oscillates on a virtuous decision amplified by the reach of technology not yet viable today. The drama may be all-inclusive with its existential dread, but the choices and implications considered and then enacted are strenuous yet sublime.

In the not-too-distant future, Ali plays Cameron, an artistically-driven product designer and married father of one son named Cory. His love story with his musician wife Poppy (the luminous Naomie Harris) began with a Meet Cute over a mistaken chocolate bar on a commuter train. Even through the shortcomings of their mutual work-life balance issues, their familys future looks promising with Poppy expecting their second child.That sunny future for Cameron is derailed when seizures he begins to experience foretell a terminal diagnosis giving him mere months to live. He will not survive long enough to see the birth of his new child and cannot bring himself to tell Poppy. However, one experimental medical option presents an unnerving measure of hope.

Pioneered by Dr. Jo Scott (8-time Oscar nominee Glenn Close) and her assisting psychologist Dalton (Adam Beach of Windtalkers), Arra Labs has developed a cloning program that copies your memories and behaviors into an exact physical copy. That healthy doppelganger can then be inserted into your life to take your place while you live out your remaining days at Arra Labs mountain retreat. The goal is to extend your perceived life and spare your family immediate grief.

With a baby on the way, that last part is the goal of Cameron, and he becomes more convinced by observing and bonding with another Arra Labs client named Kate (Awkwafina, star of the thematically similar The Farewell) who has completed this same clone exchange. The labs thorough counseling program of memory transfers and cross-checks has Cameron replaying the highs and lows of his life side-by-side with his clone, all while orchestrating an enormous secret.

Cameron is considering an action that will secure his familys future. Yet, perhaps the hardest part of Camerons journey is the prospect of saying a goodbye that no one will know is an actual goodbye. Even if his days are numbered, he has to live with the notion of someone else living what should be his life. Such reflections jar his indomitable male will as a husband and father.

This laborious proposition of Swan Song guarantees to split audiences with an ethical wrestling match between honesty and empathy on whether they could do what Cameron has chosen. One has to wonder how many shielding spouses and parents would consider this radical course of action if it were available and find pity and solidarity in that grave choice. Yet, its the lie of it all that will be a certain hang-up for others, and understandably so. While this whole undertaking is a personal choice for Cameron to make, it is also a decision he may be unfairly denying from his wife and children, unbeknownst to them. What would you tell yourself to get through this and at what point do you realize that its not only about you?

Because of the crushing emotions and controversial implications in play in Swan Song, an extremely delicate lead and dualistic performance was required from Mahershala Ali, and the soon-to-be 48-year-old conquered every possible struggle. Wherever volatile selfishness or anger threatened to push this film into over-sentimental territory, Ali seized grace armored by sorrow the likes of which is rarely accomplished. Through the painful reflections and prognostications his character goes through, Ali makes the eventual justifications for Camerons unfathomable choices convincing. That is an extremely difficult and connective place to succeed.

In dipping its toes into science fiction, the production values of Swan Song match that sturdy dramatic beauty. Cinematographer Masanobu Takayanagi (Hostiles) absorbs the posh production designs of Annie Beauchamp (The Yellow Birds) to create a stark setting of contrast and cleanness trying to contain the messy human temperaments. Composer Jay Wadley (Im Thinking of Ending Things) and music supervisor Meghan Currier amplify that morose mood further with a divine and haunting combination of score and songs.

Playing on AppleTV+, Swan Song is the feature debut of writer-director Benjamin Cleary, an Oscar winner for the live action short film Stutterer in 2015. The burgeoning visionary deserves tremendous recognition for constructing and charting a compelling path through this moral minefield of a narrative. A different director would wrongfully inject spectacle for spectacles sake or construe some external villainy. Cleary avoids those mistakes with an Andrew Niccol-like vibe of thoughtful design and intelligent patience. He knows the true nucleus of this story lies between the ears and between the ribs. Clench your own heart and mind tightly in welcoming one of the best films of 2022.

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Star Wars: Attack of the Clones is underrated and finally essential – Polygon

Posted: January 17, 2022 at 8:27 am

The once-canonical death of bounty hunter Boba Fett may have been undone by The Mandalorian and elaborated on by the current spinoff series The Book of Boba Fett, but his revival has nothing on original Star Wars death-defier, Obi-Wan Kenobi. Kenobi, desert hermit and last-minute mentor to Luke Skywalker, perished three-quarters through the very first Star Wars movie, and proceeded to appear in five more anyway: as a force-ghost in The Empire Strikes Back and Return of the Jedi, played by Alec Guinness through gritted teeth, and then as a major character in the prequel trilogy, played by Ewan McGregor.

And still Star Wars isnt done with Obi-Wan. His next return is probably one of the most anticipated television events of 2022, as McGregor will reprise the role in a limited series for Disney Plus. He will be joined, in some as-yet-unknown capacity, by his prequel co-star Hayden Christiansen as Anakin Skywalkerthe man inside the Darth Vader apparatus. Like The Book of Boba Fett, the upcoming Kenobi series is notable in part because while it revives beloved characters from the original Star Wars trilogy, it does so utilizing casting from the prequel trilogy. Remember, because Boba Fett was revealed to be a clone of his father Jango in Episode II: Attack of the Clones, he is played by Clones actor Temuera Morrison in the new show.

As it happens, Attack of the Clones turns 20 this May, and the Obi-Wan series could well have its premiere timed to coincide with that milestone. (No official release date has been announced at the time of publication.) Even if that particular anniversary goes uncelebrated beyond a cursory tweet from the official Star Wars account, the very existence of Kenobi represents an impressive double-back for the prequels, which may have been the first major movie series to experience the newfound lightspeed of internet backlash. All three movies were huge hits when they debuted in 1999, 2002, and 2005, and all three saw their reputations take a hit in subsequent years.

Now, though, plenty of prequel touchstones are greeted with open arms by fans even if Disney frequently acts as if anything that doesnt relate directly to either the original trilogy or The Mandalorian (including their own sequel trilogy) is radioactive. Given this now years-long Mandalorian-centric campaign and the prequels general reputation among embittered Gen-X fans, some might be moved to wonder why, exactly, the prequels seem to enjoy so much ongoing nostalgia.

There are plenty of explanations feeding into each other: Most prominently, a younger audience that grew up with the prequels and regards them as more or less equal to the originals, similar to how some original-release disappointment in Return of the Jedi softened over time. Theres also a certain segment of fans that appreciates movies so clearly keyed into George Lucas personal sensibilities, especially now, during a period of increasingly impersonal and unimaginative blockbuster filmmaking. Some fans also feel that the animated TV show The Clone Wars, which ran in spurts from 2008 to 2020, redeemed prequel-era storytelling and characters. Finally, there are some reactionaries who have come to appreciate the prequels via the Dark Side, channeling their rage and frustration over the Disney sequels into acceptance of Lucas less-beloved work.

But I think there is another, simpler reason people are excited to see their old prequel buddies again 20 years later: Attack of the Clones absolutely rules.

To be clear, I think this about all three Star Wars prequels. (I also love The Last Jedi. I contain multitudes as do plenty of less vocal Star Wars fans.) But even some prequel defenders will quietly dismiss Attack of the Clones. The Phantom Menace has been praised, in retrospect, for representing Lucas pure, unfettered vision for what a then-new Star Wars movie would look and feel like, while Revenge of the Sith appreciators will rightfully describe its operatic grandeur. Meanwhile, Attack of the Clones is now widely regarded as the worst of the three, an attempted course-correction from Phantom Menace that wasnt quite correct, neither pure Lucas nor successful fan service.

And yet Im not sure wed be getting an Obi-Wan TV series starring Ewan McGregor without Attack of the Clones. (Or rather, we might be, because every single previously filmed piece of genre entertainment is now fair game for nostalgia trawling, but it might not be so hotly anticipated.) The character is a supporting player in The Phantom Menace, and Revenge of the Sith calls upon McGregors formidable dramatic skills to sell the sense of tragedy and betrayal between Obi-Wan and his odd son/brother figure Anakin. But Attack of the Clones is where McGregor seems to be having the most fun, rolling with the punches as Lucas keeps throwing new planets, creatures, and images in his path.

Kenobis adventures in Clones are largely solo, a bit of screenwriting engineering to give Anakin (Christiansen) and Padm (Natalie Portman) time to fall in love and exchange feelings about sand. Kenobis galaxy-hopping subplot also seems designed to show off the infinite possibilities of Star Wars. Investigating a bounty hunters toxic dart, Kenobi plays detective, which means visiting an intergalactic greasy spoon to chat with oversized alien Dexter Jettster, poking around the Jedi archives looking for a missing planet, bluffing his way through conversations with the mysterious cloners of Kamino, tussling with Jango Fett, and, after reuniting with Anakin and Padm, fighting Harryhausen-style monsters in arena combat.

While Obi-Wan does all of this legwork, Lucas occasionally cuts back to Yoda and Mace Windu pontificating about whether to disclose the Jedi Orders diminishing power. For all the complaints about the drudgery of the prequel trilogys plotting, Clones offers a concise depiction of a civilization in unwitting decline, as Kenobis vague peacekeeping mandate involves him getting knocked around and manipulated by any number of cogs in the machinations of Darth Sidious, while his supposed allies do little but offer a show of military might at the very end (which, as we know, will only accelerate their doom). One reason that Kenobi never gets anywhere sussing out the true motivations or plans of Jango Fett, Count Dooku, or the Geonosian engineers is because despite their involvement in a vast and dastardly plan, theyre also mostly out for their own interests: Im just a simple man trying to make my way in the universe, as Temeura Morrisons Jango says, by way of explaining how his DNA has contributed to a clone army that will facilitate a fascist takeover.

Despite depicting the galaxys march toward dictatorship, Attack of the Clones is also a blast, much like the way that pulpy noir can be fun on its way to a doomy ending. Bits of the movie even look noirish: the neon and shadows of Coruscant at night, or the rough and rainy fight Kenobi has with Fett (which contrasts beautifully with the antiseptic whiteness of the cloning facility where they meet). And anyone who enjoyed the scrap between Boba Fett and a multi-armed monster on the first episode of Book ought to take another look at the arena-monster scene in Clones that gives the Jedi (and Padme) more to do than just twirl laser-swords and fire blasters. The Attack of the Clones set pieces, so numerous and varied, make the usual space battles and trooper shoot-outs of other Star Wars pictures look rote by comparison. (Has Din Djarin ever jumped out of a building to grab onto a courier droid zooming through speeder traffic?)

Much of Clones looks cartoonier than either the original or sequel trilogy, but whatever it lacks in tactility, it compensates with a sense of genuine discovery that Star Wars only occasionally hit upon in live-action TV form. Even when the film revisits familiar territory, Lucas has a knack for mixing up his own creations: The Outlander Club on Coruscant, visited by Anakin and Obi-Wan early in the film, is basically the only Star Wars watering hole that doesnt resemble a knockoff of the beloved Mos Eisley Cantina (with the possible exception of the casino in Canto Bight, which has a far less moody, visually striking lighting scheme). The desert planet of Geonosis focuses on craggy rocks and a rusty-looking droid factory, rather than recreating Tatooine vibes.

All together, its a spectacular work of imagination, and one that McGregor holds together with a charm thats equal parts laddish and daddish. The way he softly, even smugly chuckles when Anakin mentions rescuing him from a nest of gundarks; the way he reigns in Anakins emo-compulsive oversharing while still offering tacit encouragement (she was happy to see us); the way he casually drops a Jedi mind trick to dismiss a death-sticks dealer or quietly bristles at the officious librarian at the Jedi Archives piece by piece, McGregor creates a new Obi-Wan, his remnants of Alec Guinness impersonation serving as grace notes on a character he has made his own. It all adds up to a portrait of the Jedi life as both swashbuckling and laborious, a neat trick that keeps Obi-Wans adventures fun without turning him into a smirking action hero. Attack of the Clones may be the most detailed portrayal so far of what being a Jedi Knight actually entails. And who among us hasnt done their best in a work situation that was ultimately unrewarding?

Of course, Obi-Wan isnt in every scene of Attack of the Clones. The romance between Anakin and Padm would surely be better-served by a writer-director who had any kind of patience for writing dialogue or directing actors, but with that considerable handicap, the corniness is appealing in the manner of the old-timey melodrama Lucas was supposedly going for. At the very least, these scenes carry on the spirit of old Hollywood productions that would include a separate gowns by credit. (Padm goes through around 10 outfit changes, another sign of the Lucas teams casual inventiveness.) The romance plot is just one more element of the movies power-clashing, which finds a place for adventure, mystery, romance, slapstick, and grief. Star Wars can obviously accommodate a variety of tones, and it doesnt need to try all of them at once in order to succeed.

But for all of its Yoda-with-a-lightsaber fan service, Attack of the Clones feels less slavishly indebted to the series past than certain other entries, and more open to the myriad possibilities of this weird universe. Its this spirit that the new crop of Star Wars TV shows would do well to remember. So far, The Mandalorian and The Book of Boba Fett have collectively spent an awful lot of time on Tatooine, a location that the Obi-Wan show will presumably use as well, given that its where the character supposedly spent almost all of his time in between Revenge of the Sith and A New Hope. A more intimate Star Wars isnt a bad thing, and these TV shows have often been fun. But I cant quite buy the notion that they revive the spirit of Lucass original creation. These shows dont exist because Lucas kept rehashing A New Hope and Empire. They exist because he treated his prequels like a whole new sandbox.

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