This is some scary stuff if you think about it from a "terrified of technology" sort of way. If they can edit the genome once, whats to stop them from editing the genome again to fix whatever the issue was? Unless its some catastrophic screw up that for some reason cannot be fixed, all other editing will likely be slow and incremental. There is a lot more bad stuff happening from not properly tested pharmaceuticals that I can imagine this sort of technology being responsible for.
This is some scary stuff if you think about it from a "terrified of technology" sort of way. If they can edit the genome once, whats to stop them from editing the genome again to fix whatever the issue was? Unless its some catastrophic screw up that for some reason cannot be fixed, all other editing will likely be slow and incremental. There is a lot more bad stuff happening from not properly tested pharmaceuticals that I can imagine this sort of technology being responsible for.