Earlier this year, we heard about a gun and a fogging system, both of which tag criminals with synthesized DNA. The idea is that when those people are apprehended later, they can be linked to the crime by analyzing the location- or event-specific DNA still on their skin or clothing. Now, scientists at the Technology Transfer Unit of Portugal's University of Aveiro are developing something similar – DNA "barcodes" that can be applied to products, then subsequently read as a means of identification.
As explained to us by project manager Tatiana Costa, the "molecular tags" or "molecular barcoded labels" can be made easily and in large quantities. Each tag – or batch of tags, as the case may be – is made of a unique combination of "chimerical molecules of deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA)."
The non-toxic tags can be applied within a production line to a wide variety of both smooth and irregular surfaces, or inserted into food products or liquids, where they will remain invisible to the naked eye. They are said to stay attached (where applicable) and intact well, and can be easily read using low-cost portable equipment in a fashion not unlike the reading of regular barcodes – so no DNA-sequencing devices are required.
Instead of simply being used to obtain pricing information at a store checkout, however, the tags are intended more as a means of verifying the authenticity of high-value items that could be counterfeited. They could even be combined with ink, to verify someone's signature.
According to the university, the tags couldn't be copied or counterfeited, unlike some other authentication technologies. Additionally, people reading a tag would need to know its original formulation as it was applied, in order to confirm that their reading matched it.
Costa tells us that the system is currently in the prototype phase, and that her team is now seeking business partners to help commercialize the technology.
Source: UATEC
Hint, folks: if they're so easy to make, they're also easy to copy. That makes this nothing more than a "false sense of security", which actually ends up hurting everybody, because people will mistakenly "know" that fakes are "real".
You can buy a used PCR machine today for under $1000. Then make cheap knockoffs of the products, put your copied DNA on the tags, and never mind that they're obviously cheaply made because the tag "proves" they're real Gucci.
Meh. This is a disaster waiting to happen.
And here is a profile of the researcher who was the project manager: http://www.cesam.ua.pt/index.php?tabela=pessoaldetail&menu=80&user=227
As to inserting artificial DNA into FOOD, uhm.... you first! If nothing bad happens to you for 100 years, I'll try it.
Haha. I hadn't thought about it that way, but that's a very insightful comment.
And maby its not as simple as that, but look at how many things were said couldn't be copied, look at the new polymer money, they copied it within months. Look at all the computer programs that are suppose to be unhackable, and they get hacked. Smart people will make short work of this with new and novel ways not thought of by these people, that or they already know it can be copied and its just a sales pitch.
Also like someone else said, im not to comfortable with the idea of some weird synthetic dna being put into my food, or even onto any product that i could come in contact and potential absorb. But i admit i dont know very much about it.
Yeah, because if there's one thing you wouldn't normally find in your food is DNA.
You can easily acess a PCR machine, its true, but you cannot replicate the DNA if you don´t have the primer sequence - that its impossible to guess even with powerfull computation.