Poll
Is CRISPR-based editing too reckless for human trials, or are ethical fears holding back a revolution?
As of 2026, the first human trials for CRISPR-based therapies are accelerating, but debates over off-target risks and ethical boundaries have intensified. Cast your vote on whether the potential benefits outweigh the dangers.
Options
Live results
Vote first to see results.
Emoji reactions
No reaction selected.
Comments
Please sign in to comment.
Share / embed
Quick info
- How do I vote in the "Is CRISPR-based editing too reckless for human trials, or are ethical fears holding back a revolution?" poll?
- Select one option on the page to cast your vote; results update with community votes in real time.
- Can I view results without voting?
- Yes. Use the "I don't know / Show results" option, or access the results summary after voting.
Similar polls
Up to 10 suggestions from the same category and shared tags, sorted by vote count; this poll is excluded.
From the same category
Basic Sciences and BiotechnologyThe same site category as this poll.
- Is learning basic biology still useful now that AI can answer everything?
- Has single-cell sequencing genuinely changed how you think about gene expression?
- Are sustainable biotech startups worth the hype over big pharma?
- Would you ever skip a pricey biotech course and just learn the basic science yourself?
- Would you switch from E. coli to yeast expression systems for higher protein yield?
- Is animal testing in biotech research a necessary evil or an outdated practice that we’ve already outgrown?
- With CRISPR costs dropping, are you still using older gene-editing methods?
- Can gene editing really fix our food supply as climate change worsens?
- Is synthetic biology overhyped or the next big thing in basic sciences?
- Have peer-reviewed papers become a popularity contest for novel results rather than a reliable foundation for reproducible science?
TrendVersus.com · live data