crisprScienceWhy the Gene Editors of Tomorrow Need to Study Ethics TodayBy Katie M PalmerScienceWhy DNA Is the Most Exciting Programming Language TodayBy Megan MolteniScienceCrispr’s Epic Patent Fight Changed the Course of BiologyBy Megan MolteniScienceCrispr Halted Muscular Dystrophy in Dogs. Are Humans Next?By Megan MolteniScienceWith Embryo Base Editing, China Gets Another Crispr FirstBy Megan MolteniScienceCrispr Can Speed Up Nature—and Change How We Grow FoodBy Stephen S. HallScienceInside a Chemist’s Quest to Cure Genetic DiseaseBy Megan MolteniScienceCrispr Fans Fight for Egalitarian Access to Gene EditingBy Megan MolteniBusinessBig-Box Bots, a Better Blockchain, and More WIRED PredictionsBy Wired.com StaffScienceBiology Will Be the Next Great Computing PlatformBy Megan MolteniScienceA New Startup Wants to Use Crispr to Diagnose DiseaseBy Megan MolteniScienceA Flawed Study Shows How Little We Understand CrisprBy Megan MolteniScienceCrispr’d Food, Coming Soon to a Supermarket Near YouBy Megan MolteniScienceScience Is Getting Us Closer to the End of InfertilityBy Jason PontinScienceCrispr Will Transform the Way We Eradicate Invasive SpeciesBy Emma MarrisScienceWhat Good Is Crispr if It Can't Get Where It Needs to Go?By Megan MolteniScienceWhy Biotech Is Clashing over the Future of Gene TherapyBy Megan MolteniScienceCrispr Isn’t Enough Any More. Get Ready for Gene Editing 2.0By Megan MolteniScienceCrispr Company Plans Its First Trial for Genetic DiseaseBy Megan MolteniScienceThis Gene-Editing Tech Might Be Too Dangerous To UnleashBy Megan MolteniScienceCrispr Fans Dream of a Populist Future for Gene EditingBy Megan MolteniScienceUS Scientists Edit an Embryo—But Superbabies Won’t Come EasyBy Megan MolteniScienceScientists Crispr the First Human Embryos in the US (Maybe)By Megan MolteniScienceScientists Upload a Horse GIF Into Bacteria With CrisprBy Megan MolteniMore Stories