The BioBricks Foundation: Difference between revisions

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'''News'''<br>
'''News'''<br>
*'''Next Legal & Technical Standards Workshop''', March 1, 2008, San Francisco, CA
*'''Legal & Technical Standards Workshop 2''', [[The_BioBricks_Foundation:Workshop2 | March 1, 2008, San Francisco, CA]]
*'''[[Synthetic_Biology:Synthetic_Biology_4.0 | SB4.0, Fourth International Meeting on Synthetic Biology,]] 10-12 October 2008, HKUST, Hong Kong
*'''[[Synthetic_Biology:Synthetic_Biology_4.0 | SB4.0, Fourth International Meeting on Synthetic Biology,]] 10-12 October 2008, HKUST, Hong Kong
*'''Legal and Technology Standards Workshop''', [[The_BioBricks_Foundation:Workshop | November 5-6, 2007, Cambridge, MA]]
*'''Legal and Technical Standards Workshop''', [[The_BioBricks_Foundation:Workshop | November 5-6, 2007, Cambridge, MA]]
*'''Funding''': [[The_BioBricks_Foundation:PressRelease | Somekh Family Foundation makes generous donation]]
*'''Funding''': [[The_BioBricks_Foundation:PressRelease | Somekh Family Foundation makes generous donation]]
*'''Membership''': [[The_BioBricks_Foundation:Membership | Become a member of the BBF today!]]
*'''Membership''': [[The_BioBricks_Foundation:Membership | Become a member of the BBF today!]]

Revision as of 09:51, 11 January 2008


The BioBricks Foundation (BBF) is a not-for-profit organization founded by engineers and scientists from MIT, Harvard, and UCSF with significant experience in both non-profit and commercial biotechnology research. BBF encourages the development and responsible use of technologies based on BioBrick™ standard DNA parts that encode basic biological functions.

Using BioBrick™ standard biological parts, a synthetic biologist or biological engineer can already, to some extent, program living organisms in the same way a computer scientist can program a computer. The DNA sequence information and other characteristics of BioBrick™ standard biological parts are made available to the public free of charge currently via MIT's Registry of Standard Biological Parts.

Any individual or organization is welcome to design, improve, and contribute BioBrick™ standard biological parts to the Registry. For example, in the summer of 2007, over 600 students and instructors at 60+ universities around the world are making, sharing, and using BioBrick™ standard biological parts as part of the International Genetically Engineered Machine (iGEM) competition.