iPRES-2013 and DC-2013
Invited Keynotes
Gildas Illien |
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Paul BertoneDigital information storage in DNA The amount of information that humans produce and want to
store is increasing exponentially. It is estimated that the total digital
information on Earth is of the order of zettabytes (thousands of billions of
billions of bytes). The amount of digital information that people want to
archive, i.e. store safely, recoverably, for long periods of time with only
rare access and with minimal ongoing maintenance requirements, is also growing.
However, at present essentially no long-term archiving of digital information
is taking place. This is because all current digital storage media require a
continual cycle of maintenance to renew both the storage medium and the
'reading' and 'writing' hardware. This in turn is because there is no
conventional computing storage technology that is trusted to survive more than
a few years. Recent genome science-inspired advances in the technologies
for reading and writing DNA led us to investigate possibility of using DNA as a
digital archive medium. DNA is a stable information carrier, with
10,000-year-old intact sequences routinely recovered from historical samples.
Safe DNA storage conditions are easily maintained at low cost, and the ability
to read DNA fragments will surely survive for as long as there are
technologically-advanced humans inquisitive about the working of living
systems. In our proof-of-concept experiment, we showed how existing DNA
technologies can be used to store and recover digital information in a manner
that could be extrapolated to global data scales, incorporating modern methods
such as error correcting codes for data integrity. This talk will describe this
experiment, and will speculate on the future of DNA as a digital storage
medium. |
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Carlos Morais PiresScientific officer coordinating data e-infrastructures - European Commission DG CONNECTData Infrastructures in Horizon2020: support to data and computing intensive science |