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  2. Ethics of cloning - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ethics_of_cloning

    In 2015, the European Union voted to ban the cloning of farm animals (cattle, pigs, sheep, goats, and horses), and the sale of cloned livestock, their offspring, and products derived from them, such as meat and milk. The ban excluded cloning for research, and for the conservation of rare breeds and endangered species.

  3. Commercial animal cloning - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Commercial_animal_cloning

    ViaGen began by offering cloning to the livestock and equine industry in 2003, [20] and later as ViaGen Pets included cloning of cats and dogs in 2016. [21] ViaGen's subsidiary, start licensing, owns a cloning patent which is licensed to their only competitor as of 2018, who also offers animal cloning services. [22] (Viagen is a subsidiary of ...

  4. Montana rancher gets 6 months in prison for cloning giant ...

    www.aol.com/montana-rancher-gets-6-months...

    The animal has been confiscated by US Fish and Wildlife Services and is being held in an accredited facility ... said cloning the giant Marco Polo sheep hunted in Kyrgyzstan in 2013 has ruined his ...

  5. Cloning - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cloning

    Cloning of animals is opposed by animal-groups due to the number of cloned animals that suffer from malformations before they die, and while food from cloned animals has been approved as safe by the US FDA, [105] [106] its use is opposed by groups concerned about food safety.

  6. Man sentenced for cloning and breeding giant sheep - AOL

    www.aol.com/man-sentenced-cloning-breeding-giant...

    An 81-year-old Montana man was sentenced Monday to six months in federal prison for illegally using tissue and testicles from large sheep hunted in Central Asia and the U.S. to create hybrid sheep ...

  7. Hwang affair - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hwang_affair

    The Hwang affair, [1] or Hwang scandal, [2] or Hwanggate, [3] is a case of scientific misconduct and ethical issues surrounding a South Korean biologist, Hwang Woo-suk, who claimed to have created the first human embryonic stem cells by cloning in 2004.

  8. He Jiankui genome editing incident - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/He_Jiankui_genome_editing...

    The He Jiankui genome editing incident is a scientific and bioethical controversy concerning the use of genome editing following its first use on humans by Chinese scientist He Jiankui, who edited the genomes of human embryos in 2018.

  9. Hwang Woo-suk - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hwang_Woo-suk

    Hwang first caught media attention in South Korea when he announced he had successfully created a cloned dairy cow, Yeongrong-i in February 1999. His alleged success was touted as the fifth instance in the world in cow cloning, with a notable caveat: Hwang failed to provide scientifically verifiable data for the research, giving only media sessions and photo ops.