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Idea- A structured bioethics forum where experts guide debates and the public participates only after educational onboarding — ensuring informed, nuanced discussion instead of polarized noise.

Problem

  • Emerging biotech (CRISPR, AI in healthcare, biomaterials, synthetic biology) raises ethical questions that affect everyone.

  • Existing spaces (Reddit, Twitter, Facebook) devolve into misinformation, polarization, or superficial “hot takes.”

  • Academic forums exist, but they’re inaccessible to the public (jargon-heavy, closed communities).

  • Policymakers and scientists lack structured feedback from an informed public.

Existing Alternatives

  • Public forums/social media- accessible, but chaotic, uninformed, and easily derailed.

  • Academic conferences/journals- credible, but exclude the general public.

  • University ethics centers- educational, but not interactive or scalable for wide debate.

Solution

A guided bioethics forum with:

  1. Tiered Participation

    • Experts seed discussions, clarify misconceptions.

    • Public engages in structured ways (polls, Q&A, scenario responses).

    • Later Addition: Artists/writers help translate discussions into accessible formats.

  2. Educational Onboarding

    • Users complete a quick explainer + short quiz before joining a debate.

    • Ensures everyone starts with baseline understanding.

    • Prevents misinformation-driven arguments.

  3. Structured Outcomes

    • Summaries of debates show how opinions shift when people are informed.

    • Useful for educators, policymakers, researchers.

Who Benefits

  • The public: Learn complex bioethical issues in digestible ways + participate meaningfully.

  • Experts: Better engagement with society + insight into informed public opinion.

  • Policymakers/educators: Access to nuanced, structured summaries of how the public thinks when properly informed.

Why Now

  • Biotech breakthroughs (gene editing, lab-grown organs, AI in diagnostics) are moving faster than public understanding.

  • Distrust in science and misinformation online are at an all-time high.

  • The public needs to be better informed about novel heathcare technologies and pressure governments into being more efficient in bioethical policymaking.

Why This Matters to Me

This project matters to me because I want people to truly understand the healthcare and biotechnology developments that directly affect their lives. Right now, science is moving faster than public awareness, and that gap creates risks, not only of misunderstanding, but also of misuse. By creating a space where the public can engage meaningfully with experts, we can make sure that people aren’t just passive recipients of new technology but active participants in shaping how it’s used. Informed citizens can push governments to create timely, thoughtful laws that both protect people from harm and unlock the potential for real progress.

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Comments

  • I really like the concept, but I’m curious about the name. Where did it come from, and how does it reflect the platform’s focus on guided, balanced discussion around bioethics?
    • The name Geneva is inspired by the Geneva Conventions, which symbolize global ethical standards and dialogue across borders. It also plays on the word ‘gene’, tying it back to biotechnology. So it represents a space where people come together to discuss the ethics of life sciences with fairness, openness, and respect, much like a modern ‘ethical convention.’
  • How would you ensure widespread adoption of this website? After all, this forum will only work as long as their is an active and vibrant community of discourse surrounding the ethics of scientific development on it.
    • You’re absolutely right! To build momentum, I’d start by partnering with universities, science clubs, and ethics organizations to host featured discussions that bring in both students and experts. Early on, I’d focus on timely, news-linked topics that naturally draw public attention, like CRISPR or AI in healthcare. Over time, features like polls, summaries, and artist-led explainers would help make the platform shareable and keep the community active.
  • Your idea relies on experts to guide discussions. How will you attract and retain them? Experts are busy, so what would make them contribute consistently?
    • To keep experts engaged, I’d start by partnering with universities, ethics centers, and graduate programs, where contributing could count as public engagement or teaching credit. I’d also highlight experts’ insights on their profiles, giving them visibility and recognition for their contributions,
  • Bioethics covers a huge range of issues. Are you planning to focus on a few key areas, or will it try to cover everything? There’s a risk that if it’s too broad, users might feel lost or overwhelmed.
    • You’re absolutely right! Starting too broad could dilute the impact. At first I’ll focus on just a few high-interest areas like genetic editing, AI in healthcare, and biomaterials, since they’re timely and relatable. Once the format and engagement work well there, I can expand gradually into other bioethics topics.
  • I like that it’s educational, but how will you convince everyday people — who might not usually follow science or ethics — to actually participate? What would make someone choose to join this forum over just watching a YouTube explainer or reading a post?
    • I'm designing the forum to be interactive and personalized, not just educational. Instead of passively watching a video, users get to test their opinions, see how they compare with others, and even ask questions directly to experts. The onboarding makes it approachable, and the polls and debates make it engaging so people feel like they’re part of shaping how these technologies evolve, not just learning about them.
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