Wired Magazine never fails to make me think. The October 2009 issue featured “The Smart List: 12 Shocking Ideas That Could Change the World.” There were six ideas that have specific relevance to our field:

  1. Recruit Autistics. "A preternatural capacity for concentration and near-total recall" makes autistic folks ideal software engineers according to Thorkil Sonne, who founded Specialisterne in Denmark, an IT consultancy that hire mostly people with autism-spectrum disorders.
  2. Embrace Human Cloning. Human clones walk among us—identical twins—so why not take in vitro fertilization to its logical conclusion?
  3. Make Health Risk Management Meaningful. According to Ralph Keeney, 55% of deaths for people aged15 to 64 are now due to their own decisions—compared to 5% a century ago. Provide people with better calculations of risk (for not using seatbelts, not exercising, bad diets, etc.) and then adjust health premiums accordingly.
  4. Release All Nonviolent Offenders in Prison. Incarcerating nonviolent criminals costs us $22,000 per year—and has no social gain. Make nonviolent offenders go to counseling, get an education, do public serivce, and repay their victims.
  5. Legalize Assisted Suicide. Ludwig Minelli, founder of Dignitas, a right-to-die organization, believes that prohibiting suicide doesn't keep desperate people from trying. Instead, provide dignified options—and counseling for people considering suicide.
  6. Forget Medical Privacy. Guest commentator Jamie Heywood of PatientsLikeMe believes "privacy has been used as an excuse by those who have a vested interest in hoarding" health care information. He wants us to share our personal data on-line in social communities.

You may or may not agree with them—but, if implemented, they certainly will change our world.

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