Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Emerging Tech
  3. News

Scientists crack the code to using DNA like a computer hard drive

The same molecule that stores your genetic code might soon be storing your vacation photos.

Add as a preferred source on Google
Crystal, Plant, Flower
MJH SHIKDER / Unsplash

Even before the AI boom, data centers were already consuming staggering amounts of energy and natural resources. Now, generative AI has intensified that strain, exposing just how unsustainable our current storage infrastructure really is. It’s forcing us to rethink how we store data and pushing us toward alternative storage solutions.

One area gaining serious attention is DNA-based data storage, which encodes digital information into synthetic strands of DNA. A storage medium so compact and durable that it could dramatically reduce the need for sprawling, energy-hungry data centers.

Turning biology into data centers

You might think that it sounds like science fiction. But the concept is surprisingly straightforward, and researchers have been on it for decades. 

Recommended Videos

DNA is nature’s information storage system. It stores all the biological data using four base components: A, C, G, and T. Scientists have figured out how to translate digital data, the zeros and ones that make up photos, videos, and documents, into those same four letters.

The advantages are staggering. DNA can hold massive amounts of information in an incredibly small space. Theoretically, all the world’s data could fit inside a shoebox. It’s also remarkably durable. Kept dry and cool, DNA can remain stable for thousands of years, and it requires no energy to maintain.

The rewrite barrier

Despite its promise, DNA storage faced a critical flaw: it was permanent. It meant that once the data was stored on DNA, there was no way to overwrite and update it. That limitation has kept DNA storage research confined to long-term archiving rather than everyday storage. But researchers at the University of Missouri are changing that.

Reading and writing storage on DNA like a digital file

Li-Qun “Andrew” Gu, a professor of chemical and biomedical engineering at Mizzou Engineering, has said that they are developing a method that allows them to rewrite and update the data written on DNA. 

The team is using a nanopore sensor, a molecular-scale detector that reads DNA by measuring subtle electrical changes as strands pass through it. The system is already more compact, faster, and environmentally friendly than existing systems. The researchers are hopeful that they will be able to shrink the device to the size of a USB thumb drive.

This changes everything. For the first time, DNA storage can behave like modern hard drives, where users can write, update, and overwrite data on demand.

What it means for us

While DNA storage is years, possibly even a decade, away from mainstream adoption, the progress is hard to ignore. The technology offers a compelling solution to the growing strain on our data infrastructure and resource consumption. 

If successfully developed for real-world use, DNA-based storage could represent the most significant breakthrough in data storage since the invention of the hard drive.

Rachit Agarwal
Rachit is a seasoned tech journalist with over ten years of experience covering the consumer technology landscape.
Microsoft’s newest AI agent wants to take entire projects off your plate
Microsoft

Microsoft is expanding its ambitions for workplace AI with the general availability of Copilot Cowork, an agentic system designed to handle complex tasks from start to finish rather than simply offering suggestions.

After spending three months in Microsoft’s Frontier preview program, the company says Copilot Cowork is already used by more than half of the Fortune 500, alongside organizations such as Accenture, Zurich Insurance, Capital Group, and others. The rollout marks one of the fastest-growing launches in the history of Microsoft’s Frontier program, according to the company.

Read more
Online payments are dimming the charm of one of America’s top tourist attractions
One of America's last analog tourist traditions just joined the cashless economy.
Photography, Binoculars, Camera

We all know those heavy, coin-operated binoculars perched on every scenic overlook in America, the ones you’ll find everywhere from the Empire State Building to the Grand Canyon. Turns out, they’ll soon start accepting tap-to-pay payments. 

This is great news, as you’ll no longer need to carry a quarter anymore, and making payments with your smartphone is much more convenient. However, I’d argue that the quarter was kind of the whole point.

Read more
The FBI secretly built an entire fake town just to practice cyberattacks
Hidden inside a warehouse in Alabama, the Kinetic Cyber Range recreates real-world digital attacks from start to finish.
FBI Kinetic Cyber Range Featured

While Hollywood has fake cities for filming movies, the FBI apparently has one for getting hacked. The agency has pulled back the curtain on its Kinetic Cyber Range, a 22,000-square-foot replica small town hidden inside its Huntsville, Alabama campus. But instead of training officers for shootouts or hostage rescues, the facility is designed to simulate realistic cyberattacks on homes, businesses, and critical infrastructure so investigators can practice responding to them in a controlled environment.

The FBI built an entire town just to simulate cybercrime

Read more