LLM (google/gemini-3.1-flash-lite-20260507) summary:
- State Longevity Initiative: the russian government has authorized a 26 billion dollar vanity project focused on staving off biological decline.
- Dubious Scientific Focus: researchers are chasing fantasies involving organ printing and the harvesting of mini-pigs for potential human transplantation.
- Optimistic Timeline: official claims suggest human organ replacement will be achieved by 2030 despite significant technological hurdles.
- Lack Of Transparency: unlike private western initiatives, this state-sponsored effort has produced almost no verifiable evidence in international peer-reviewed journals.
- Questionable Metrics: the initiative set a goal of saving 175,000 lives, a figure observers sarcastically link to massive wartime losses.
- Speculative Research Methods: extreme measures including exposure to ultralow temperatures are being touted as legitimate anti-aging interventions.
- Technological Grandiosity: the program mirrors common authoritarian tendencies to prioritize showy scientific breakthroughs over practical public health outcomes.
- Geopolitical Parallel: the project attempts to frame state-directed resource allocation as a cutting-edge technological race against western billionaire investment.
By
Conor GrantMay 29, 2026 12:00 pm ET
This is an edition of The Future of Everything newsletter, a look at how innovation and technology are transforming the way we live, work and play. If you’re not subscribed, sign up here.
Silicon Valley billionaires such as Jeff Bezos, Sam Altman and Peter Thiel are not the only powerful men fascinated with antiaging research: Russian President Vladimir Putin has made his quest to stave off decline a state priority.
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The Future of Everything
A look at how innovation and technology are transforming the way we live, work and play.
This week, Bojan Pancevski reports on Putin’s $26 billion longevity initiative, which encompasses methods as wide-ranging as organ printing, harvesting mini-pigs and exposure to ultralow temperatures.
175,000
How many lives Putin’s national longevity initiative promised to save by the end of the decade (the figure had an awkward wartime echo, roughly matching independent estimates of Russian troop losses in the invasion of Ukraine, as critics noted)
Russian state scientists appointed by Putin have focused on two key technologies: bioprinting, or 3D-printing living tissue, and xenotransplantation, or growing human organs inside mini-pigs, a porcine breed deemed genetically compatible to humans.
Russian scientists working with government agencies claim to have bioprinted human cartilage tissue and a mouse thyroid gland, with the aim of achieving human organ replacement by 2030. A similar timeline has been discussed for growing organs inside pigs.
Yet unlike similar research funded by Bezos, Altman or Thiel, the work promoted by Putin’s circle has produced little peer-reviewed research in major international journals.
- These billionaires are fueling the quest for longer life. (Read)
- The longevity business is booming—and its scientists are clashing. (Read)
🤔 What do you think about Vladimir Putin’s longevity push? Send me your thoughts, questions and predictions at future@wsj.com (if you’re reading this in your inbox, you can just hit reply).
More of What’s Next: Putin’s Longevity Push; AI Investing; China’s High-Tech Sedan
Investors are betting big on “physical AI,” or autonomous machines that can understand and perform complex real-world tasks, as they search for new investment opportunities in a landscape where AI is disrupting many software businesses.
Robinhood is letting customers use AI to trade stocks and make credit-card purchases. The brokerage is part of a crowded field of financial firms that have introduced AI tools into a range of services they offer individual customers.
China’s answer to a Rolls-Royce is stuffed with gadgets. The battery-powered Maextro S800 sedan is manufactured with the help of more than 1,000 robots in Hefei, China, and runs on tech from Huawei, best known as a maker of mass-market phones.
Mistral is chasing AI superintelligence to counter U.S. dominance. The French AI company says it’s working as fast as it can on the moonshot race to develop so-called superintelligence because Europe can’t afford to rely on U.S. tech giants.
Future Feedback
Last week, we reported on business leaders who are creating AI versions of themselves. Readers shared their thoughts on these so-called digital twins:
- “I’m in the process of making a digital twin for my own use, mostly to synthesize my thinking or make papers, presentations and email responses faster. But I wouldn’t ever trust it to act or create material without me in the loop. It’s my reputation on the line if it hallucinates or behaves inconsistently.” —Richard Fray, United Kingdom
- “We’ve developed a tool at the Drucker School of Management at Claremont Graduate University to access Peter Drucker’s extensive legacy with accuracy. We explored the use of images, video and synthetic voice but chose not to. Why? This is not a reincarnation of Peter Drucker—it’s a highly reliable and accurate access to his volumes of material. The idea of a digital twin is catchy, but misleading. Presenting such creations as live and anthropomorphic is incorrect. Presenting them as ‘here’s what Reid might say if he had the time’ is correct. That clarity reflects morals and values, and should be the standard.” —Steven C. Tarr, Washington
- “Leveraging technology for one-way communications—with authenticity—could be a good use of the ‘digital twin.’ To me, that’s the key point: Simulating a CEO visiting with employees in a location she’s never actually been would be falsifying the authenticity and empathy that real leaders need to demonstrate.” —John Dabbar, New York
- “I would use a digital twin, were I still a CEO. Only now I’m 89. Back in my startup days (1973), I was so busy I had to forgo many things, like keeping up correspondence with old pals. Since this was before start-uppers were ‘founders’—with the attending glorification—my friends thought I was just rude. Now, at my grand old age, I have so much I could feed my AI doppelgänger that it would surely fool my pals (though most are dead, alas). Surely the AI twin would be more ‘me’ than I am now. I think we (my twin and I) will go do another startup!” —Willis ‘Scooter’ Duff, New Mexico
(Responses have been condensed and edited.)
Elsewhere in the Future
- A new extraction process could unlock the world’s lithium. (MIT Technology Review)
- This $6 billion Chinese startup is trying to build hands for every robot. (Wired)
- This writer tried to sell his house with a chatbot. (The New York Times)
About Us
Thanks for reading The Future of Everything. We cover the innovation and tech transforming the way we live, work and play. This newsletter was written by Conor Grant. Get in touch with us at future@wsj.com. Got a tip for us? Here’s how to submit.
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