
Could a biologist armed with AI kill a billion people? | Dr Richard Moulange
80,000 Hours Podcast
State of AI biology tools today
Richard surveys AlphaFold, protein design models (MPNN, RF diffusion), ESM and the yet‑to‑be‑solved sequence→function problem.
Last September, scientists used an AI model to design genomes for entirely new bacteriophages (viruses that infect bacteria). They then built them in a lab. Many were viable. And despite being entirely novel some even outperformed existing viruses from that family.
That alone is remarkable. But as today's guest — Dr Richard Moulange, one of the world's top experts on 'AI–Biosecurity' — explains, it's just one of many data points showing how AI is dissolving the barriers that have historically kept biological weapons out of reach.
For years, experts have reassured us that 'tacit knowledge' — the hands-on, hard-to-Google lab skills needed to work with dangerous pathogens — would prevent bad actors from weaponising biology. So far, they've been right.
But as of 2025 that reassurance is crumbling. The Virology Capabilities Test measures exactly this kind of troubleshooting expertise, and finds that modern AI models crushed top human virologists even in their self-declared area of greatest specialisation and expertise — 45% to 22%.
Meanwhile, Anthropic’s research shows PhD-level biologists getting meaningfully better at weapons-relevant tasks with AI assistance — with the effect growing with each new model generation.
Richard joins host Rob Wiblin to discuss all that plus:
- What AI biology tools already exist
- Why mid-tier actors (not amateurs) are the ones getting the most dangerous boost
- The three main categories of defence we can pursue
- Whether there’s a plausible path to a world where engineered pandemics become a thing of the past
This episode was recorded on January 16, 2026. Since recording this episode, Richard has seconded to the UK Government — please note that his views expressed here are entirely his own.
Links to learn more, video, and full transcript: https://80k.info/rm
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Chapters:
- Cold open (00:00:00)
- Who's Richard Moulange? (00:00:31)
- AI can now design novel genomes (00:01:11)
- The end of the 'tacit knowledge' barrier (00:04:34)
- Are risks from bioterrorists overstated? (00:18:20)
- The 3 key disasters AI makes more likely (00:22:41)
- Which bad actors does AI help the most? (00:30:03)
- Experts are more scary than amateurs (00:41:17)
- Barriers to bioterrorists using AI (00:46:43)
- AI biorisks are sometimes dismissed (and that's a huge mistake) (00:48:54)
- Advanced AI biology tools we already have or will soon (01:04:10)
- Rob argues that the situation is hopeless (01:09:49)
- Intervention #1: Limit access (01:18:16)
- Intervention #2: Get AIs to refuse to help (01:32:58)
- Intervention #3: Surveillance and attribution (01:42:38)
- Intervention #4: Universal vaccines and antivirals (01:56:38)
- Intervention #5: Screen all orders for DNA (02:10:00)
- AI companies talk about def/acc more than they fund it (02:19:52)
- Can you build a profitable business solving this problem? (02:26:32)
- This doesn't have to interfere with useful science (much) (02:30:56)
- What are the best low-tech interventions? (02:33:01)
- Richard's top request for AI companies (02:37:59)
- Grok shows governments lack many legal levers (02:53:17)
- Best ways listeners can help fix AI-Bio (02:56:24)
- We might end all contagious disease in 20 years (03:03:37)
Video and audio editing: Dominic Armstrong, Milo McGuire, Luke Monsour, and Simon Monsour
Music: CORBIT
Camera operator: Jeremy Chevillotte
Transcripts and web: Elizabeth Cox and Katy Moore


