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"description": "Nvidia has shipped the first commercially licensed surgical AI brain to robot makers. Jazz Pharmaceuticals has committed up to $2.46 billion and Merck up to $510 million to two AI antibody platforms. BARDA has closed its window on AI antivirals. The substrate of medicine has been quietly outsourced.",
"path": "/synthetic-minds-surgery-drugs-and-biosecurity-share-the-same-brain/",
"publishedAt": "2026-06-18T11:37:49.000Z",
"site": "https://www.thedigitalspeaker.com",
"tags": [
"Futurwise",
"Intelligence Age Scorecard!",
"Pharma Has Rented Its Discovery Lab To AI",
"GR00T-H-N1.7",
"500 hours",
"$2.46 billion to AbCellera's AI",
"a $510 million pact",
"AI antivirals",
"Intelligence Age Scorecard",
"you can sign up here"
],
"textContent": "_The Synthetic Minds newsletter offers short daily insights to get you thinking. If you enjoy it, please forward. All signals are powered by_ Futurwise_. If you need more insights, subscribe to Futurwise and**get 25% off** for the first three months!_\n\n**_I have just launched the_** Intelligence Age Scorecard!**_It will help you understand how ready your organization is for the Intelligence Age._**\n\n_**Today’s topic:** Health_\n\n* * *\n\n### Pharma Has Rented Its Discovery Lab To AI\n\nA chip company has shipped the AI brain that controls a surgical robot. Two of the world's largest drug makers have rented the AI brain that designs their next cancer drugs.\n\nSurgery, drug discovery, and biosecurity are no longer different industries. They are renting the same brain from a handful of suppliers.\n\n * Nvidia has shipped GR00T-H-N1.7: the first surgical AI model any robot maker can legally deploy. It was trained on 770 hours of operating-room video from Johns Hopkins, Stanford, Northwell, and the robot makers themselves.\n * CMR Surgical donated close to 500 hours of its own Versius procedures. Every competitor can download what CMR's data trained.\n * Jazz Pharmaceuticals has committed up to $2.46 billion to AbCellera's AI to discover cancer drugs Jazz does not yet have.\n * Merck has signed a $510 million pact with Protillion for the same outsourced discovery engine, a chip that designs proteins by the million.\n * BARDA, the US biosecurity buyer, has done the same for AI antivirals against Ebola and Marburg.\n\n\n\nThat is the technology story. Here is the signal.\n\nThe data moat in surgical robotics did not exist six months ago. Every robot maker treated its operating-room video as competitive advantage. CMR has donated 500 hours to Nvidia's open library ; the advantage has migrated to whichever competitor can clear FDA fastest.\n\nThe same migration has happened at the molecule layer. Two of the world's largest drug makers have rented their antibody discovery to AI platforms in two days.\n\nThe industry no longer runs this work in-house. It rents access from suppliers it does not own.\n\nThe argument that medicine had split into two opposite product economics for the same aging body named the customer. The substrate beneath them has been named too: a commercially licensed AI brain that the robot maker, the pharma industry, and the federal biosecurity office all rent from one thin supplier base.\n\nThe last time a substrate change of this size moved through a sector, the internet rewrote the cost structure of every advertiser and retailer. The companies that lost did not lose to better technology. They lost because their differentiation moved while they kept investing in the old moat.\n\nThe question your board should debate is no longer which AI vendor to pilot. It is whether the proprietary asset your product depends on, the dataset, the discovery lab, the device IP, has become a sidewalk in competitors' shared infrastructure.\n\nThe brain that controls surgery, the brain that designs drugs, and the brain that defends a country against pandemics share three suppliers. Decide who owns yours before the lease comes due.\n\n* * *\n\n## The Intelligence Age Scorecard\n\nThe substrate of medicine, surgical-robot control, antibody discovery, and federal biosecurity procurement, has been quietly rented from a thin AI supplier base in a single window. Are you still watching which AI vendor to pilot, or already verifying whether the data and IP your medical product depends on has become a sidewalk in your competitors' shared infrastructure?\n\nTake the Intelligence Age Scorecard to benchmark your readiness for the next two quarters, and the next five years.\n\n* * *\n\nIf this newsletter was forwarded to you, you can sign up here.\n\nThank you.\nMark",
"title": "Synthetic Minds | Surgery, Drugs and Biosecurity Share the Same Brain",
"updatedAt": "2026-06-18T11:45:25.237Z"
}