I'm not sure exactly what would count here. But right now the way to do embryo selection is to bully one of the companies that do pgt testing into giving them the raw dna of your embryo (it's in theory your own medical data that you have a right to, which is under HIPPA, but some companies make it very difficult or refuse), and then send that data to some other company.
Chatgpt recommended this phrasing, which seems pretty good:
A federal law or regulation explicitly prohibiting or significantly restricting the right of individuals to access or transfer raw genetic data from embryos for use in embryo selection.
State-level laws or regulations explicitly prohibiting or significantly restricting individuals from obtaining or sharing raw genetic embryo data for the purpose of embryo selection in states representing at least 70% of the US population.
A binding court decision at a federal appellate level or above that establishes a precedent severely restricting or banning access to or transfer of raw genetic embryo data specifically for embryo selection purposes.
"Significant restrictions" specifically include, but are not limited to:
Removing or restricting the legal right to access or own embryo genetic data.
Explicit prohibitions on sending embryo genetic data to third-party analysis providers.
Requiring direct medical oversight in a manner designed specifically to prevent private embryo selection processes using raw genetic data.
This market resolves NO if none of the above conditions have been met by January 1, 2028.
Restrictions on general privacy or genetic testing without explicit targeting of embryo selection do not count.General regulations about IVF safety, quality of medical labs, or standard healthcare privacy rules that do not specifically target embryo selection or genetic data ownership do not count.
Legal actions limited only to specific companies or isolated cases without setting broader precedent or creating widespread policy changes do not count.