Apr 26, 2026
Benchmarking Obfuscated Split Order Detection Methods
Prateek Garg, Phil Palmer, Adam Jones
🏆 3rd Place Winner + 🏆 Track 4 Winner: Benchtop Synthesizer Security
This project is trying to solve the problem of split-order screening, which is one of the biggest current vulnerabilities in the DNA synthesis screening. We present an open-source project for benchmarking and evaluating obfuscated split-order detection methods. Our central finding is that split-order detection is technically tractable even under realistic obfuscation.
Solid benchmark, and the minimap2 result is useful!
Two things I'd push on:
- The "tractability" headline feels stronger than what you actually showed. You proved single-pool detection works under your obfuscation set, which is great, but the discussion itself flags cross-vendor correlation and AI-designed variants as the real unsolved problems. The framing would land better if it matched the discussion!
- FPR on benign research pools is the missing piece for me. F1 is great but a synthesis company's first question is "how often does this flag legitimate orders." Adding that sweep would make the work way more useful to an actual deployer.
The Evo 2 angle in your future work is the one I'd love to see next.
This is a well-done hackathon-scale project: clearly and tightly scoped, well positioned relative to other work, succinctly but precisely described, and clearly useful to others.
My primary quibble is that the connection to benchtop synthesizers is not clear to me. Split orders are normally discussed as a way to avoid the screening done by commercial synthesis companies; AFAIK, benchtops don't (yet) have screening at all.
Cite this work
@misc {
title={
(HckPrj) Benchmarking Obfuscated Split Order Detection Methods
},
author={
Prateek Garg, Phil Palmer, Adam Jones
},
date={
4/26/26
},
organization={Apart Research},
note={Research submission to the research sprint hosted by Apart.},
howpublished={https://apartresearch.com}
}


