Apr 26, 2026
Locus: Browser-Based Researcher Credential Verification for DNA Synthesis Screening
Jayani Srinivasan
Locus automates researcher credential verification for DNA synthesis screening by mapping ORCID publication profiles to NCBI taxonomy identifiers. A novel trajectory feature detects deliberate biological capability acquisition that static credential checks cannot capture.
Locus presents a browser-based tool for automating researcher credential verification in DNA synthesis screening by linking ORCID profiles to biological taxonomy . The core idea is relevant for AI-biosecurity but the current system is somewhat simplified. In practice, robust KYC-style verification would likely require richer and more diverse data sources beyond taxonomy alone. Also, it may struggle with edge cases such as generalist researchers, sparse publication records, or non-academic actors. That said, execution is good for a hackathon project, including the video demonstration.
The Chrome extension functions well and behaves as intended. Both the report and the demo video are clearly and professionally assembled. The concept of using ORCID and PubMed to automate KYC credential verification for DNA synthesis customers is reasonable, but it comes with notable limitations, many of which the report already acknowledges. In practice, this approach verifies only a narrow subset of customers (primarily academic researchers), who are also among the least likely groups to misuse synthetic DNA.
In academic environments, orders are often placed by lab managers or core facility staff who may have no publication record at all. For such cases, incorporating institutional email‑domain verification could strengthen the workflow. Additionally, individuals with only review, commentary, or perspective articles on the listed organisms, without any hands‑on research experience, would likely pass the current screening, which weakens its effectiveness.
The implementation also appears to misunderstand the split‑order problem. The issue is not when someone orders DNA fragments from multiple listed organisms; rather, it arises when a customer orders different segments of a gene or genome from the same listed organism in separate transactions.
Overall, this is a good and creative attempt with some novelty, but its impact is limited by the constraints of the proposed KYC solution relative to the broader challenge.
Cite this work
@misc {
title={
(HckPrj) Locus: Browser-Based Researcher Credential Verification for DNA Synthesis Screening
},
author={
Jayani Srinivasan
},
date={
4/26/26
},
organization={Apart Research},
note={Research submission to the research sprint hosted by Apart.},
howpublished={https://apartresearch.com}
}


