Google Inc announced on Wednesday it was launching a new company focused on health and well-being, and hinted at cooperation with longtime rival Apple Inc in the venture.
A Google statement said the company, Calico, would put a particular focus on “the challenge of ageing and associated diseases.”
Arthur Levinson, chairman and former chief executive of biotech firm Genentech and chairman of Apple, is to be Calico chief executive and a founding investor.
Levinson will remain chairman of Genentech and a director of Hoffmann-La Roche, as well as chairman of Apple, Google said.
Time magazine, which interviewed Google chief executive Larry Page ahead of the announcement, said the details of the project were not yet clear, but that it is likely to use its data-processing to shed new light on age-related maladies.
On Google+, Page acknowledged people may be surprised at the effort.
“OK ... so you’re probably thinking wow. That’s a lot different from what Google does today. And you’re right. But as we explained in our first letter to shareholders, there’s tremendous potential for technology more generally to improve people’s lives,” he wrote. “So don’t be surprised if we invest in projects that seem strange or speculative compared with our existing Internet businesses. And please remember that new investments like this are very small by comparison to our core business.”
He said that the venture is still in its “very early days, so there’s not much more to share yet.”
Page told Time — for a cover story titled “Can Google Solve Death?” — the effort would include innovative thinking, not just ways to fight cancer.
“One of the things I thought was amazing is that if you solve cancer, you’d add about three years to people’s average life expectancy,” Page told the magazine. “We think of solving cancer as this huge thing that’ll totally change the world. But when you really take a step back and look at it, yeah, there are many, many tragic cases of cancer, and it’s very, very sad, but in the aggregate, it’s not as big an advance as you might think.”
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