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Ask HN: Have you ever cloned a cat?

35 points| arthurcolle | 8 days ago

I see it'll cost about 60K

Getting the genetic material seems trivial.

Can anyone recommend a service?

43 comments

order

mkl|8 days ago

Maybe get a new cat and donate $60k to an animal shelter?

I guess the fact of such services existing and competing drives forward and funds genetics research, so from that point of view I'm glad they exist, but it seems like a strange way to spend so much money.

TheChaplain|8 days ago

It is not strange if you ever had a pet that meant a lot to you.

I know people who have grieved for months after losing their cat and their dog. Their connection was much more than "just a pet", it became family and as important as a child, sibling or parent.

Cloning is of course not guarantee the pet will be exactly as the original, but if there's a chance it will have similar personality I can very much understand the willingness to pay for it.

NedF|8 days ago

[deleted]

Jordan-117|8 days ago

I could maybe see the worth of this if it was a $60k medical bill to save a dying cat. But even a successful clone will only be physically identical, not behaviorally. And it feels like the resemblance would just magnify all the differences.

I love cats and dogs dearly, so I don't say this lightly, but please just get a new cat (even the same breed!) and save the money for a worthier cause.

gyomu|8 days ago

Would it actually be physically identical? Don't certain characteristics like spots/stripes/etc have some amount of variance due to embryo development?

Sharlin|8 days ago

Anyone with a spare 60K who would use it to clone a cat rather than to improve the lifes of existing cats (donating to local shelters, TNR programs, etc) hardly deserves to have a cat.

xyzsparetimexyz|8 days ago

I know everyone on this site is a Netflix SRE making $450k a year but are people really spending their money on cloning their pets??

mk89|8 days ago

There are people leaving millions of $ as inheritance to their pets, I am not surprised that someone tries to clone someone they love/loved...

FlingPoo|8 days ago

There’s also something psychologically risky about cloning:

If the new cat behaves differently (which it will), you’re forced into one of two painful positions:

“This isn’t really them.” “Why aren’t you like you used to be?”

That comparison can prevent the new animal from being accepted as its own being.

KaiserPro|8 days ago

you wouldn't download a cat

[00s heavy electric music intensifies]

gpt5|8 days ago

Interestingly, the most cloned animal in the world are horses [1].

Given how popular (and expensive) it is for horses, it likely delivers on the results people are looking for. Note that current cloning techniques don't clone the mitochondria, which represents 1%-2% of the genome.

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Horse_cloning

swiftcoder|7 days ago

Horses are also orders of magnitude more valuable (financially) than cats. Nobody is paying $70 million for a cat for their breeding program...

swiftcoder|8 days ago

> I see it'll cost about 60K

It also only has a ~30% success rate, so it might be in the ballpark of $200K to get a living clone

klez|8 days ago

I once made a clone of cat(1), making sure not to include the -v option because it's considered harmful.

Seriously, though, why are you asking? Was there some breakthrough in biology recently that made it feasible and available?

Or are we actually talking about cat(1)?

derektank|8 days ago

Commercial off the shelf animal cloning for pets and animal husbandry has been around for well over a decade at this point.

fragmede|8 days ago

My clone of cat(1) is called redpanda(no manual) that includes kitty terminal graphics protocol support so I can do `cat nyan.png` and the png rendered to the terminal I'm using (ghostty) instead of cat spewing a bunch of garbage.

https://github.com/fragmede/redpanda

ktpsns|8 days ago

cat &

A UNIX fork is actually a clone of the process, in the first place.

(SCNR)

Traubenfuchs|8 days ago

Yes, they looked the same, but behaved completely differently…

Wasted money.

tetha|8 days ago

You paid money to get to the Sematary? I think you may have been scammed by the locals.

potatie|8 days ago

If you do, would be interesting to see how much of the same behaviour is shown by the new cat so do share

binaryturtle|8 days ago

I have no idea what genetic material is, but cloning a `cat` is very easy, the instructions in German are very clear: "Nie Kaffee verwenden, sondern immer `tee`!" :) I'm also not sure why it costs `60K` for you? Only `14,320` here.

eimrine|8 days ago

Cloning vegetables is way simpler, I use to clone my potatoes every year.

Zealotux|8 days ago

I understand why this post would get flagged but I love the question, it never came to my mind how logical it would be for someone to clone their beloved pet.

potatie|8 days ago

If you do, would be interesting to see how much of the same behaviour is displayed by the new cat so do share

bertylicious|8 days ago

Yes, I have and no there aren't any services, because it's illegal almost everywhere. But if you give me the 60k, I'll write a wikihow for it.