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​By Emmanuel Thomas l Tuesday, Dec. 23.25

 

​FORGET rockets to Mars or buying social media apps. The new ultimate billionaire ego-trip isn’t a yacht—it’s a small army of mini-mes.

 

​The fertility industry is currently a Wild West. We have laws about how many fish you can catch in a pond, yet a billionaire can “over-fish” the human gene pool with zero oversight. It’s time for the regulators to step in. If we don’t set limits on these “super-donors” now, we’re not building a better future—we’re just living in Pavel Durov’s petri dish

​Telegram boss Pavel Durov’s latest boast that he’s fathered 100 children through sperm donation, coupled with his “free IVF” giveaway, isn’t just a quirky bit of tech-bro philanthropy.

It’s a chilling glimpse into a world where the ultra-wealthy treat human genetics like a software update.

​​Durov frames his “seed-spreading” as a “civic duty,” claiming he wants to help families by sharing his “high-quality” DNA.

Let’s call it what it is: The Billionaire God Complex.

​There is a staggering arrogance in believing that because you built a messaging app, the world is crying out for 100 more versions of your chin and your IQ.

It’s the ultimate narcissism—treating the next generation not as individuals, but as a “legacy project” to be scaled like a startup.

​​Beyond the ego, there is a very real, very scary biological risk.

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​Accidental Inbreeding: With 100+ children in 12 countries, many of whom are anonymous, what happens in 20 years when “Durov Baby A” meets “Durov Baby B” at a bar?

​The “Master Race” Trap: By offering free IVF only to those who use his sperm, Durov is essentially running a private eugenics programme.

We are moving toward a “designer baby” market where the poor are priced out and the rich get to copy-paste their own faces across the globe.

​Durov’s promise to leave his $17 billion fortune to his biological brood is perhaps the most cynical part of the deal.

He’s dangling a golden carrot in front of parents, turning a child’s birth into a lottery ticket.

​But a $17 billion inheritance is a poor substitute for a father.

These children aren’t being brought into the world to be loved; they are being created to be “assets” in a billionaire’s dynastic strategy.

​The fertility industry is currently a Wild West. We have laws about how many fish you can catch in a pond, yet a billionaire can “over-fish” the human gene pool with zero oversight.

​It’s time for the regulators to step in. If we don’t set limits on these “super-donors” now, we’re not building a better future—we’re just living in Pavel Durov’s petri dish.

​What do you think? Is Pavel a hero or a creep? Let us know!

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