CRISPR gene editing can hold great potentiality of healing the people who may need it. One ethical use of the technology is that this can help treat genetic diseases and greatly increase human health and life expectancy. One problem with it is the off-target effects. The potentiality of a harmful effect can lead to severe consequences and these harmful effects can also have a chance to harm the persons children. These harmful off-target effects can be created accidentally, but they can also be created purposefully. If a person who was irresponsible got a hold of CRISPR systems then they could use this technology for malicious reasons. A person with these reasons could permanently hurt someone and their future children/bloodline. This is considered unethical since the person who is hurt could lose the ability to do what they wish with their life in the future, for instance a person who enjoys running could lose the ability to walk to do malicious behavior of others, and this could affect this persons entire lineage from there on. Another unethical use is that a person could steal their DNA data and then impersonate them in order to steal more information or even sell their DNA data on the black market. Another unethical consideration of CRISPR gene editing is that a hacker could create a strand of DNA that, when read by a computer, is able to hack into their computer and can steal people’s data or destroy the technology it infects.