Board of Directors

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jordansparks
Site Admin
Posts: 263
Joined: Thu Aug 27, 2015 3:59 pm

Board of Directors

Post by jordansparks »

It's time for a Board of Directors. We are in a growth push, after all, and we don't want anyone to hesitate from signing up because of worries about succession. It's hard to know how growth will progress. I propose that we immediately open up to start adding directors. I don't think there should be a deadline or a target number. The only requirement is that the candidate be a paid member ($150/yr) of Sparks Brain Preservation by the time we vote. So basically, we wait until the right person or people come along, and then we grow the number of directors. I'm guessing we might eventually end up with about 8. More than that is a pain when trying to have a conference call. So if you are serious, this forum thread is the place to post your candidacy. If you want more privacy, there's a slight chance that we might turn on some forum features of our membership portal at some point. The portal is not quite live yet.
jordansparks
Site Admin
Posts: 263
Joined: Thu Aug 27, 2015 3:59 pm

Re: Board of Directors

Post by jordansparks »

After sleeping on it, I think it should actually be an "Advisory Board of Directors". If they had control over the daily business activities, it would just cause sclerosis and drama. The real reasons people want a Board of Directors is for succession and patient care. So we will write into the bylaws that this board will take control in the event that something happens to me. To give them the resources to ensure perpetual patient care, we will also need to build up the assets of the company. This would include getting the building paid off. And even though I waffle back and forth on the need for a Patient Care Fund, it might make sense from a marketing perspective.
AndyMcKenzie
Posts: 17
Joined: Thu Oct 05, 2023 7:25 am

Re: Board of Directors

Post by AndyMcKenzie »

I am hereby submitting my candidacy for the Advisory Board of Directors.

Here is some information about me. I have been interested in brain preservation since college. I originally signed up for preservation with the Cryonics Institute in 2009, and later switched to Alcor. I then switched to Oregon Cryonics (now Sparks Brain Preservation) in 2019, when I was living in New York City.

Over the years, I have read a lot of content about the topic online. For example, I read all of Mike Darwin's blog, and I participated in his Cryonics Intelligence Test as "Synaptic": http://chronopause.com/chronopause.com/ ... index.html. It's interesting that Jordan was one of the few other respondents.

I was also a volunteer for the Brain Preservation Foundation, starting from 2014. When aldehyde-stabilized cryopreservation was going to win the Brain Preservation Foundation prize, I began to look in-depth into the molecular effects of aldehydes. I eventually decided that aldehyde crosslinks seem extremely unlikely to destroy any important molecular information. This research led to the review that I wrote about the molecular effects of glutaraldehyde: https://osf.io/preprints/osf/8zd4e_v1. Along with the high-quality structural preservation that aldehyde methods can achieve under a range of circumstances, this led me to my current belief, which is that aldehyde-based preservation is clearly the best current option for structural brain preservation.

After completing an MD/PhD program at Mount Sinai, during my residency and post-doc, I did more research in a brain bank. This made me even more interested in Oregon Cryonics, because the aldehyde methods they used were so similar to what is used in conventional neuroscience research and brain banks. Eventually, I was beyond thrilled when Jordan offered me a position to do research here, which I started in July 2023.

The past couple of years have been a whirlwind. Time goes by fast. I hope that we have done some useful research. And I believe that our current ability to preserve the structure of whole human brains is the best in the world. But we aren't at all satisfied. We are just getting started and still have a ton of research work to do to optimize our methods. I personally won't be satisfied until we have a very reliable (>99% probability) option for preserving the important structures across the entire human brain, verified by ultrastructural imaging, ideally under realistic, less-than-ideal circumstances, for an accessible price. I'm not sure if we will ever achieve that, but we will try to make progress towards it.

I am highly committed to seeing this organization survive and thrive. I believe that one of the most important things that posterity will judge me on is whether or not the preserved patients that I help care for have a chance to live on in the future. I take that seriously. Long-term preservation and organizational survival is a key component of it. That's why I want to be on the Advisory Board of Directors, to help steer the organization over the long-term in a direction which gives our patients the highest probability chance of being revived in the future, if that ever becomes possible, and which gives our members the highest quality preservation, if they ever need these services.

In addition to my medical and scientific experience, I also have some governance experience as a director of Apex Neuroscience. I have a collaborative approach and will strive to listen to the other board members and take their opinions seriously. I want to note as well that if the Advisory Board of Directors discusses my own employment or compensation, then I would of course recuse myself from that discussion or vote. Thanks for reading this.
Mati_Roy
Posts: 31
Joined: Fri Jan 11, 2019 5:42 pm

Re: Board of Directors

Post by Mati_Roy »

I am hereby submitting my candidacy for the Advisory Board of Directors.

I learned about cryonics in 2013. I heard about real-world cryonics before ever hearing about the concept in fiction. I became an Alcor member in 2016.

In 2018, I went to the Teens and Twenties Cryonics Gathering, and went from having met only a few people signed up for cryoncis to meeting almost a hundred during that summer. After that gathering, me and some people I had just met went for a road trip across North America to visit most cryonics organizations as well as meet various local groups. Organizations were Osiris, Alcor, Suspended Animation, Critical Care Research, TransTime, OregonCryo (previous name), and LifeSpan Society.

I joined the board of directors of Critical Care Research at its foundation in 2019, and was interim CEO in 2021. I joined the board of trustees of Stasis Foundation at its foundation in 2021–the organization behind the Timeship project. I'm on the Alcor Trust Committee, and will be serving as a trustee for the trust of certain cryonics members once/if they get cryopreserved. I have some writings on cryonics on my website: https://matiroy.com/important.html#cryonics. I notably wrote the timeline of brain preservation: https://timelines.issarice.com/wiki/Tim ... eservation. I regularly post about cryonics on https://x.com/matiroy (and have over 17k followers).

I considered doing a career in brain preservation, but ended up going into AI instead (https://www.linkedin.com/in/matiroy/). There are 2 main problems you can only solve before Superintelligence: 1) setting up the right initial conditions for superintelligence, and 2) preserving information, most importantly, people. That’s what I focus on.

In 2014, I watched Roen Horn’s interview with Jordan Sparks (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hXJjwmlCDU4; I had left a comment), and became a fan. In 2018, I met with Jordan Sparks in person during my tour of OregonCryo. I’ve been really impressed with Jordan’s dedication, critical thinking, and his overall approach to brain preservation. I think it’s an extremely valuable organization to have in the brain preservation ecosystem.

I first interacted with Andy in 2019, and I’ve also been a big fan of his dedication, work, and approach to brain preservation. I was so glad when he joined Sparks Brain Preservation.

I’ve been engaging with this organization for a while (Forum—I made 29 posts since Jan 11, 2019, which is 5.87% of all posts—, and direct communication), trying to support it however I can, as well as referring it to anyone for whom it’s been the right fit, and would love to continue supporing this organization through this role.
Logan5000
Posts: 1
Joined: Tue Nov 11, 2025 2:42 pm

Re: Board of Directors

Post by Logan5000 »

I am hereby submitting my candidacy for the Advisory Board of Directors.

I am a neuroscientists and psychiatrist. I have been interested in brain preservation for many years and have been active with the Brain Preservation Foundation (BPF) for many years (I became an advisor in 2014). I met Andy McKenzie at the BPF when he was still a medical student and have worked with him on and off since then. Andy introduced me to the Sparks Brain Preservation and I have just become a member (November 2025).

I have been a long advocate for brain preservation:
"The Ethics of Exponential Life Extension through Brain Preservation". https://jetpress.org/v26.1/cerullo.htm

And I have also been involved in the scientific and philosophical debate on whether brain preservation would preserve identity and consciousness:
Uploading and Branching Identity - https://www.researchgate.net/publicatio ... g_Identity
The Problem with Phi: A Critique of Integrated Information Theory - https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC4574706/
chasedenecke
Posts: 1
Joined: Wed Nov 12, 2025 6:11 pm

Re: Board of Directors

Post by chasedenecke »

I am hereby submitting my candidacy for the Advisory Board of Directors.

My background is perhaps somewhat different from others who have done direct work in the field of cryonics or organ preservation. I've been interested in preventing death and preserving brains for many years, but my main professional focus has been in the genetics field where I've focused on embryo selection and gene editing.

I read Aubrey de Grey's book "Ending Aging" about a decade ago and realized just how terrible death is. Though I briefly considered working on aging directly, I decided the genetics field was more neglected and a more important use of my time.

Brain preservation seems like a very worthwhile endeavor to me because it is the one way to help those of us who are too old for longevity escape velocity make it to a (hopefully) brighter and more medically advanced future.

In the same way that the Herculaneum is now being deciphered using tools that were almost unimaginable to those who first uncovered it, so too might brains preserved today be recovered and uploaded in a future using technology that is hard to imagine now.

I'd like to do what I can to help this endeavor, hence my interest in joining the board.
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