I think there is a miscommunication here.
I am concerned about this device, and consider it dangerous, because of what it represents, not necessarily it being intrinsically dangerous.
EG, it represents the impetus of disparate market forces converging on very inexpensive synthetic biology synthesis. (Microsoft is a software company, and the notion that you could integrate GAN based AI into the mix, along with improvements in protein fold prediction and function, gives rise to a potential (and highly desirable by industry) future in which the need for specialist synthetic biochemists becomes lower and lower, and the barrier to entry becomes more political than logistical or economical.
What I find scary, is that a device for encoding DNA without human oversight is being skunkworked, at a "reasonably" affordable one-off price, (10k) and people are uncaring or unconcerned about the implications of these market trajectories.
Similar kind of dangerous outcome that has already come to pass:
"Why would you be concerned about VoIP tech? Why would you be concerned about falling prices to make phone calls?"
Oh, No reason. (As the cost barrier goes down, the incentive to become a bad actor increases, as there is no cost, and significant areas for gain. The same would be true of vastly expanded synthetic bio tech, with computer assisted synthesis and integration. The costs associated would cease being significant barriers against malicious actors, as their perceived gains would only grow. Eventually, like with Robocalls, the notion of NOT doing the bad things would become laughably naive. The time to make a stink about it is BEFORE the markets can reach unstoppable momentum-- EG, right now.)