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by streb-lo
2380 days ago
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No, that's a bad analogy. Following someone is manpower intensive. A better analogy would be sending someone to observe your hair color -- do you mind if that's public? As the value of DNA increases, people will collect it. Restaurants, washrooms, your employer, airlines, Uber etc. all could have trivially easy access to your DNA if they choose to. |
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Just because there is 'trivial' access to certain attributes of people doesn't mean that it's legal to capture those attributes, and even if you do capture them, they're worthless on the legal market. E.g. see SF ban on facial recognition.