| Generally, being pseudo-anonymous is what allows open and free discussion (but lots of vitriol too). While genetic information is not yet understood well enough by masses to be abused in stereotyping and rejecting and — indeed — "cancelling", there is a huge potential to do so. This especially holds true for gender, racial, national differentiation, genetic disease potential and health profiling — all accessible through a full genome (even if some of the indicators are not with 100% confidence). Lots of this can also be used to start linking genome data to an actual person (helped with data from other contexts), which is where it starts to become risky according to known risk profiles. Unsurprisingly, someone who is likely a white male (I could have checked using your genome too, but loading up your profile above confirms that) with "no credible genetic risk factors" is a lot less concerned about opening up their genome to the public: you are unlikely to get discriminated against. With that said, even you can get potentially ignored for your privilege: even I just engaged in that — somewhat discounting a part of your experience/claim because you are a white male. Part of that is also education: your extensive experience in the field allows you to make an educated choice. Many can't attain that much knowledge before they decide whether to share their genome or not. This opens up the question similar to that entire face recognition fiasco — how will unprivileged be affected by the privileged being mostly used to train the models on and do research on? So the question is how do we ensure enough anonymity to make everyone happy to contribute to the world knowledge, but reduce chances of linking data back to actual people? I know nebula.org is doing something of the sort (though mostly just guaranteeing that they will remove the data at your request, and not share it without your permission), but we could have one genome produce a bunch of part-genomes, still allowing causation/correlation research, but none of them having the full picture. That would disable some of the groundwork research (is there a correlation/causation only visible in the full genome or larger part of it?), so it's a tricky balance to find. And finally, I always like to make this choice a bit personal: how would you feel about your child being linked to a criminal case due to your genome being publicly available? |