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by dahart
631 days ago
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There is a list of reasons several agencies in US government like the FBI collects DNA from some people, but they don’t have DNA for all US citizens and I don’t expect the government to have my DNA. What nefarious purposes do you imagine the government has? Is matching suspected criminals against the crime database a nefarious purpose? Would you care if 23AndMe sold your DNA & analysis to a private for-profit medical insurance data provider who could recommend hiking your price or denying coverage, based on your genetic markers, without having to tell the insurance company why and without having to share your DNA? This is one of the private business nefarious purposes I worry about, based on having a friend who worked in credit processing saying that they were looking for legal ways to sell purchasing habits to medical insurance companies. |
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I’ve done time with an individual who got (I believe) wrongfully convicted due to genetic genealogy. A lay jury watches Law and Order, hear “DNA”, and will proverbially buy the Brooklyn Bridge from prosecutors.
Get too unpopular with those in power, and maybe your DNA can be traced to a shell casing for an unsolved assassination a continent away from you.
Annie Dookhan wrongfully convicted thousands upon thousands upon her doctored drug tests. Someone just like her could do it to you or someone else with your DNA test.
There are laws against insurers citing preexisting conditions to deny coverage, and most DNA is equivocal as to whether you’ll develop expensive maladies. So that doesn’t worry me either.