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by homosaur
4625 days ago
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I think this company is interesting but am disturbed by every time I read an article about them, they just laugh off privacy concerns. It's not 2013 I'm worried about with someone accessing this data, it's 2023. Says Andy Page: "I view this as a tidal wave of inevitable data and a trend in the marketplace. The technology is available; the price point is decreasing. There are so many organizations and engineers and companies that are focused on this." Of course you see it as a trend, or at least your pocketbook depends on it being one. The fact that he isn't responding with all the robust steps they do to protect data leads me to believe there's not enough concern at this company for privacy to trust them. Maybe that's okay when it's yet another SV social bullcrap site, but for medicine? Nah. |
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The cavalier attitude towards privacy that pervades the field of genomics is deeply troubling to me. From the article: "23andMe's privacy statement clearly states that it collects a person's genetic, registration, web browsing, and self-reported information. The company can share its data with third parties '[after] it has been stripped of Registration Information and combined with data from a number of other users sufficient to minimize the possibility of exposing individual-level information while still providing scientific evidence.'"
Having read that, consider that "a team of geneticists reported Thursday in the journal Science that it was able to figure out the names of people who had donated their DNA to research -- even though test subjects' identities were stripped from their genomic data." (Source: http://articles.latimes.com/2013/jan/18/science/la-sci-sn-ge...)
Anne Wojcicki, co-founder of 23andme, is married to Google co-founder Sergey Brin. It doesn't seem entirely implausible that the two companies could have joint business ventures down the road. I wonder how valuable "anonymized" genomic sequences would be to advertisers.