"The key thing about your genetic data ... it is uniquely yours. It identifies you, so if you are going to entrust it to a company, you should try to understand what the consequences are,” said Jennifer King, director of consumer privacy at Stanford Law School’s Center for Internet and Society, whose research on the issue and interviews with individuals shows a lack of consumer knowledge.
Veritas Genetics CEO Mirza Cifric said "we see potential value in saving genetic data so that they can engage with pharmaceutical companies to develop drugs [but] [o]ur primary interest is unlocking secrets that exist in the genome."
Darnovsky, executive director at the Center for Genetics and Society, noted that in the Golden State Killer case, law enforcement found their way to the suspect by using DNA from relatives. She said there is a lesson in this for consumers. “When you provide your genetic information to a DNA testing company, you are also providing information about those related to you — including distant cousins."
quotes from https://www.cnbc.com/2018/06/16/5-biggest-risks-of-sharing-dna-with-consumer-genetic-testing-companies.html
We consider covid19 was a propaganda marketing campaign designed to a) put people into compliance and b) screw up the economy.
But what about c) mapping the genome sequence of the world.
(post is archived)