• The thing with 23andme and other DNA genealogy profilers is that a vast section of the population knew that it was a stupid and dangerous idea. Perhaps there was better awareness about it than about any other technical problem that plagues our society. Despite all that, the other section of the population decided to simply ignore the loud warnings and outcry and managed to get their genetic information leaked. Even worse, the leaked information doesn’t just affect them - it affects their relatives too. So potentially, a lot of people who didn’t like the tests also have their information leaked. Some people just won’t learn.

    • I totally agree in principle. Handing over your genetic information to shady 3rd parties is stupid. But how do you know it hasn’t happened without your knowledge or permission? Technology exists that can extract DNA from fingerprints (the PCR that was used for covid-19 tests). Meanwhile, how many blood tests do you get in a year? How do you know what happens with those samples?

  • 23andMe was always a product with a very small upside and absolutely massive downside. Best case scenario, it’s a neat little thing to learn about yourself. Worst case scenario, it’s a massive opportunity for discrimination and blackmail.

    Completely unrelated: for some reason, on kbin, the thumbnail for this article is the thumbnail for this youtube video, and that is a cooler thing than 23andMe by far.

  • Wojcicki (pronounced woh-JIS-key)

    What? She’s the daughter of:

    Stanley George Wojcicki (/ˌvuːɪˈtʃɪtski/ VOO-ih-CHITS-kee; born Stanisław Jerzy Wójcicki, Polish: [vujˈt͡ɕit͡skʲi]

    It’s curious to see how people modify the pronunciation, from Wikipedia:

    Susan Diane Wojcicki (/wʊˈtʃɪtski/ woo-CHITS-kee;

    Anne E. Wojcicki (/wuːˈtʃɪtski/ woo-CHITS-kee;

    …so each one pronounces it differently? 🧐