By Jay
Fusion
– When companies like Ancestry.com and 23andMe first invited people to
send in their DNA for genealogy tracing and medical diagnostic tests,
privacy advocates warned
about the creation of giant genetic databases that might one day be
used against participants by law enforcement. DNA, after all, can be a
key to solving crimes. It “has serious information about you and your
family,” genetic privacy advocate Jeremy Gruber told me back in 2010 when such services were just getting popular.
Now, five years later, when 23andMe and Ancestry
both have over a million customers, those warnings are looking
prescient. “Your relative’s DNA could turn you into a suspect,” warns Wired, writing about a case from earlier this year, in which New Orleans filmmaker Michael Usry became a suspect in an unsolved murder case
after cops did a familial genetic search using semen collected in 1996.
The cops searched an Ancestry.com database and got a familial match to a
saliva sample Usry’s father had given years earlier. Usry was
ultimately determined to be innocent and the Electronic Frontier
Foundation called it a “wild goose chase”
that demonstrated “the very real threats to privacy and civil liberties
posed by law enforcement access to private genetic databases.”
If the idea of investigators poking through your DNA freaks you out, both Ancestry.com
and 23andMe have options to delete your information with the sites.
23andMe says it will delete information within 30 days upon request.
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