I've never understood the fear of being tracked. Like what's so special in your life that it matters if you're being tracked.
Also, I ordered a 23&me DNA kit and had some conspiracy theory friends think I'm crazy "they're gonna have your DNA...you don't know what they'll do with it"
Yeah so? They can do whatever they want with it lol it doesn't effect me in any way.
The concern in the US is that they would sell it to health insurance providers. They have your genetic code and can see the likelihood of you developing various medical conditions, and "adjust" your premiums accordingly.
The more conspiracy minded would suggest that by cross referencing your results with that of your close relations they could build a profile across your entire extended family, and then adjust a lot of people's premiums.
I mean... it seems unlikely that 23&me's primary business model is not based on "one and done" family trees.
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I've never understood the fear of being tracked. Like what's so special in your life that it matters if you're being tracked.
Also, I ordered a 23&me DNA kit and had some conspiracy theory friends think I'm crazy "they're gonna have your DNA...you don't know what they'll do with it"
Yeah so? They can do whatever they want with it lol it doesn't effect me in any way.
Is 23&me the Mormon run company?
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Captain James P. DeCOSTE, CD, 18 Sep 1993
23andMe is a commercial enterprise. Its business model depends on packaging and reselling its customers’ genetic data and other information. Earlier this year, 23andMe announced the first two of a number of deals with pharmaceutical and biotech corporations, including some of the largest in those sectors.
Handing over genetic, health and personal information to companies like 23andMe – and paying them for the privilege – isn’t the best way to advance science.
Is that what purchasers of the company’s spit kits had in mind when they read the consent document that begins, “23andMe aims to make and support scientific discoveries and publish those discoveries in scientific journals?”
But once you part with your genetic information, there can’t be guarantees of privacy and anonymity, as 23andMe’s consent document acknowledges. And while a 2008 law prohibits health insurance companies and employers from discrimination based on genetic information, the law does not cover disability, life or long-term care insurance. Breaches could affect not just you, but your relatives as well.
I've never understood the fear of being tracked. Like what's so special in your life that it matters if you're being tracked.
Also, I ordered a 23&me DNA kit and had some conspiracy theory friends think I'm crazy "they're gonna have your DNA...you don't know what they'll do with it"
Yeah so? They can do whatever they want with it lol it doesn't effect me in any way.
I find it funny that you are more worked up over a breathalyzer than you are for a company selling your DNA.
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Quote:
Originally Posted by calgaryblood
Looks like you'll need one long before I will. May I suggest deflection king?
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I've never understood the fear of being tracked. Like what's so special in your life that it matters if you're being tracked.
Also, I ordered a 23&me DNA kit and had some conspiracy theory friends think I'm crazy "they're gonna have your DNA...you don't know what they'll do with it"
Yeah so? They can do whatever they want with it lol it doesn't effect me in any way.
Wait, then you bring up 23 and me as an example of what not to worry about? And consider it a conspiracy theory? There's a lot of tracking that doesn't matter anymore if you want to participate in the online world, but 23 and me is a horrible example.
That could have massive implications as the years go by. Never give them your business.
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Wait, then you bring up 23 and me as an example of what not to worry about? And consider it a conspiracy theory? There's a lot of tracking that doesn't matter anymore if you want to participate in the online world, but 23 and me is a horrible example.
That could have massive implications as the years go by. Never give them your business.
Yeah, I wouldn’t never willingly give away a DNA sample to some company. Not only implications to the person who gave the sample, but their parents, siblings, children. Need to think a little bit about what the future may hold. “Remember when you said you has no family history or pre-existing conditions? Well 23&Me told you, did you forget? Coverage denied!
Not worth the risk for some small amount of entertainment value.
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Not sure how we got here in this thread, but I'll stay off topic too.
I'm sure I'm in the minority here, but I would also never give up DNA so my children could never implicated by law enforcement, through me. I have zero concern that they might ever be involved in any activity that would deem something like this necessary, but still nope.
23 and Me has been the subject of a few hacks, too. It's easy enough to ignore the email saying they've secretly recorded you through your webcam, but it would be a lot harder to ignore them having your DNA results, blackmailing you about telling your company you have a gene for early onset alzheimer's, or many other things that can be gleaned you may not want others knowing.
Wait, then you bring up 23 and me as an example of what not to worry about? And consider it a conspiracy theory? There's a lot of tracking that doesn't matter anymore if you want to participate in the online world, but 23 and me is a horrible example.
That could have massive implications as the years go by. Never give them your business.
Yeah honestly what's to worry about? They don't sell any information or give your information away so the insurance point is moot.
I've yet to see one point that makes sense to not do a DNA test.
I guess it could be hacked but no insurance company is buying hacked information. I just don't see the downside and yes a lot of it is conspiracy theories about them selling your information. They don't.
Did you miss the announcement posted after yours that they are?
That's all done anonymously and used for studies and to learn how to treat diseases. No personal information is sold and the anonymous information is for the betterment of society.
Also so many serial killers and murders have been solved by people posting their own DNA to other sites and I think it's all a positive.
People here in Toronto are getting their houses broken into and keys stolen. Cops (stupidly) even told people to leave your doors unlocked. Ridiculous.
I've seen people installing bollards too. My neighbor parks his ####ty minivan perpendicular behind his new GMC Sierra. Not a bad idea.
buy a $500 POS to box in your car lol...not a bad idea.
Car theft is a great risk/reward crime for a prospective criminal.
if you get caught, you do maybe 30 or 60 days. Hardly a deterrent. There's a minimum sentence of 6 months for a 3rd offence, which means you'll be out in 4. Theft of motor vehicle charges often get pled down to related offences with no mandatory sentence. Additionally, it's pretty hard to get a conviction for someone who is a passenger, rather than driver. There's decent money to be made.
Contrast that with robbing a corner store or a taxi driver with a weapon (easy 2+ years in prison) and it's a no brainer.
Just like trying to pickpocket someone on a bus or the LRT (little to no jail time for theft) vs hitting someone while trying to grab their purse (jail time for robbery)
Or contrast it to trying to make money from selling drugs (high jail sentences, sure to eventually get caught)
Or compared it to breaking into someone's house to steal (usually 2 years in jail or more)
If I was trying to make a living as a criminal, I would steal cars 100%. It's way smarter than dealing drugs and plus there's no violence involved, it doesn't attract high sentences.
Last edited by Johnny199r; 06-25-2024 at 02:48 PM.
I posted this news piece in the Federal Government thread given the Liberal party bail leniency changes. But pretty clear how bad it's gotten as a result.
Nearly half of the 124 people arrested by Ontario’s carjacking task force were out on bail, police say, with many being released again after their latest arrest.
The Provincial Carjacking Joint Task Force, which operated from September 2023 until March, saw 124 arrests made and 749 criminal charges laid, police said.
“The stats are rather staggering,” he said.
“The lack of potential consequences might be a driving factor as well. And frankly our court system, rightly so, gives gives people second chances, and sometimes third and fourth chances. …
“Thankfully in this country, people are given a second chance. But when it’s when it’s multiple times, it is frustrating, for sure.”