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My first reaction on seeing 23andMe and its workalikes was "why the flying fuck would I want to give my DNA information to a corporate entity in this world of ubiquitous corporate surveillance!?"
It's nice to have cynicism vindicated. Again.
I don't understand the unforeseen ramifications he's talking about for your entire family. I understand the main fear about uncertainty regarding what happens to the data, which is likely sold to the pharmaceutical sector or Institutions. However, what's the point? I don't support such companies, but it seems like there's a lot of fearmongering without much substance. It's not that different from an ISP or any company collecting data to sell to other companies or institutions. No one expected anything different, and those who did are likely just consumers who don't care about these issues at the end of the day.
"It's not that different from this thing that's done that's already proven time and again to be an utter shitshow, so we should permit this new thing too!"
I'm beginning to see how COVID-19 killed a million Americans. "It's not that different from the flu, so we shouldn't worry."
Just for clarification - my comparison was between the business models of an ISP and a DNA company - having a primary product sold to the consumer which is then used to collect and accumulate data, and subsequently making money by selling this data. It was not my intention to "rate" or value them against each other or to trivialize one. This business model is well-known and should not be unexpected from a company in today's data-driven economy.
The words after "company" in your final sentence are the problem.