• @bionicjoey@lemmy.ca
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    96 months ago

    This seems like corporate whitewashing of all the insidious things they will actually sell user data for. Like “yeah we sell user data but only so we can make a cure for cancer” meanwhile they are selling it to organizations that are building biometric monitoring databases straight out of Minority Report.

  • @Fullest@sh.itjust.works
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    66 months ago

    This isn’t even new. Why are we posting things from over two years ago and treating it like some sort of revelation?

  • FoundTheVegan
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    06 months ago

    Everyone who thinks this is legitimately bad. I ask, what do you think of AI art data sets? Sometimes, to make something new you have to have mass amount of data to start with.

    I think people who paid to have a service, checked a box for their sample to be used for research, and the research is to cure disease, have significantly lower reason to be upset than an artist who used Twitter to upload their work and had said work used as a data set to train a product that will try to make their career even MORE financially immposible.

    Boohoo. You signed up for a good cause. Get over it.

    • @duplexsystem@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      16 months ago

      Here’s the difference, an artist can make more art. You cannot change your DNA. If someone steals some of your art it’s not the end of the world. You can make more. If someone has your DNA, you can’t change it. Once its out there that’s it. More over having someone’s DNA can give you significant insight into into just the person whose DNA you have but also their parents and their children.

      • FoundTheVegan
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        06 months ago

        Once its out there that’s it.

        But the subject put it out themslevss. More over, they paid for it be used. No one was tricked, captured or coerced in to giving their DNA.

        As opposed to an artist who is promoting themselves and their craft, used without their knowledge to replicate their work.

        • WalrusDragonOnABike
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          16 months ago

          By biological father was an anonymous sperm donor before the technology to sequence a person’s DNA for under 10 billion dollars was a thing. They did not give their DNA to ancestry. Their sister did, having no clue that her brother had donated. Yet ancestry has matched her to several nieces and nephews, outing her brother’s history to his sister and the children who were never supposed to have access to that info. It’s not just your own information.

          Similarly, one of my half siblings suddenly found out that his dad wasn’t his birth dad.

          Anyways, he happens to be cool with the fact that he suddenly had contact with offspring who weren’t supposed to know who he was.

          But our DNA is interconnected. It doesn’t just belong to one person.

          • @poppy@lemm.ee
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            06 months ago

            Happier version of your story:

            My dad an I both did 23 and Me. He made sure I knew he had done sperm donation before I met my mother just in case something came up. Well, it did! I have two half siblings from his donations! I think it’s cool, and I think he’s happy to know he helped two families have a child.

            • WalrusDragonOnABike
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              16 months ago

              I have a lot of half-siblings. One set of two, one set of 3 (I’ve only met the oldest), one only child, there’s me and my two full siblings, and the donor’s actual child. There’s more out there. Another we matched with their child, but I don’t think we even know their name. Been pretty cool meeting all of them and the donor. Its actually been a happy experience, but one certain people had no choice in making.

  • @dangblingus@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    -26 months ago

    What’s funny to me about these DNA testing companies, isn’t the obvious data collection ploy, but the customers who feel compelled to buy the service. So the fuck what you’re 13% Cherokee and 27% Dutch and 5% Eastern African? Try developing a personality or interests.

    • @Occamsrazer@lemdro.id
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      -16 months ago

      Too many people in the world crave an identity that is original enough to be interesting, but not so original that it can’t be quantified or defined by accepted or understood identity templates. They need to be able to put a name to their identity so they can talk about it.