Posted on 10/12/2018 9:58:52 AM PDT by ETL
If youre white, live in the United States, and a distant relative has uploaded their DNA to a public ancestry database, theres a good chance an internet sleuth can identify you from a DNA sample you left somewhere. Thats the conclusion of a new study, which finds that by combining an anonymous DNA sample with some basic information such as someones rough age, researchers could narrow that persons identity to fewer than 20 people by starting with a DNA database of 1.3 million individuals.
Such a search could potentially allow the identification of about 60% of white Americans from a DNA sampleeven if they have never provided their own DNA to an ancestry database. In a few years, its really going to be everyone, says study leader Yaniv Erlich, a computational geneticist at Columbia University.
The study was sparked by the April arrest of the alleged Golden State Killer, a California man accused of a series of decades-old rapes and murders. To find himand more than a dozen other criminal suspects since thenlaw enforcement agencies first test a crime scene DNA sample, which could be old blood, hair, or semen, for hundreds of thousands of DNA markerssignposts along the genome that vary among people, but whose identity in many cases are shared with blood relatives. They then upload the DNA data to GEDmatch, a free online database where anyone can share their data from consumer DNA testing companies such as 23andMe and Ancestry.com to search for relatives who have submitted their DNA. Searching GEDMatchs nearly 1 million profiles revealed several relatives who were the equivalent to third cousins to the crime scene DNA linked to the Golden State Killer. Other information such as genealogical records, approximate age, and crime locations then allowed the sleuths to home in on a single person.
Geneticists quickly speculated this approach could identify many people from an unknown DNA sequence. But to quantify just how many, Erlich and colleagues took a closer look at the MyHeritage database, which contains 1.28 million DNA profiles of individuals looking at their family history. (Erlich is chief science officer of the ancestry DNA testing company.) If you live in the United States and are of European ancestry, theres a 60% chance you have a third cousin or closer relative in this database, the team projected. Their success rate was similar when they did searches for 30 random profiles in GEDmatch. (The odds drop to 40% for someone of sub-Saharan African ancestry in the MyHeritage database.)
Assuming you have a relative in one of these databases, what are the chances police could find you from an unidentified DNA sample, the way they nabbed the alleged Golden State Killer? To find out, Erlich and colleagues combined the MyHeritage database information with family trees, and demographic data such as rough age and likely geographic location. On average, that allowed them to use a hypothetical DNA sequence to home in on 17 suspects from a pool of about 850 people, the team reports today in Science.
GEDmatch likely only encompasses about 0.5% of the U.S. adult population, but millions of Americans are using DNA ancestry testing services. Once the GEDmatch figure rises to 2%, more than 90% of people of European descent will have a third cousin or closer relative and could be found in this way. Its surprising how small the database needs to be, says population geneticist Noah Rosenberg of Stanford University in Palo Alto, California, who was not involved with the work.
Rosenberg and colleagues showed last year that a profile in a consumer DNA database can be matched up with the same persons profile in law enforcement forensic DNA databases, even though they use a different, smaller set of DNA markers. Today in Cell, they report that more than 30% of individuals in the forensic databases can also be linked to a sibling, parent, or child in a consumer database. The two types of databases combined could make it even easier to find a suspect from a DNA sample. The linked consumer DNA profile could also reveal physical appearance or medical information for a criminal or their relatives, such as genes for eye color or a disease, even though the forensic databases arent supposed to contain that kind of information. More can be done with them than has been claimed, Rosenberg says.
Although these studies are encouraging news for solving crimes, they raise privacy concerns for law-abiding citizens, Erlich says. One possible solution suggested by his team is that the consumer DNA testing companies digitally encrypt a customers data and that GEDMatch only allow these encrypted files to be uploaded. That way a law enforcement agency couldnt upload DNA sequence data from its own lab without an ancestry companys cooperation. (The police cant just pretend to be a customer and send crime scene DNA samples to companies like 23andMe because the companys sequencing machines typically cant process scant, degraded DNA samples.)
Erlich also thinks U.S. officials need to revisit federal rules protecting people who volunteer for research studies. A recently revised guideline for biomedical researchers, called the Common Rule, assumes that a research participant cant easily be identified from their anonymized DNA profile. But in its paper, Erlichs team used GEDMatch to identify a woman who was part of a study using her anonymized DNA profile and birth date, which is often publicly available to researchers.
Genetic policy experts agree that changes to how genealogy databases and DNA sequencing firms operate or are regulated are needed. The digital signature might be a partial solution, says law professor Natalie Ram of the University of Baltimore in Maryland. But all the players in the direct-to-consumer DNA sequencing industry would have to agree to this scheme, she notes. If not, were back to square one.
Instead, she and others recently argued in Science that states and Congress should pass laws limiting situations where law enforcement can use genealogy databases to find suspects. It may be reasonable for a murder case, but not for a petty crime, Ram says. Finding the right balance is important.
It’s going to be everyone or just white folk?
Why not database everyone at birth or entry into the US?
And we can ask for these databases from all of the nations that have membership in the UN. Including the rapist diplomats.
[Why not database everyone at birth or entry into the US?]
I imagine that’s coming. Progressives and New World Order folks will praise it - for “peace and security”.
Anything else would be profiling and a national ID.
Good, we can use that DNA card for voter ID.
No one forces you to send your DNA to an ancestry database.
And you better hope that second cousin Suzie on your dad’s side and third cousin Earl on your mom’s side of the family does not send in their DNA.
I thought that race was a social construct.
Yep. They’re all scared to say it. That’s why Eric Holder had to hide the stats of the percentages. Helps keep the fools dumbed-down. The last accurate stats were before “kick-em” Eric Holder began his propaganda campaign.
This should be his new name: “kick-em” Eric Holder
Lol! That about sums it up.
Working white males are anti social doncha know.
Think of all the missing fathers who could be found
I am of the opinion that EVERY violent felon should have their DNA taken and recorded post conviction. This would serve to simplify cold case files buy facilitating DNA searches.
By the time most criminals see a conviction, they have already committed several crimes.
“I am of the opinion that EVERY violent felon should have their DNA taken and recorded post conviction.”
That is being done.
Blacks are at 40%. Harder to profile ancestry when 70% dont have fathers.
A yet to be invented DNA reader would be a perfect credit card pin number.
I had forgotten about that cartoon. It’s a keeper.
I definitely don’t want ANY person wrongly convicted for a crime - be they white, black, red, brown, yellow, etc. I will say, the last two idiots I encountered and the one before that, were white. (probably still are white, LOL). That being said, it’s because of the limited places I go. Especially since the time when Eric Holder and Barack Obama were encouraging violence and letting it run rampant.
For liberals, I have two examples, from previously-posted articles:
Corrina Mehiel
“Just a few days after she was photographed with Nancy Pelosi grinning in approval, friends found Mehiel tied up, stabbed, tortured, and ultimately dead at the hands of El Hadji Alpha Madiou Toure, a black man arrested driving her car and using her debit card.
He said he didnt do it.”
“Her belief in black victimization came, she said, at an early age when her mother read to her the book that would change her life: It Takes a Village, by Hillary Rodham Clinton.”
David Ruenzel
Some liberals, most of which are ego-soaked, look for ways to support their self-perceived importance so they champion imaginary causes for that purpose, Newburn said. They are adult-children who feel free to construct fantasies about their greatness. Their narcissism in part functions to blind them to inconvenient realities. So to compensate, they idealize the targets of their misdirected and pathological caring.”
[I am of the opinion that EVERY violent felon should have their DNA taken and recorded post conviction. This would serve to simplify cold case files buy facilitating DNA searches.]
That’s been happening for a long time. Some have been linked to crimes (sexual assault, for example) even while they’re in prison for other crimes.
My emphasis was on EVERY, cause not all states do that.
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