Posted on 08/08/2020 4:16:13 AM PDT by gattaca
Putting any personal data on line is problematic. Putting your DNA online is foolish.
I’m sure there is more to it than what I think.
My wife spent the $25 or whatever it was on one of those tests.
“Gee - it came back that you have a 80% match with Northern Europe and 20% in Scandinavia. But you knew that already!”
Like I said - there must be more to it than the results we see. I’ve seen articles where they end up solving some long-ago murder through these sites and matching the DNA from some distant cousin to the killer.
My son and daughter used Ancestry.com. In fact, we are waiting for my son’s results to come back. Just wanted to see what others think about this.
“They” might be able to find more compatible matches for organ transplants. You may have an unfortunate accident.
Im <1% sub Saharan African. I need the documentation. Im no quadroon but my African heritage should be worth a small cut of the reparations pie.
Besides the DNA, they also know who your ancestors were. They can display your whole family tree.
A few considerations:
If you set up an account with a company and give them your email address, you can get out by changing your email.
But you can’t change your biometrics. Biometric data is a permanent connection to you.
Think twice before you use a fingerprint or facial scan to access your PC.
Think twice before you send your DNA to anyone.
Think twice about offering retinal scans.
If any company offers free apps, free reports, free functionality etc, YOU are actually the company’s product (sell your data to others, if only in aggregate).
Google will be happy to give you instructions to navigate from one address to another. In exchange, you’re telling Google two of your locations and the time you’re there. And they know what is at those locations. They can learn a lot about you by combining these data. Then add a “smart thermostat” so they know when you’re home. Etc.
Be careful out there. Think. Protect your data.
My family is Greek..really Greek. Really. I did the DNA thing.not one hint if Greek ancestry.
What’s the other ancestry database from which we should remove our data?
Lisbon1940 wrote:
“Besides the DNA, they also know who your ancestors were. They can display your whole family tree.”
Including mother’s maiden name.
Banks still use that as one of the security layers, when establishing an account.
Having that info up on a genealogy site invites trouble from identity thieves.
Most in the family have had it done now. My side had been pretty well researched prior so the results were mostly not a surprise.
Wife’s side was a surprise. Not much prior research, lots of stories - and about 50/50 on the results.
Being a professional hacker for a US gov entity - I can tell you that this only erases the person doing this - their access to their data.
[The website gives you an option to expunge your DNA results through its settings menu, and all youll need to do it is your Ancestry.com username and password.]
Once done, the file does not reside on the server where it is located. I can tell you from personal experience that it still does in an off-site backup location.
Those files marked for deletion will in fact be deleted from the front-end web server and inaccessible by others looking for that information. The kicker is, when one had already signed a form to store their data on one of these sites - it is stored permanently. The TRACE BACK to other known relatives and all the other “fascinating things” these sites do to link people together - has those DNA records stored and itemized throughout the system.
The file path from the original owner of that data may be erased - but it can still be found. It’s a matter of how one retrieves it. Once it is downloaded and backups are created - it’s game over. The idea that those records are erased by clicking a button is just not realistic.
I find stuff all the time on people — stuff that should not have existed in the 1st place.
...just saying ...
DNA is an identifier that is on a higher level than a fingerprint. For this reason, I’ve always been paranoid that it can and will be used for nefarious purposes in the future, gleaned from these Ancestry companies.
NO thanks!
I’m OK to never learn I have a long lost cousin.
If you or your family ha ever been to the Dr’s office and had blood drawn — then someone had your DNA stored - if not multiple agencies... It’s fact of life of how this nation operates...
It’s the same reason that in 2004-2005 US Troops went all over Iraq and collected blood/DNA samples - to be used to trace back insurgents if their bodies were left on the battle field or blown up in an IED attempt...
Your DNA resides all over the place right now...
So they have your DNA. Turns out you have some latent health issues (like late-onset diseases).
So your insurance premiums go up a few surreptitious bucks at a time.
You won’t know why, but they will.
Putting any personal data on line is problematic. Putting your DNA online is foolish.
—
It is a choice. One that millions have decided to make.
There are many reasons why individual may submit their DNA to Ancestry, but again that is their choice.
Governments and organizations have been gathering information about individuals since humans learn to write.
Most everything about you is recorded somewhere
Birth certificate
Death certificate
Marriage License
Divorce
Drivers license
School Yearbooks
Church records
Newspaper articles
Library card
Customer cards
Credit cards
and the list goes on.
The only difference is today computer’s exist.
Here is a scary thought for you. Even if you do not join any social network site online, but your friends and family have, then you have a folder with your name on it somewhere.
These are all just tools. As with any tools they can be used for good or bad, but if you think you can escape by not sending a DNA sample to Ancestry then you are mistaken.
A cousin you don’t even know sends in a sample and the DNA information is linked to them in their tree and by extension everyone else in their tree. So like it or not, your DNA (or a variation of it) may already be within Ancestry’s data base
The only other one I've heard of is 23andme.com
“They can display your whole family tree.”
And, when BLM does a search and discovers your great-great uncle, twice-removed on your father’s side, owned a slave...you’re done for.
I am going to hack my data and enter DNA information from Project Bluebook , an alien DNA strand genetic sequence.
When they come for me, it will justify the hail of lead they will meet.They have no jurisdiction over non humans!They would have to join the Galactic Republic!
Nothing like UFO ( U F**k Off) DNA.
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