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If you used this ancestry site, remove your data now
Kim Komando ^ | August 7, 2020 | JAMES GELINAS

Posted on 08/08/2020 4:16:13 AM PDT by gattaca

Genealogy websites have become increasingly popular in recent years. These platforms are able to scour the web in search of documents and archival data, which can help users build historically accurate family trees.

There’s also another side to genealogy websites that has attracted attention from privacy advocates: DNA testing. Websites like Ancestry.com can use DNA testing to find matches, but the fact that these platforms store this information on their end means that hackers could try and steal it. Tap or click here to see how Ancestry.com suffered a huge data breach.

Since genealogy websites collect so much data, their user database can be quite valuable in the corporate world. And that’s exactly what’s happening to Ancestry.com thanks to an acquisition by Blackstone — its new parent company. This means if you sent your DNA to Ancestry, Blackstone has it now. Here’s how you can remove it.

Blackstone buys out Ancestry.com According to new reports from Reuters, the multinational private equity firm Blackstone Group has purchased Ancestry.com for the staggering price of $4.7 billion. This acquisition includes all debt accumulated by Ancestry.com as well, which shows just how eager Blackstone is to add the company into its vast portfolio.

Now that Ancestry.com is under new management, you’re probably wondering what kind of company The Blackstone Group is? Well, for starters, Blackstone deals mostly with private equity, credit and hedge fund investments. Most of its properties are in the financial sector, which makes Ancestry.com a curious purchase altogether.

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Email address Enter your email address SIGN ME UP But if you read between the lines, you can see why the website is so valuable. Ancestry.com is the biggest provider of home DNA testing services, which users can apply towards finding genealogy data and personalized health information.

Ancestry.com boasts more than 3 million paying customers from around the world, and the DNA data it manages is highly valuable to anyone who would be interested in selling it to, say, pharmaceutical companies or medical data firms. It’s almost a no-brainer that a big hedge-fund company would want a slice of the pie.

Of course, if you submitted DNA information to Ancestry.com, this also means your data is at risk of being sold or traded. No, this isn’t illegal either. Once you give the information to Ancestry.com, it’s theirs to use. The terms and conditions more or less spell this out. Tap or click here to see a tool that can read the terms and conditions of websites for you.

I don’t want a hedge fund having access to my DNA. How can I remove the data? Thankfully, if you’re a member of Ancestry.com, you don’t have to settle with leaving your DNA data in Blackstone’s hands. The website gives you an option to expunge your DNA results through its settings menu, and all you’ll need to do it is your Ancestry.com username and password.

Follow these steps to remove your DNA data from Ancestry.com:

Tap or click here to visit Ancestry.com’s DNA settings page. Scroll to the bottom of the Settings page and tap Delete next to Delete DNA Test Results And Revoke Consent to Processing. You’ll be asked for your password next to confirm you want your information removed. Enter your password and tap Delete test results and Revoke Consent. Clicking this removes your results permanently from the website. Unfortunately, you’ll end up losing access to anything you might have learned from taking your test, so we’d recommend writing the information down or taking a screenshot or two before continuing.

Then again, it might not even be worth it to take these DNA tests or use genealogy websites going forward. As we’ve seen in the past, they contain a lot of personal data (that can be bought or sold by third parties) for very little in return. Tap or click here to see another scary ancestry website you should remove your data from.


TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: ancestry; antigmonutjobs; antivaxxers; bigpharma; blackstone; blackstonegroup; dna; genealogy; godsgravesglyphs; helixmakemineadouble; paranoia; windowspinglist
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To: dsc

“My great great grandmother was 100% North Carolina Cherokee. My cousin for whom she was her great-grandmother had the DNA test and it said she had zero Cherokee blood.”

There was a thread here a while back that asserted the impossibility of determining American Indian ancestry from DNA.


Native Americans Descended From a Single Ancestral Group, DNA Study Confirms
By Liese Greensfelder on April 28, 2009 in Science & Technology

https://www.ucdavis.edu/news/native-americans-descended-single-ancestral-group-dna-study-confirms


81 posted on 08/08/2020 3:16:58 PM PDT by Grampa Dave (Does anyone know of any Democrat, who does the right thing for America/Americans today?)
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To: a real Sheila

What about having a long lost rich uncle who has a fortune to bequeath to his closest heir? ;)


82 posted on 08/08/2020 3:21:35 PM PDT by Redcitizen (Nobody needs a 10 round magazine. You need a 30 round magazine. Yeah)
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To: Whenifhow; null and void; aragorn; EnigmaticAnomaly; kalee; Kale; azishot; AZ .44 MAG; Baynative; ..

p


83 posted on 08/08/2020 6:25:35 PM PDT by bitt (American Lives Matter)
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To: Lisbon1940

Before Ancestry, there was the Mormon Church.....


84 posted on 08/08/2020 8:22:16 PM PDT by matthew fuller (we're "blessed to have a leader" like Trump. Goya CEO)
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To: gattaca

Who owns Blackstone?


85 posted on 08/08/2020 10:48:15 PM PDT by wastedyears (The left would kill every single one of us and our families if they knew they could get away with it)
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To: MV=PY; gattaca
Now, this obviously isn't the same as taking affirmative steps to turn in your DNA for a geneaology test....but if someone/some agency wants your DNA, they will get it and it truly wouldn't be that difficult to find a sample.

Unless of course you burn all your garbage and never go anywhere in public.

Police lifted DNA from her trash and charged her with a baby's 1981 killing. She says that was illegal.
Theresa Bentaas is fighting a murder charge by saying police should not have taken DNA from her garbage without a warrant.

The DNA in your garbage: up for grabs
Drop a hair? Anyone can legally sequence your genetic material—and privacy experts want to close that gap.

86 posted on 08/08/2020 10:51:48 PM PDT by rxsid (HOW CAN A NATURAL BORN CITIZEN'S STATUS BE "GOVERNED" BY GREAT BRITAIN? - Leo Donofrio (2009))
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To: P.O.E.; gattaca

Insurance, credit companies, and the government want to know.

Ask John Roberts @ SCOTUS. I think he knows.


87 posted on 08/08/2020 10:54:14 PM PDT by Tunehead54 (Nothing funny here ;-)
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To: miliantnutcase

Red


88 posted on 08/09/2020 3:51:49 AM PDT by Patriot_MP (Of the Troops, For the Troops - US of A Always. Si vis pacem, para bellum)
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To: rxsid

Agreed. If someone wants your biometric data they’ll get it. It’s appropriate to use the technology for crime investigation.

In fact, we soon won’t have a choice about keeping our biometric data private. Facial and retinal scanners will be everywhere with many opportunities to tie the data to your identity. An earlier thread post said that Texas takes fingerprints for driver’s licenses.

But one of the points of my post is that the use of aggregate data is frighteningly powerful.

Google is in the business of collecting and aggregating your data to sell the result to advertisers.

https://www.statista.com/statistics/267606/quarterly-revenue-of-google/

The NSA collects your data and aggregates it to “detect threats.”

https://nsa.gov1.info/data/

There are many problems with an organization having access to this amount of data and the use of AI to turn it into information. For example, the culture at Google is very progressive so the employees’ belief system necessarily shapes the outcome of their products (AI). They slant search results which influences users, perhaps even without realizing they are doing it.

https://www.technologyreview.com/2019/02/04/137602/this-is-how-ai-bias-really-happensand-why-its-so-hard-to-fix/#:~:text=%20How%20AI%20bias%20happens%20%201%20Framing,during%20the%20data%20preparation%20stage%2C%20which...%20More%20

And, of course, the NSA is ultimately directed by people who have political interests. It doesn’t take much imagination to see how it can be abused.

The aggregate data is just data. AI is just pattern recognition. But the use of these tools can be for good or evil, just like any technology.

I’d prefer to make it difficult for any of them to collect data from me. Unfortunately, I think this perspective is rather unusual these days.


89 posted on 08/09/2020 4:24:37 AM PDT by MV=PY (The Magic Question: Who's paying for it?)
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To: gattaca

How do you remove it?

Call them on the phone … “Hey can you please remove my data”
“Surrrrre……we will”

“Ok thanks, bye”


90 posted on 08/09/2020 7:48:42 AM PDT by Mr. K (No consequence of repealing obamacare is worse than obamacare itself)
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To: Patriot_MP

lol


91 posted on 08/10/2020 7:32:46 AM PDT by miliantnutcase
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To: PeteB570

You may already know this, but that is the most common family myth handed down each generation. (Indian Princess in the family line)


92 posted on 08/13/2020 6:17:33 PM PDT by Jessarah
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To: Jessarah

as my father said. Yes there is probably an Indian princess back there. Don’t be impressed. Every two bit tribe had a chief. Every chief had a few wives. Statically half the babies were girls. Every girl a princess. The place was crawling with Indian princesses.


93 posted on 08/13/2020 6:30:08 PM PDT by Chickensoup (Voter ID for 2020!! Leftists totalitarian fascists appear to be planning to eradicate conservatives)
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