The financial collapse of personal genomics giant 23andMe raises an urgent question: What happens to your most intimate data when the company holding it goes ...
Opinion: LK Law Firm's Lena Kempe provides a brief overview of the genetic testing process and how 23andMe's bankruptcy ...
Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel warns about privacy risks of consumer genetic tests amid 23andMe's bankruptcy, urging ...
The openSNP project, a platform for sharing genetic and phenotypic data, will shut down on April 30, 2025, and delete all ...
Me collected information from survey questions about personal health and beyond, such as drinking habits and risk tolerance.
Me (ME) is bankrupt, its CEO is out, and 15 million people’s genetic data might soon be sold off to whoever’s willing to pay. Now, a swarm ...
If you were a 23andMe customer, your genetic and personal information could be used in civil or criminal cases, targeted ...
The open source repository of genetic data will delete its banks of data on April 30, its co-founder confirms.
A genomics company, a crypto foundation, and the former CEO are all looking at this treasure trove of genetic data.
What's scary is how much we don't know. If you're worried about data privacy, think about deleting your data now.
Officials including California Attorney General Rob Bonta had questioned what would happen to the genetic data collected by 23andMe.