Saturday, June 4, 2022

"Genetic paparazzi are right around the corner, and courts aren’t ready to confront the legal quagmire of DNA theft"

 From The Conversation, June 3:

DNA is a trove of personal information that can be hard to keep track of and protect. 

Every so often stories of genetic theft, or extreme precautions taken to avoid it, make headline news. So it was with a picture of French President Emmanuel Macron and Russian President Vladimir Putin sitting at opposite ends of a very long table after Macron declined to take a Russian PCR COVID-19 test. Many speculated that Macron refused due to security concerns that the Russians would take and use his DNA for nefarious purposes. German Chancellor Olaf Scholz similarly refused to take a Russian PCR COVID-19 test.

While these concerns may seem relatively new, pop star celebrity Madonna has been raising alarm bells about the potential for nonconsensual, surreptitious collection and testing of DNA for over a decade. She has hired cleaning crews to sterilize her dressing rooms after concerts and requires her own new toilet seats at each stop of her tours.

At first, Madonna was ridiculed for having DNA paranoia. But as more advanced, faster and cheaper genetic technologies have reached the consumer realm, these concerns seem not only reasonable, but justified.

Putin and Macron sitting at opposite ends of a long table
For some, keeping one’s distance might be a preferable alternative to getting one’s DNA stolen. AP Photo/Pool Sputnik Kremlin

We are law professors who study how emerging technologies like genetic sequencing are regulated. We believe that growing public interest in genetics has increased the likelihood that genetic paparazzi with DNA collection kits may soon become as ubiquitous as ones with cameras.....

....MUCH MORE

And yet President Biden told the American diplomats in Beijing to submit to the anal swabs. 
And Madonna as see-er of truth? May you live in interesting times.