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Under 23andMe's current user agreement, users must opt-in to allow the company to share their personal DNA or data. The agreement states that if the company is acquired, customers' data may be ...
23andMe says the personal data it collects includes registration information like birth date, genetic information like a user's genotype, sample information like saliva, and self-reported information.
For the last decade, 23andMe has been known worldwide for offering genetic testing, ancestry tracing and health information to its customers. Now the company’s future appears to be uncertain ...
Whether in search of relatives, a family's country of origin, or to understand personal disease risk, 15 million people have shared their DNA with 23andMe since the genetic test site launched in 2006.
23andMe said that roughly 80% of its customers consent to participate in the company's research program, which it said has generated more than 270 peer-reviewed publications uncovering new genetic ...
Concerns about privacy always plagued 23andMe, but those concerns grew after news broke last year that some user data had been compromised. The data — including birth details and names — was ...
23andMe faces uncertainty amid acquisition talks and board resignations, and users are worried about their data. Here's what the company says.
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