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23andMe offers a saliva-based ancestry and health information service for less than $200 (€185) Alamy Stock Photo

Would you submit your DNA for ancestry testing?

23andMe claims 15 million customers have used the service since it was founded in 2006.

US GENETIC TESTING company 23andMe has filed for bankruptcy and is looking for a new buyer.

The company says 15 million customers have used the service for ancestry and health information since it was founded in 2006.

In the bankruptcy filing, 23andMe has said it agrees to pay $37.5m (€34.7m) in settlements following a 2023 hacking incident. Almost 7 million accounts were affected by the data breach. 

The announcement has been met with warnings for customers to ask the company to delete their data.

Geoffrey Fowler, a tech columnist for the Washington Post, has said that there is a risk “that your data could get sold or transferred to a new company, which might want to use it for new purposes”.

So today we’re asking: Would you submit your DNA for ancestry testing?


Poll Results:

No - I would never do it (4029)
I would be open to it (3160)
Yes - I have done it before (1693)
Unsure (1020)

 

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    Mute Linda Mooney
    Favourite Linda Mooney
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    Nov 11th 2013, 8:11 AM

    Why was he never held accountable? Why? Ireland’s very own Goebels.Despicable. Why didn’t it get taken to the Human Rights Court when out own system let these women down .

    69
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    Mute Catherine Mill
    Favourite Catherine Mill
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    Nov 11th 2013, 11:38 AM

    Yes I agree he should be in jail. Everyone in Drogheda knew about him and many went North or to Dublin to have their babies. Everyone was too scared to speak out lest they loose their own jobs.
    Clearly Irish women’s wombs and creativity are not worth much with the amount of money they will receive. For a lifetime of misery.
    The worst feeling has to be that Neary has never been jailed
    Justice has to be SEEN, To be done.!

    12
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    Mute rotund jocularity
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    Nov 11th 2013, 8:41 AM

    Its a shame that when he was burgled and assaulted that he didnt have his head removed when he went there for medical assistance. Why isnt he in jail?

    33
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    Mute rotund jocularity
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    Nov 11th 2013, 8:42 AM

    ‘there’ being hospital

    7
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    Mute Ed Appleby
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    Nov 11th 2013, 11:21 AM

    Neary should be behind bars along with those who helped him and those in management who should have stopped him. The hospital at the centre of this also needs to be held accountable, did they not have any checks in place to stop this kind of abuse of patients taking place? I cannot believe he has never been arrested and charged, only in Ireland would a monster like Neary be allowed to walk around scot free.

    11
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    Mute Catherine Mill
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    Nov 11th 2013, 11:42 AM

    Well, I heard one nurse tried to get the truth out and lost her job.
    These doctors were treated like “gods”
    Even see the way the nurses have to walk feet behind them on their rounds and the fear in the nurses body language.
    We just need to see old patriarchy for what it was and is.

    7
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    Mute Catherine Mill
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    Nov 11th 2013, 11:44 AM

    This hospital had a terrible reputation- not just Neary.
    People even carried cards stipulating that in emergency Do not bring me to MMM Drogheda.
    Also in the 1990′s unmarried girls were treated like sinners and made to suffer. You had to have seen it and experienced it to comprehend.

    8
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    Mute brian walters
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    Nov 11th 2013, 10:16 AM

    Why was this man not jailed

    9
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    Mute Catherine Mill
    Favourite Catherine Mill
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    Nov 11th 2013, 11:39 AM

    its Ireland.
    They were just women after all, second class citizens. That was the mentality and no one can say otherwise.

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    Mute b flynn
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    Nov 11th 2013, 4:44 PM

    Well done to the women, their persistence with the support of Patient Focus – they now have got for us what our solicitors couldn’t

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    Mute Marie O Connor
    Favourite Marie O Connor
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    Nov 11th 2013, 3:55 PM

    Redress? What redress? Still the same old, same old. Trying to save money at the expense of justice. The Supreme Court awarded one of these women 250,000 10 years ago: today the Government offers 60,000 – 100,000 for the same injury. Women over 40 were having children when Judge Harding Clark excluded them on age grounds from the terms of a so-called redress scheme that was then rubber stamped by HSE funded patient groups. And what’s this about 30 days in which to apply? Is this another cost saver, drawn up in the hope that late applications will disqualify some?

    3
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