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After DNA Misuse, Researchers Banished From Havasupai Reservation

bbsguru writes "A court settlement has ended a controversial case of medical privacy abuse. From the NYTimes: 'Seven years ago, the Havasupai Indians, who live in the deepest part of the Grand Canyon, issued a 'banishment order' to keep Arizona State University employees from setting foot on their reservation, an ancient punishment for what they regarded as a genetic-era betrayal. Members of the tiny tribe had given DNA samples to university researchers starting in 1990, hoping they might provide genetic clues to the tribe's high rate of diabetes. But members learned their blood samples also had been used to study many other things, including mental illness and theories of the tribe's geographical origins that contradict their traditional stories.'"

332 comments

  1. Get it Back by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They should make them give the DNA back !

    1. Re:Get it Back by gront · · Score: 5, Informative
      Read TFA

      Acknowledging a desire to “remedy the wrong that was done,” the university’s Board of Regents on Tuesday agreed to pay $700,000 to 41 of the tribe’s members, return the blood samples and provide other forms of assistance to the impoverished Havasupai — a settlement that legal experts said was significant because it implied that the rights of research subjects can be violated when they are not fully informed about how their DNA might be used.

    2. Re:Get it Back by keithjr · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Can they also get back the research that was done, now likely digitally archived? That's the more creepy precedent set by DNA misuse. Heck, why would the university want it after it's been sequenced?

    3. Re:Get it Back by causality · · Score: 1

      a settlement that legal experts said was significant because it implied that the rights of research subjects can be violated when they are not fully informed about how their DNA might be used

      I'll say the same thing here that has occurred to me with several other decisions. It's amazing to me that there could be any controversy over this or otherwise a widespread view that there is any other way to handle it. I wouldn't even want to lend my car to someone without having an idea of what they plan to do with it and that's far less of a privacy/security issue than DNA and medical records. To put this another way, what's the good reason (that doesn't involve covering up abuses) why full disclosure and informed consent should not be standard policy?

      --
      It is a miracle that curiosity survives formal education. - Einstein
    4. Re:Get it Back by darkstar949 · · Score: 2, Informative

      It takes a lot of effort sequence DNA and odds are the university hadn't actually sequenced the entirety of the DNA that was provided, but just the relevant chromosomes. Likewise, depending upon when the sequencing was done their might be errors or incomplete blocks in the sequences that modern equipment could correct for.

    5. Re:Get it Back by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Can they also get back the research that was done, now likely digitally archived? That's the more creepy precedent set by DNA misuse. Heck, why would the university want it after it's been sequenced?

      I'm not sure what you mean by "get back the research"... do you mean force it to be deleted on the grounds that the data was obtained unethically? Because that would actually be an even creepier precedent. Imagine: "Oops, one of the researchers fucked up the informed consent forms. All our results are thoughtcrime now. Better delete 'em before we get sued."

    6. Re:Get it Back by paeanblack · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I'll say the same thing here that has occurred to me with several other decisions. It's amazing to me that there could be any controversy over this or otherwise a widespread view that there is any other way to handle it.

      Remove the "genetics" aspect from the issue; let's imagine that the tribe consented to have the researchers take photographs to study, say, body morphology, or whatever. The researchers then use those photographs to also analyze facial morphology.

      Should the research subjects be able to control in perpetuity how those photographs can be looked at and thought about? Should they be able to control what tools are used to examine the photographs? (i.e. eyes only, no lenses or calipers...not even eyeglasses) Or can the researcher analyze those photos as they see fit and draw whatever conclusions they wish?

      Both a photograph and a DNA sample are snapshots of some aspect of a person's individuality. Both yield medical data. Both can be used to track and uniquely identify a person (except for twins). We're just far more comfortable with the concept of photographs.

      If this case were about photographs, would the Slashdot crowd react in the same way, or would we dismiss the tribe as backwards aboriginals afraid of losing their soul? Informed consent is a very good policy, but does our discomfort stem from the breach of policy or the genetic bogeyman?

    7. Re:Get it Back by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      To put this another way, what's the good reason (that doesn't involve covering up abuses) why full disclosure and informed consent should not be standard policy?

      Full disclosure and informed consent are not just standard policy by codified in international law. I think the issue here comes to how much information constitutes full disclosure. Imagine a consent for that states "to study diabetes" vs "to study a potential genetic origins for diseases like diabetes." Or "other factors that may arise."

      I really don't know which side of this issue I'd come down on, even if I knew all the facts (including whatever the investigators communicated verbally). As a scientist, you try to get as broad of permission as possible, even if you have just a specific project in mind, because samples are difficult to obtain and you'd like to be able to use them for questions that may arise during the initial study or for studies that haven't even occurred to you yet. The actual reporting is always anonymized, so it's (generally) tough to see a privacy issue, but in this case it's essentially the group privacy of the tribe that's at stake, if there is such a thing.

    8. Re:Get it Back by Otto · · Score: 1

      It's highly unlikely that they did full sequencing on these samples. Full sequencing is expensive and time consuming.

      Generally they only sequence the specific parts of the DNA that the particular research happens to be interested in.

      --
      - Give a man a fire and he's warm for a day, but set him on fire and he's warm for the rest of his life.
    9. Re:Get it Back by lgw · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Should the research subjects be able to control in perpetuity how those photographs can be looked at and thought about? Should they be able to control what tools are used to examine the photographs? (i.e. eyes only, no lenses or calipers...not even eyeglasses) Or can the researcher analyze those photos as they see fit and draw whatever conclusions they wish?

      That should all depend on the consent form signed, shouldn't it? If individuals want to release their data for only a certain kind of study, whether that's DNA, photographs, or shopping history, and reasears decide to do something else with that data - well, what does the consent form / privacy policy say? It's a contract, like any other (and like any other, if you misrepresent a written agreement to someone who can't understand its implications, the statements you make and not the written form becomes the contract).

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    10. Re:Get it Back by EdelFactor19 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I would say its no different if its a photograph. A key component of performing valid and recognized research is informed consent. I absolutely expect to control in perpetuity how my photograph / dna / etc are researched. I'm not as concerned with the tools, whether its a magnifying lens or a digital something or other; but what's being searched for is separate.

      The fact that you had to use the word "also" as in "also analyze facial morphology" illustrates the line very clearly. I/you/we/whomever didn't consent to that; we consented to body morphology. If you want to analyze it for that come back and get my consent or piss off.

      Why do I hold this control? because its my information to start with. I gave you access to it in return for something under some contractual terms.. Now you are trying to change them after the fact without my option or giving me anything in return. More importantly, you are trying to do something I likely would never have agreed to in the first place.

      Here's a better example, instead of a photo, let's pretend its my credit card. If I go to the store and buy a widget from you and pay with my credit card, I consent to give you the credit card briefly for the sole purpose of executing this transaction. You are not entitled to copy my number, to run background checks on me, to withhold it from me, to give it to others, or to charge other things to me. I gave it to you to execute a transaction that's it.

      So to answer your question I would react that exact same way. I view it no differently than fraud / misrepresentation and potentially breech of contract.

      To answer a separate question; the researchers are free to draw whatever conclusions they want no matter what. Whether they are valid conclusions, or have any evidence to substantiate the claim is another story. They are free to analyze these photos in a manner which is consistent solely with advancing the purported goals and activities that are consistent with disclosure, studying for trends that are wholly unrelated to the study at hand which was disclosed does not meet this requirement.

      Think about this in the reverse case. Go buy a playstation3 or an iphone, shouldn't it be yours to do with it what you will? Or does Sony/Apple have a right in perpetuity to change the conditions and terms, add and remove functionality as they see fit at any time whenever they like without your consent. Doesn't seem very different to me. You want my data you play by our rules. I'm not giving you my blood, i'm giving you a license to analyze it. Come to think of it more ironically Apple does exactly this in regards to tools now. Apple software "can only be run on apple branded computers" and iphone software can only be written in "approved languages".

      Funny, its always important that IP, copyrights, contractual, and privacy rights of corporations is always protected so sternly, but so quickly trampled when they are of an individual, the ones who are actually supposed to be protected by laws.

      --
      "Jazz isn't dead, it just smells funny" ~Frank Zappa
      EdelFactor
    11. Re:Get it Back by Improv · · Score: 1

      Re Godwin,

      Umm, yes you did. You win the title of "Troll" for this discussion and lose (with no demerit to your position, just the personal shame of misbehaviour).

      --
      For every problem, there is at least one solution that is simple, neat, and wrong.
    12. Re:Get it Back by ffreeloader · · Score: 2, Interesting

      do you mean force it to be deleted on the grounds that the data was obtained unethically? Because that would actually be an even creepier precedent.

      The research should absolutely be deleted as it was done on subjects without their consent or knowledge. The precedent set by using that research would be the total violation of privacy, as it says its alright for government institutions to use deceit to get personal information.

      That you see a problem with stopping this type of action on the part of the government says a lot about you. It says you think the government has the right to deceive you and abuse the agreements it makes with you.

      I say you haven't given this subject any thought at all. If you have, then it says a lot about how you value your, and more importantly your neighbor's right to privacy. To me it's really scary that you would want to steal my privacy.

      --
      "while democracy seeks equality in liberty, socialism seeks equality in restraint and servitude." de Tocqueville
    13. Re:Get it Back by ffreeloader · · Score: 1

      Mod this man up. He gets it.

      --
      "while democracy seeks equality in liberty, socialism seeks equality in restraint and servitude." de Tocqueville
    14. Re:Get it Back by koreaman · · Score: 1

      ASU is publicly funded and is steered by a committee appointed by the governor, but calling it part of "the government" is a bit of a stretch.

    15. Re:Get it Back by GameMaster · · Score: 1

      Here's an interesting question. Lets say it were money that I had embezzled from my company and then invested wisely for a few years before they found out and had me charged with a crime. (I'm using embezzlement because it's closer to the present case than simple theft as embezzling implies that you were given the right to manage the money with the clear expectation that you would only use it for certain things but did other things with it to benefit yourself). Should I get to keep the returns I received on the money while it was in my possession? I'm not a lawyer, but I'm pretty sure that all that ill gotten gain would go back to the company I embezzled the money from. In this case, it would make perfect sense to me that the tribe should get full ownership of all the IP created from the use of the DNA and have the right to demand that all journals or other publications that printed anything based on the study of that DNA cease printing/distributing that information.

      --

      Rules of Conduct:
      #1 - The DM is always right.
      #2 - If the DM is wrong, see rule #1
    16. Re:Get it Back by HarrySquatter · · Score: 1

      It doesn't matter what they used to do the research. If you didn't ask consent to do it, you don't get consent to do it. What's so hard with such a concept?

    17. Re:Get it Back by jc42 · · Score: 1

      That you see a problem with stopping this type of action on the part of the government says a lot about you. It says you think the government has the right to deceive you and abuse the agreements it makes with you.

      Yeah, as can be understood by reading the discussion of the Sony EULA story earlier this afternoon, such deceit and abuse is the sole right of corporations. When they do it, it's their natural right supported by law; when the government does it, it's evil.

      At least that's the way it is in the US these days. YMMV if you live elsewhere (though it's sorta hard to find a country where a large corporation doesn't have more social and legal power than most of the citizenry).

      --
      Those who do study history are doomed to stand helplessly by while everyone else repeats it.
    18. Re:Get it Back by spazdor · · Score: 1

      "Oops, one of the researchers fucked up the informed consent forms. All our results are thoughtcrime now. Better delete 'em before we get sued."

      Uh, yeah, that's how it always works.

      If you fucked up the informed consent forms, you don't have informed consent.

      --
      DRM: Terminator crops for your mind!
    19. Re:Get it Back by PsychoSlashDot · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Why do I hold this control? because its my information to start with.

      The following is me playing devil's advocate but I think it's worthwhile.

      No. DNA is not your information. It's you (at least your physicality). I still say too bad. Ownership of self is an illusion. It's the result of social convention, no more.

      If an individual was determined to carry the cure for cancer in their blood and they allowed a sample to be taken for confirmation of this theory but specifically refused researchers the "right" to synthesize or reproduce/culture that sample, what do you think would happen? A lot of people would end up cured of cancer because someone with a clue would suddenly realize that they're really an animal and act the part.

      You are food. That you aren't eaten on a daily basis is luck, pretty well.

      Personally I find the idea that an individual or small group of individuals could - let alone would - allow a sample to be taken but try to limit it's potential benefit utterly and completely repugnant. This isn't about a sample being taken illegally. This isn't about a needle when you've said "no". It's about artificially limiting potential learning for arbitrary internal reasons. Disgusting, really. We are all hungry, starving for knowledge and these people had the ability to share universally, without personal cost but instead elected to dictate who and how we can feed.

      --
      "Oh no... he found the .sig setting."
    20. Re:Get it Back by bytesex · · Score: 1

      "do you mean force it to be deleted on the grounds that the data was obtained unethically?"

      Eh yes. Otherwise, doing unethical research or not, would just be an accountant's puzzle to solve: does the outcome of the research weigh up against the fine we're going to have to pay.

      --
      Religion is what happens when nature strikes and groupthink goes wrong.
    21. Re:Get it Back by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They're only wogs, and what's more the bottom of the grand canyon is a dumn place to build a casino.

    22. Re:Get it Back by Migraineman · · Score: 1

      Why do I hold this control? because its my information to start with. I gave you access to it in return for something under some contractual terms.. Now you are trying to change them after the fact without my option or giving me anything in return. More importantly, you are trying to do something I likely would never have agreed to in the first place.

      Sounds like copyright legislation and every instance where our elected representatives have extended the term.

    23. Re:Get it Back by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't we already give them a crapload of cash every month (along with every other tribe in the US) that our taxes pay for? Maybe we should be entitled to DNA research as long as federal money supports them. How long do we have to keep apologizing with cash?

    24. Re:Get it Back by ffreeloader · · Score: 1

      I see, in your world one or the other, corporations or government, has the right to abuse people? How about neither?

      To tell the truth I don't see how you made the leap to the idea that I support invasion of an individual's personal privacy by corporations, or by anyone/any_organization, for that matter.

      Our constitution guarantees us the right to be secure in our persons and papers. And, I truly believe that if the founders of our constitution had understood what technology was to come they would have named this type of abuse of our freedoms specifically, as they specifically named the technologies/methods used in their day.

      --
      "while democracy seeks equality in liberty, socialism seeks equality in restraint and servitude." de Tocqueville
    25. Re:Get it Back by EdelFactor19 · · Score: 1

      I'm guessing you've never taken any classes in ethics. A thief is a thief is a thief.

      If the person specifically said they couldn't reproduce it and the researchers weren't smart enough to secure that right in the first place, i think the researchers would be fired.

      Would people be angry with him? Yes. But he absolutely has the right to make that decision, its his or her body.

      Here's a twist, the person was a jehova's witness, and you just happened to get just enough of his blood to test but it was destroyed.. Does that give you the first to forcefully take more from him?

      If its such a simple right thing to do then when you go back for permission it will probably be granted. If it was something they never would have agreed to in the first place, why does this matter.

      DNA might be a factual thing, but the vessels its found in are not. My blood, my saliva and my cells are mine, they are not yours, they are not the communities.

      Granted I'm a liberal, and I don't know what your stance is, but it would only be more ironic if you were a conservative.

      --
      "Jazz isn't dead, it just smells funny" ~Frank Zappa
      EdelFactor
  2. Damn them! by maugle · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Those damn researchers, trying to study other diseases and discover our true heritage! How dare they?!

    1. Re:Damn them! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Well, even if their intentions were good, the samples were provided for a different purpose.

    2. Re:Damn them! by spamking · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Exactly. They just opened the flood gates for the rest of US Tribes . . . expect more complaints to be filed.

    3. Re:Damn them! by Kelbin · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Really? The Researchers were given the DNA for the sole purpose of researching the Tribes troubles with Diabetes and then they started doing other things with that DNA that goes outside of what the samples were given for.

    4. Re:Damn them! by eldavojohn · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Those damn researchers, trying to study other diseases and discover our true heritage! How dare they?!

      So where do you draw the line? And what kind of signal does this send to other people who are unsure of what their DNA samples will be used for? Regardless of good intentions or the betterment of science, that's a sure fire what to screw up any trust a community might have with you and anyone looking to use DNA analysis.

      --
      My work here is dung.
    5. Re:Damn them! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Wow, you sure do have a great attitude towards individual rights. how 'bout I take your DNA and:

      Put it into a database along with your medical history
      Use it to study alcoholism or drug use
      Use it to study homosexual development
      Use it to study the development of our ancient ancestors from lower life forms
      Put it into a national/international crime database and run it against all unsolved cases

      You may not have a problem with any of these uses, but odds on if I do enough things with your DNA you will object to one of them.

    6. Re:Damn them! by Mordok-DestroyerOfWo · · Score: 2, Insightful

      It's a tricky situation. I'd love to agree with you in that gaining knowledge is extremely important. But ethically they should have at least asked for permission first. The problem now is that other tribes may be more reluctant to give samples for any reason lest they be abused.

      --
      "Never let your sense of morals prevent you from doing what is right" - Salvor Hardin
    7. Re:Damn them! by rotide · · Score: 1

      If someone told you they were taking a sample from you for reason X, would you not be angry if they then used it for reasons Y and Z?

      If it is "beneficial" (subjective) to you, maybe you would enjoy the "free" service of them utilizing your sample for reasons Y and Z, but if it was merely beneficial to the company that harvested the sample and you were to get no benefit from it?

      I might enjoy learning that I have a pre-disposition to a disease and should avoid smoking/drinking/pooping in non-neon shades of toilet/etc. from a simple cholesterol blood test, but to you that might be something you didn't want to learn let alone a company.

      It's not for us to decide what is and isn't acceptable to someone else. If the terms of the sample taking did not include the studies and other tests done I would argue it was an invasion of privacy.

    8. Re:Damn them! by mcgrew · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You're not only missing the point, you're avoiding it entirely. Do you think researchers have the right to do research on YOU without your permission?

    9. Re:Damn them! by thruthenight · · Score: 3, Insightful

      What about this: you give your credit card number to a store for certain purchase, and they purchase dozen of other things on the same credit card for you ("Yes, sir, we truly believe you need all those things, it's all for your own good!")

    10. Re:Damn them! by Hijacked+Public · · Score: 1

      They didn't do research on them, they did research on their DNA, which the Havasupais provided willingly. Why is it all right for an individual to put usage terms on something they give away but not all right for a company to do it with a product they sell?

      --
      "Sacrifice for the good of The State" - The State
    11. Re:Damn them! by rotide · · Score: 1

      So if one day cloning becomes legal and they decide to use a leftover sample of a lab test you had done years ago, you wouldn't get upset that a company now sells copies of you for whatever reason they want? I mean, you did give those samples away in the first place. What does it matter what they do with it after that?

      Or, lets get a bit more grounded. Say your blood sample that you had done years ago was now tested and it's proven that you and your family are predisposed to a whole host of diseases. Now, that information is made public or at least made available to other companies, such as insurance (health, life). Or perhaps to anyone that potentially could take health risk factors into account when approving you for something such as a loan.

      Are you really going to argue that hey, I gave that stuff away years ago and now they can do what they want because I have no say now?

    12. Re:Damn them! by sconeu · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Let's imagine you own a gun. Joe comes to you and says, "I want to borrow your gun for target practice". He uses it for target practice, and then uses it to rob a bank.

      Hey, you can't be pissed off... he didn't say, "for target practice, and NOTHING ELSE".

      --
      General Relativity: Space-time tells matter where to go; Matter tells space-time what shape to be.
    13. Re:Damn them! by Nerdposeur · · Score: 0, Troll

      So if I say "may I borrow your car to go to the grocery store?" and we don't sign an agreement saying "and nowhere else," then it's OK for me to take a cross-country road trip? Your fault, eh?

      Also, after that, you and your neighbors would continue to trust me, right?

      (Slashdotters, take note: I used a car analogy.)

    14. Re:Damn them! by Kjella · · Score: 2, Informative

      Collecting data for purposes A, then later using them without permission for B, C and D should be illegal. I know that is at least the case here in Norway, the law on use of personal information is quite strict. Consider it a form of fraud if you will, that's the issue here not the research itself.

      --
      Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
    15. Re:Damn them! by Hijacked+Public · · Score: 1

      I am not arguing anything any way. I'm asking, why is it all right for a person to set terms for DNA they've given away, but not all right for a company to set terms for a product it sells?

      --
      "Sacrifice for the good of The State" - The State
    16. Re:Damn them! by MillionthMonkey · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Like figuring out whether the diabetes is comorbid with other mental illnesses that might be treatable? Or related to health problems seen among other groups too that may be dealing with them more or maybe less successively than people in the Tribes?

    17. Re:Damn them! by fwfell · · Score: 1

      Despite your disclaimer, your "mom" joke and the tenor of your reply reveal much about your ability to be civil.

    18. Re:Damn them! by AshtangiMan · · Score: 1

      The terms in the DNA case were set by the scope of the study which was presented by the researchers and was the foundation of the agreement. Likewise, when you buy the product you know what the limitations are. Neither is a problem. When the company changes the limitations on the product (PS3, made more restrictive for instance) or the scope is expanded after the fact, without obtaining authorization then both are a problem. You see?

    19. Re:Damn them! by Em+Emalb · · Score: 1

      (Slashdotters, take note: I used a car analogy.)

      Dude, thanks for the assist. My work is done here.

      --
      Sent from your iPad.
    20. Re:Damn them! by NiteShaed · · Score: 5, Informative

      That would be true, but TFA says:
      Roughly 100 tribe members who gave blood from 1990 to 1994 signed a broad consent that said the research was to “study the causes of behavioral/medical disorders.”

      Yes, Diabetes was their primary motivation, but they signed on for more than that. The problem seems to be that they didn't like what happened later and regretted that decision.

      --
      Some bring out the best in others, some the worst. Some bring out far more.
    21. Re:Damn them! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, those damn researchers! I'm sure that with a flip of a switch, that data could be abused and would be if any white person of wealth and stature wanted something from them. Nobody with money on their minds gives a **** about the Native Americans. Their only recourse is total xenophobia until respect comes before ambition. Scientists have no more ethics than robber barons.

    22. Re:Damn them! by tophermeyer · · Score: 4, Insightful

      If they wanted to have expansive use definitions for samples that they voluntarily surrendered, they should have had those terms in writing.

      They don't need to make an explicit demand for that, that is something that is actually already assumed. One requirement for conducting research with all human subjects (and especially protected populations) is that they be made fully aware what their data is being used for prior to giving their consent (though some research models require deception and an eventual debriefing this was not the case here).

      If you complete your stated analysis on a given set of samples and later desire to do further analysis, then Human Subjects ethical requirements actually put the onus on the Researchers to go back to the Participants and get their explicit permission to continue using their samples.

      A major concept in Human Subjects testing is Informed Consent. Researchers are required to fully explain the nature of the study and receive full informed consent from Participants before they can collect any data. This kind of thing is something that HST Researchers (along with their professional organizations and regulatory bodies) take very very seriously.

    23. Re:Damn them! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'd draw the line at giving the results to the FBI, which it sound like they did not do.

      I seem to recall a TV special about the DNA collections to trace the migration of man from Asia to the US. I'm not sure if this tribe was one of them. Some tribes were quite hesitant, until convinced by other members that learning was in keeping with the tribes' culture. Furthermore, if they had blood brothers elsewhere, it would not be against their heritage to learn where their blood brothers lived.

      As to going against tribal history, I guess it's a bit like GWB not wanting to hear Valerie Plame's info that there was no nuclear weapons program in Iraq. Remember, we had to invade because they would have a nuclear bomb, "within two years."

    24. Re:Damn them! by ArsonSmith · · Score: 1

      No, this is more like buying an iPhone and putting Android on it then seeing Steve Jobs get his panies in a bunch over it because you weren't suppose to do that with his idealistic view of the iPhone experience.

      They gave away their dna with/or without implicate consent to do something, but the sample no longer belonged to them. All the other analogies I've seen have been, I'm going to ask you for something then continue to affect you by doing other things (additional charges on your credit card, additional miles on a car etc...)

      --
      Paying taxes to buy civilization is like paying a hooker to buy love.
    25. Re:Damn them! by operagost · · Score: 1

      Worst. Troll. Ever.

      --

      Gamingmuseum.com: Give your 3D accelerator a rest.
    26. Re:Damn them! by ElectricTurtle · · Score: 1

      My excellent karma disagrees. I actually drop edgy posts now and then specifically so I don't get flooded with more mod points than I really want.

      --
      I support the Slashcott and will not be reading or commenting from 2/10/14 to 2/17/14. Beta is steaming pile of dog shit
    27. Re:Damn them! by Discopete · · Score: 1

      If you RTFA, you'll see that they did indeed sign a consent form that was "purposely simple" (doctor's words) due to that fact that english is not the Havasupai's primary language. To "study the causes of behavioral/medical disorders." sounds like a boilerplate consent that took advantage of that fact.

      What it looks like is that ASU realized they were about to have their a**es handed to them and they backed off and said "ok, we f-ed up, what can we do to make it right?"
      Had a judge found in the Havasupai's favor it would have had far reaching effects throughout the US, not just in the educational system but also in the health and human services system.

    28. Re:Damn them! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Roughly 100 tribe members who gave blood from 1990 to 1994 signed a broad consent that said the research was to “study the causes of behavioral/medical disorders.”"

    29. Re:Damn them! by tsm_sf · · Score: 1

      what expectation would I reasonably have that the use would be exclusive?

      You mean I should assume that you will go outside our agreement at the first opportunity? If I say "I agree to let you study my blood for X condition", do you really see that as carte blanche?

      Let's take this to it's logical extreme. If I get ahold of your DNA through legal means (say, from GP's mom) and set up a restaurant serving cuts of meat from your cloned body, were you "stupid and careless" to not expect such behavior?

      --
      Literalism isn't a form of humor, it's you being irritating.
    30. Re:Damn them! by ElectricTurtle · · Score: 1

      This depends on their status. Yes, there is Title 45 Part 46 of the CFR, but that only applies to federally-regulated research. Whether this falls into that category or not I am not informed enough to say. Other organizational policy issues are of course between the researchers and their organization.

      --
      I support the Slashcott and will not be reading or commenting from 2/10/14 to 2/17/14. Beta is steaming pile of dog shit
    31. Re:Damn them! by mrdoogee · · Score: 1

      I would only object to the 5th use of my DNA, as it violates the 4th Amendment. The rest, have at it.

      The basic tenets of your argument are sound however. I realize that while I may be quite free with my limits on DNA use, others may not. The question remains that did these people give informed consent to just diabetes or as a earlier poster claims to a broader collection of genetic disorders. Based on not RTFA, I can only speculate.

    32. Re:Damn them! by wizardforce · · Score: 1

      The tribe members gave blood samples on the condition that they be used for a specific purpose. As interesting as these secondary investigations would have been, their blood belongs to them no one else.

      --
      Sigs are too short to say anything truly profound so read the above post instead.
    33. Re:Damn them! by LWATCDR · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Dang right now dare a Native American tribe be upset when researchers don't honor the agreements they made with the tribe! They should trust that is is for their own good and will help them in the end.
      Oh and they should just give up their beliefs and and got on with life.
      Really have they learned nothing from history!

      Actually I have to find it a little amusing that they where upset to find out the researchers didn't keep there agreement. I mean really does any tribe really expect that any agreement they sign will be honored? And just how can any researcher NOT honor an agreement with a Native American tribe and sleep at night? I mean ignoring their wishes and beliefs for their own good? Because you know better than they do? Usually I am the first to say that the concept of "white mans guilt" is stupid and abused but really in this case it seems like they must be from another planet?.

      Kind of reminds me of that STNG when they are asked to relocate some Native Americans from a Planet and you can just see the character of Picard thinking, "You want me to do what???"

      --
      See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
    34. Re:Damn them! by melikamp · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The line can only be drawn at "no expectation of DNA privacy for anyone". Each of us sheds millions of skin cells every day, everywhere we go, leaving our DNA samples on everything we touch. Anyone who considers their DNA their property should kindly not litter and keep it to themselves. What we should fight is the discrimination based on DNA analysis, because the genotype only describes some initial conditions, whereas the phenotype is what we are, and in many respects, what we've made of ourselves through culture, even in spite of our genes.

    35. Re:Damn them! by Red+Flayer · · Score: 1

      Then you're doing it wrong.

      Once you are above the karma threshold for mod points, it doesn't matter how your current posts are modded (unless they bring you back below the threshold). What matters is how often you access slashdot, and I think how often you post.

      If you want to reduce the amount of modpoints you get... either access & post very frequently or access & post rarely.

      --
      "Trolls they were, but filled with the evil will of their master: a fell race..." -- J.R.R. Tolkien on Olog-hai
    36. Re:Damn them! by bmo · · Score: 1

      And you know what? You have absolutely no sense of humor.

      Lighten up.

      Sincerely, everyone who doesn't like a killjoy.

      --
      BMO

    37. Re:Damn them! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Lets say I fill out a 'win one thousand dollars' sweepstakes at some random mall.

      Those damn marketers all they want to do is sell where I live and my phone number to people. They just want to connect me to people who want to sell me things.

      If you do not think it is the same thing you are blind.

    38. Re:Damn them! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I bet Sony's EULA justifies the company's action to brick OtherOS as well. Or for any other industry in fact - check your contract with your car, health insurance; software licensing agreement, even your credit card companies. The golden clause is usually: we can modify this contract at any time, with or without your consent - or some variation thereof.

      Just because they signed this blanket do-whatever-you-want, it doesn't mean the researchers can override the state or federal laws, including HIPAA.

    39. Re:Damn them! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Somewhere down the list will be "and use your DNA to make artificial fetus' to run medical research on, only to have them come back 18 years later with medical bills and a childhood of overdue child support that you now owe because you are their biological father."

      I would definitely have a problem with that, and I don't put it past some pharmaceutical corporations.

    40. Re:Damn them! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Their heritage is more important to their lives than our research. This is a lot like the Creationism vs. Darwinism debate, but with more genocide.

    41. Re:Damn them! by ElectricTurtle · · Score: 1

      Even with that justification removed, it's still amusing to get people riled up occasionally. It's just a matter of balance. I frequently post long, well-researched, and wholly polite things. If I never lashed out I probably couldn't keep going. It's called being human, and I am unashamed of it.

      --
      I support the Slashcott and will not be reading or commenting from 2/10/14 to 2/17/14. Beta is steaming pile of dog shit
    42. Re:Damn them! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They did not, which is why we have research and medical ethics guidelines to go by.

    43. Re:Damn them! by qmetaball · · Score: 1

      i don't know about you, but my car didn't come with a contract.

      --
      Everything is porn to somebody.
    44. Re:Damn them! by noidentity · · Score: 1

      And further, it's not like the researchers didn't have the opportunity to ask for permission to study these other things. It could be that they figured the answer would be "no", which would just put them further in the wrong.

    45. Re:Damn them! by Foobar+of+Borg · · Score: 1

      I would only object to the 5th use of my DNA, as it violates the 4th Amendment. The rest, have at it.

      Oh, that's so cute! An American who thinks the 4th Amendment matters anymore! (Sorry, I'm not actually making fun of you. I'm just depressed.)

    46. Re:Damn them! by NiteShaed · · Score: 2, Informative

      That's just nonsense. The consent form said the samples were to be used for medical research. That's what they were used for. Your examples would be applicable if the samples were used for criminal checks, or market-research, but that's not the case.

      In Sony's case, OtherOS was a feature that was present, and in some cases motivated people to purchase the unit. There is no comparison here.

      Clauses that say a contract can be unilaterally modified at any time are generally invalid on their face, and since that's again not what happened here, not relevant.

      HIPAA has nothing to do with this. Patient confidentiality was not broken during any of the studies. If you're aware of some other state or federal law you feel is applicable, go ahead and cite it, but good luck searching, 'cause I don't think you'll find anything.

      --
      Some bring out the best in others, some the worst. Some bring out far more.
    47. Re:Damn them! by noidentity · · Score: 1

      What about this: you give your credit card number to a store for certain purchase, and they purchase dozen of other things on the same credit card for you ("Yes, sir, we truly believe you need all those things, it's all for your own good!")

      I'm sorry, none of that makes any sense. Can you put it in terms of cars?

    48. Re:Damn them! by PhxBlue · · Score: 1

      Yes, Diabetes was their primary motivation, but they signed on for more than that. The problem seems to be that they didn't like what happened later and regretted that decision.

      Two points:

      First, did they understand what they were signing?

      Second, given the Indian Nations' history with white people and treaties, why shouldn't they be outraged that the researchers used the DNA for more purposes than what they had originally agreed to verbally?

      --
      !#@%*)anks for hanging up the phone, dear.
    49. Re:Damn them! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      WOLFORD BRIMLEY DOES NOT APPROVE! If you have diabeetus you should not approve, either...

    50. Re:Damn them! by couchslug · · Score: 1

      I'd welcome ANY use that seeks truth and serves science.

      The world is welcome to my medical history, including pics of my vasectomy scars with surrounding shrubbery if wanted.

      --
      "This post is an artistic work of fiction and falsehood. Only a fool would take anything posted here as fact."
    51. Re:Damn them! by mea37 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Or alternately

      "The problem seems to be that they didn't like what happened later and realized that they hadn't understood what they signed."

      Even among native English-speakers, it is not unheard of for a signature to be considered invalid if it's later determined that the signer didn't really know what he/she was signing. This isn't something you'd want to rely on - it's obviously best to know what you're signing before you sign it. But this sounds like it was far removed from the ideal scenario for truly informed consent.

      We don't know how the document was explained to the individuals, because we weren't there. No malice would've been necessary for there to be a miscommunication about what was happening; I'd be thoroughly surprised if it had been fully explained and understood.

      Given that we don't know exactly what was said, based on the way each side has framed its argument it sure sounds like the Native Americans only intended one use for their blood, the issue was never explicitely discussed, the researchers didn't understand the donors' expectations or the sensitivity to the matter in their culture, and then you get what we have here. If that's true, then the real fault is a serious lapse of judgement on the researchers' part.

      Everyone involved may have acted with good faith and good intentions, but if you want to work with other cultures, and trumpet how well you work with other cultures, then you need to be aware of their point of view.

    52. Re:Damn them! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Really...they had permission did they??? From the article:

      "“Did you have permission,” she asked during the question period, “to use Havasupai blood for your research?”

      The presentation was halted. Dr. Markow and the other members of the doctoral committee asked the student to redact that chapter from his dissertation.

      Many members are still suffering from diabetes and say they were never told if researchers had learned anything that could help them. The classes on nutrition that Dr. Markow had sponsored with grant money have since petered out. "

      Obviously, the tribe did not consent to that.

      jackass

    53. Re:Damn them! by HappyEngineer · · Score: 1

      When you put it that way I'm actually almost convinced it's ok. It seems to me that when I buy a product I have a right to use that product however I want. As long as they're not doing anything that ties the DNA to specific individuals then it's just research and not individual violation of privacy.

      It's too bad I haven't gotten mod points in years. I'd love to remove the unnecessary troll mod you've gotten.

    54. Re:Damn them! by pclminion · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Go for it. Just don't associate it with my name. How fucking hard is that?

    55. Re:Damn them! by b4dc0d3r · · Score: 3, Informative

      If you read a bit further: Carletta Tilousi, one of the few Havasupai to attend college, stopped by Professor Martin's office one day in 2003, and he invited her to the student's doctoral presentation. Ms. Tilousi understood little of the technical aspect, but what she heard bore no resemblance to the diabetes research she had pictured when she had given her own blood sample years earlier.

      I realize that "[t]he consent form was purposely simple, Dr. Markow said, given that English was a second language for many Havasupai," but when you explain it as diabetes research and the consent form says something different, there's a problem. After the above question, the following happened.

      The presentation was halted. Dr. Markow and the other members of the doctoral committee asked the student to redact that chapter from his dissertation.

      Bottom line is, if they were told it was one purpose, and the contract said something else, then you would have to prove that everyone who signed was capable of understanding that the contract did not match the verbal description. the sentence right before what you quoted was "I went and told people, if they have their blood taken, it would help them," said Floranda Uqualla, 46, whose parents and grandparents suffered from diabetes. "And we might get a cure so that our people won't have to leave our canyon." Does that sound like someone who thought the consent form was more broad than just diabetes?

      "Doesn't matter, you signed a contract" is not bulletproof.

    56. Re:Damn them! by Bakkster · · Score: 1

      Yes, Diabetes was their primary motivation, but they signed on for more than that. The problem seems to be that they didn't like what happened later and regretted that decision.

      Hence, the purpose of 'informed consent'. It matters less that you consent, and more that you know what you are consenting to. Put another way, your consent isn't legal if you aren't aware of the implications of your consent. For examples of studies going bad when they didn't use informed consent, see the Stanford prison experiment, the Milgram experiment, and The Monster Study.

      --
      Write your representatives! Repeal the 2nd Law of Thermodynamics!
    57. Re:Damn them! by Red+Flayer · · Score: 1

      Trust me, I know the feeling, you twit.

      :)

      --
      "Trolls they were, but filled with the evil will of their master: a fell race..." -- J.R.R. Tolkien on Olog-hai
    58. Re:Damn them! by HeckRuler · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Except, as others have pointed out and you would know if you had RTFA, they DID have permission. The Havasupai went to the researchers to cure their diabetes, but in that process they were told, and agreed to, being researched for other disorders.

      Now, I can see, in a way, being miffed that research was done that didn't have any hopes of helping the people. (other then giving them knowledge about themselves). And they could ever so slightly argue for some kick-back from that research, but that's a little greedy.

      But other then uncovering some inconvenient truths, I'm not seeing the problem. Suck it up and deal with reality. I'm siding with the researchers on this one.

    59. Re:Damn them! by RightSaidFred99 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      No, not like that at all. Nice story, though.

    60. Re:Damn them! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Did you also notice that English isn't a primary with that tribe? How about the limited education and experience with the outside world?

      I have no doubts that the researcher took advantage of them, even if it was neither intended nor understood by her.

      Most of the members of that tribe are not educationally equipped to properly understand the ramifications of that kind of consent agreement. Heck, they wouldn't even know there were questions they should have asked. In their minds it was simple, they were told it was to try and find out about their diabetes so a cure might be made. To them, those papers were just lawyerese in a foreign language telling them that.

    61. Re:Damn them! by mea37 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      If the studies had really revolved around matters related to the tribe's diabetes problem, then I imagine the university would've raised that argument.

      TFA does kinda-sorta imply that the type of study you're talking about is possible in the realm of genetic research, which is all well and good; but nowhere do I see any indication that it's what actually happened. In fact, I'd like to know how they'd go about that since they didn't find a genetic link to the diabetes problem in the first place.

      If you want to argue that reserachers shouldn't need specific concent to broaden the uses to which DNA is put once collected, then make that argument. It is a legitimately debatable point, though in this instance I believe the cross-cultural issues will tip the balance toward requiring concent. But come on - don't hide behind counter-factual interpretations of what happened; it just makes our culture look that much less worthy of trust.

    62. Re:Damn them! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That would be true, but TFA says:
      Roughly 100 tribe members who gave blood from 1990 to 1994 signed a broad consent that said the research was to “study the causes of behavioral/medical disorders.”

      Yes, Diabetes was their primary motivation, but they signed on for more than that. The problem seems to be that they didn't like what happened later and regretted that decision.

      Or perhaps the researchers didn't give the tribe members a reasonable explanation of what else might happen with the samples. Informed consent is just that, it can't be generalities and hand waving.

    63. Re:Damn them! by SydShamino · · Score: 1

      Because humans have more rights than nonhumans?

      --
      It doesn't hurt to be nice.
    64. Re:Damn them! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      You have the right to do plenty of things that I object to. I object to you telling your friend that I am a total asshole, or that what I'm wearing is ugly as sin, and if you saw me getting drunk and making a fool of myself I would object to you telling the story to everyone you know. But you sure as hell should have the right to do those things.

      And, of course, in this case the volunteers apparently signed contracts that allowed all of this. So it's more a case of "read the damn fine print" than anything else. Should some fine print be disallowed? Possibly. I could see how, if the contract was designed to be misleading, it would be thrown out. But that's a different kind of discussion.

    65. Re:Damn them! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Damn fine print gets the Indians again! Arent there any Indian laywers?!

    66. Re:Damn them! by HeckRuler · · Score: 2, Informative

      Roughly 100 tribe members who gave blood from 1990 to 1994 signed a broad consent that said the research was to “study the causes of behavioral/medical disorders.” The consent form was purposely simple, Dr. Markow said, given that English was a second language for many Havasupai, and few of the tribe’s 650 members had graduated from high school. They were always given the opportunity to ask questions, she said, and students were also instructed to explain the project and get written and verbal consent from donors.

      So yes. They did.
      Jackass.

    67. Re:Damn them! by spamking · · Score: 2

      Second, given the Indian Nations' history with white people and treaties, why shouldn't they be outraged that the researchers used the DNA for more purposes than what they had originally agreed to verbally?

      What exactly does "medical research" mean to you?

      And why bring race into this? There are actually people out there wanting to help those in need. Regardless of color.

    68. Re:Damn them! by TubeSteak · · Score: 3, Informative

      Yes, Diabetes was their primary motivation, but they signed on for more than that. The problem seems to be that they didn't like what happened later and regretted that decision.

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Informed_consent

      Especially when it comes to medical ethics, the wording of the contract is far less less relevant than the meeting of the minds that precedes it.

      As context, if you look at how our laws are interpreted, the Supreme Court spends a lot of time delving into the intent of Congress, not just the final product.

      --
      [Fuck Beta]
      o0t!
    69. Re:Damn them! by sznupi · · Score: 1

      I would be more than exstatic of something like that; where can I send my DNA?

      --
      One that hath name thou can not otter
    70. Re:Damn them! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      p>Hey, you can't be pissed off... he didn't say, "for target practice, and NOTHING ELSE".

      Sure I can. And I will demand the return of my gun. In a manner which will not give him the opportunity to use it upon me.

    71. Re:Damn them! by sznupi · · Score: 1

      I concur. It's good to satisfy you little inner Evil from time to time...

      --
      One that hath name thou can not otter
    72. Re:Damn them! by Jah-Wren+Ryel · · Score: 2, Interesting

      The line can only be drawn at "no expectation of DNA privacy for anyone". Each of us sheds millions of skin cells every day, everywhere we go, leaving our DNA samples on everything we touch. Anyone who considers their DNA their property should kindly not litter and keep it to themselves.

      I'll be right there with you, just as soon as the laws preventing me from doing whatever I damn well please with the electromagnetic signals broadcast onto my property are repealed.

      --
      When information is power, privacy is freedom.
    73. Re:Damn them! by jpate · · Score: 1

      Honestly? First, the people are giving their DNA. It is a gift to science and society at large. There's a difference between a gift and a purchase. Second, regardless of what the US Supreme Court might say, corporations are not people. There's just no comparison between a person giving to researchers and a company selling goods and services to consumers.

    74. Re:Damn them! by MillionthMonkey · · Score: 1

      I'll admit I haven't RTFA.

    75. Re:Damn them! by Jah-Wren+Ryel · · Score: 1

      You're not only missing the point, you're avoiding it entirely. Do you think researchers have the right to do research on YOU without your permission?

      FYI, there is a term for this sort of issue: Informational self-determination.

      --
      When information is power, privacy is freedom.
    76. Re:Damn them! by nbauman · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The investigators treated the Havasupai the same way they treat their own families when they look for a genetic disease.

      The Times had another story about a doctor, James Lupski, whose family had the colorfully-named Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease, who got researchers to do DNA studies of his family. http://www.nytimes.com/2010/03/11/health/research/11gene.html In sequencing their DNA, they found that there were related conditions in other members of their family who everybody thought were healthy. They got a lot of useful information for that family.

      The investigators explained what they were doing to the Havasupai, as best as they could to subjects who don't speak English that well and who don't understand the science of it that well. This is a common situation with well-established rules. As the TFA explains, they got informed consent to do exactly what they did. This was for the benefit of the Havasupai.

      The alternative is to never do studies on poorly-educated people. Is that what you want?

      There is no such thing as "just studying diabetes." In DNA studies, they try to get all the useful information they can (or can afford), as they did with Lupski. That way they can look for patterns.

      Now a few members of the Havasupai want to complain about it (for their own benefit), so they've convinced the other tribal members that there is something wrong with doing standard medical studies on people with a poorly-understood disease. The subjects agreed, and now they're going back on their word. They got away with it because they were in a position to blackmail the university by getting other tribes to boycott their studies.

      If you want to say that the doctors also benefitted professionally and got grants for helping their patients deal with life-threatening diseases and potentially saving a few lives, yeah, OK, they did. What's wrong with that? And what about the lawyer who sued the university?

    77. Re:Damn them! by Hatta · · Score: 1, Insightful

      First, did they understand what they were signing?

      Why did they sign if they didn't understand it?

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    78. Re:Damn them! by Archangel+Michael · · Score: 1

      No no no no.

      It is like being born in the USA and having subset of 536 people (congress/president) tell you that you need to buy Health Insurance or else face fines and persecution by the IRS.

      ("Yes, sir, we truly believe you need that, it's all for your own good!")

      --
      Agent K: A *person* is smart. People are dumb, stupid, panicky animals, and you know it.
    79. Re:Damn them! by Christoph · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I, for one, do not care about my DNA being private. But, as you wrote, I might care about an abuse (telling me I can't live in my neighborhood because my DNA says my ancestors once lived in a certain part of the world, etc).

      The most abused information -- age, race, gender -- is public. We can't keep it private (in a one-on-one personal encounter) if we wanted. The only solution is to reduce unfair treatment based on that information. Why is that not the same with DNA or other personal information (that has public health and scientific uses)?

      My DNA can be used to find cures to disease, and I would provide it. I don't want to micro-manage how my DNA benefits science or is arguably mis-used. Unless you grow my DNA into a bullet and shoot it at me, it's not important to me.

      Public health is important. Finding a cure for Parkinson's, alzhiemers, diabetes, autism...I really, really, really, really care about those things. If some moron arguably misuses my DNA to learn what-not I just am not interested.

    80. Re:Damn them! by SecurityGuy · · Score: 1

      No, the problem is that you're asked (by a live human being) to participate in research to learn Thing A, in this case, why your tribe has a high incidence of a debilitating disease, and given a form which says they're allowed to use whatever you give them to research thing A, things B-Z, other things AA-zqf, and any other research purpose.

      Been there, done that, with cord blood donation. Am I willing to donate cord blood which will otherwise just be thrown away but might help someone? Of course. Give me the consent form. No lie, the last line of the long form explaining what they were going to do with it was "or any other research purpose." In other words, the whole form should have read "Can we have your umbilical cord blood to do anything we want with?" Well, no, you can't. I didn't sign.

      Sadly, this kind of crap will NEVER stop unless people start objecting to it, and objection takes the form of no. This isn't hard. Draft a narrowly focused consent form that lets you do your research, not any random research you or anyone else thinks up later, AND respects the rights of your subjects. Don't ask them to sign a blank biological check.

    81. Re:Damn them! by Hotawa+Hawk-eye · · Score: 1

      While "It's easier to ask forgiveness than it is to get permission.", getting permission is easier (and IMO better) than getting lawyers involved.

      Of course, the list of things that are easier and better than getting lawyers involved is quite long, but that's beside the point.

      If these researchers had thought that using the data for other purposes would have some benefit, they could have explained why and asked the donors (or the tribe leadership) for permission. In the worst case, the donors or the tribe say no; in the best case you convince them to let you do what you want.

    82. Re:Damn them! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Finally you admit some ignorance and act like a reasonable person. If you'd had the decency to not act like a jackass all the way down to this point, I wouldn't be downmodding all of your posts.

    83. Re:Damn them! by melikamp · · Score: 1

      I don't think I understand. Can't you just build a Faraday cage around your property?

    84. Re:Damn them! by melikamp · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I agree completely. I like your analogy with skin color: DNA is just as clearly exposed in the world, arguably even more so, but people get fooled into thinking that it is supposed to be private only because they cannot see it with a naked eye.

    85. Re:Damn them! by Actually,+I+do+RTFA · · Score: 1

      "Yes, sir, we truly believe you need that, it's all for your own good!"

      You buying health insurance isn't about whether its good for you. In fact, they assume it will be bad for you (hence having to be forced to buy it). However, if people can only buy insurance if it is a good deal, then that leads to market failures. This becomes especially true when pre-existing conditions are no longer able to disqualify you from getting insurance.

      --
      Your ad here. Ask me how!
    86. Re:Damn them! by Mr.+Slippery · · Score: 1

      Each of us sheds millions of skin cells every day, everywhere we go, leaving our DNA samples on everything we touch.

      And because there's so much DNA being shed, mine mixes in with everyone else's. It's not personally identifiable data, unless you take a sample from me, or get a sample from somewhere where I've been the only recent occupant.

      Given that there is no way for anyone to get an identifiable sample of my DNA without assault or trespass, I have a very strong expectation of DNA privacy.

      --
      Tom Swiss | the infamous tms | my blog
      You cannot wash away blood with blood
    87. Re:Damn them! by Mr.+Slippery · · Score: 2, Insightful

      And why bring race into this?

      Race was brought into this in 1492, when the genocide of the Native nations began. It continues today, with ongoing treaty violations. Neglecting to discuss the past and present vast influence of racism on policy, hiding behind some "let's not bring race into this" excuse when in fact the whole issue is rooted in beliefs about race, is not honest and rational behavior.

      --
      Tom Swiss | the infamous tms | my blog
      You cannot wash away blood with blood
    88. Re:Damn them! by brillow · · Score: 1

      Correct, failure to have a "meeting of the minds" does not by its own claim exempt you from contractual obligations. Saying "well I didn't read the contract" is not good enough. Saying "well I read it but I didn't understand it" is not, on itself, good enough. I wonder how much the Native Americans were paid for their samples.

    89. Re:Damn them! by maxume · · Score: 2, Informative

      It is illegal to decode digital satellite signals without the permission of the broadcaster, even though they are indiscriminately irradiating most of the United States. If you don't want me to decode it, you shouldn't be so sloppy with your EM, not go running to the government.

      --
      Nerd rage is the funniest rage.
    90. Re:Damn them! by brillow · · Score: 1

      Except this is not a case of medical ethics. The people here are not patients, they are simply research subjects.

    91. Re:Damn them! by maxume · · Score: 1

      I bet there are ways of getting a pretty excellent characterization simply by combining samples from several locations where you happen to have been. It might not hold up legally, but it would probably be perfectly usable.

      And then there is the thing where I obsessively empty trash receptacles at some place you frequent, so that I can harvest some of your saliva.

      --
      Nerd rage is the funniest rage.
    92. Re:Damn them! by mcgrew · · Score: 1

      Your DNA is you; or at least, a large part of what you are. DNA was given conditionally, and they went past the conditions.

    93. Re:Damn them! by melikamp · · Score: 1

      See the reply above. Analyzing what you deposit in a public restroom is also likely to work. A single hair that you shed from your head in a public place may be clearly visible and identifiable, depending on your hair style.

      And you have to understand that identification is not at the core of the issue. It may irk you more when they know that your name is attached to this DNA, but much damage can be done by discriminating based even on the results of an anonymous study: if you sweep an area frequented by members of a certain social group (say, immigrants), then you can make statistical statements about that social group. The statistics can be perfectly sound, but the discrimination is still unethical.

      Whatever difficulties face those who are determined to collect your DNA without depriving you of your liberty, the simple fact is that it is silly to expect something to be private if you drop millions of copies of it everywhere you go.

    94. Re:Damn them! by Jah-Wren+Ryel · · Score: 1

      It's also illegal to repeat anything I've received that was broadcast over certain frequencies - like those of cell phones, pagers and some other radio bands.

      --
      When information is power, privacy is freedom.
    95. Re:Damn them! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Honest officer, I thought it was cloned sznupi on rye.

    96. Re:Damn them! by Bill_the_Engineer · · Score: 1

      Suck it up and deal with reality. I'm siding with the researchers on this one.

      Why?

      (Just speculating here)

      The original intent was to help the tribe with their diabetes. They made the agreement vague enough to keep the required paperwork down, and to keep any potential roadblocks from hampering the original work.

      Now that the work is over, researchers within the university wanted access to the samples for their own research. The university's review board compared the requests against the vague agreement made for the original research and awarded access. Now we have an issue where the spirit of the agreement doesn't match the letter of the agreement.

      I think the university should "Suck it up and deal with reality" that they dropped the ball here. They should at least kept the tribe informed of any new research, or at the very least terminated the agreement after the diabetes research concluded.

      I don't see enough information to pick a side, but I don't see how a technicality created by a vague agreement should absolve the university. At the very least this should serve as a wakeup call for both the universities and the research subjects that full disclosure of all activities permitted and the duration should be given at the time of signing. We can call it a "truth in granting permissions" form.

      --
      These comments are my own and do not necessarily reflect the views or opinions of my employer or colleagues...
    97. Re:Damn them! by Tromad · · Score: 1

      This isn't acceptable when they take our DNA and patent the tests and results that come from it. If they want free access to my DNA I want free access to their tests and results.

    98. Re:Damn them! by Mr.+Slippery · · Score: 1

      I bet there are ways of getting a pretty excellent characterization simply by combining samples from several locations where you happen to have been.

      I very seriously doubt it.

      And then there is the thing where I obsessively empty trash receptacles at some place you frequent, so that I can harvest some of your saliva.

      And if you're following me around enough to do this, you're stalking me. Still criminal behavior.

      --
      Tom Swiss | the infamous tms | my blog
      You cannot wash away blood with blood
    99. Re:Damn them! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'll admit I haven't RTFA.

      Then STFU until you have some clue of what you're talking about.

    100. Re:Damn them! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So if I can convince some people that a contract is about A and then write it up so that is also covers B-Z if I feel like it, that's perfectly legit?

      "Guys, sign this contract, it says I can get $100 from you to invest."

      *whisper*but it doesn't specify a hundred it just says I can take money from you to invest as I like*whisper*

      So hey sign right here. Don't worry that you can't read it too well and it's in legalese! Trust me!

    101. Re:Damn them! by Sir_Lewk · · Score: 1

      Race was brought into this in 1492, when the genocide of the Native nations began. It continues today, with ongoing treaty violations.

      Treaty violations are equivalent, nay, ARE genocide.

      Riiiiiiiight.

      --
      "linux is just DOS with a UNIX like syntax" -- Galactic Dominator (944134)
    102. Re:Damn them! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So he can wear a wet suit then?

    103. Re:Damn them! by Mr.+Slippery · · Score: 0

      Analyzing what you deposit in a public restroom is also likely to work. A single hair that you shed from your head in a public place may be clearly visible and identifiable, depending on your hair style.

      Where I come from, we flush after using public restrooms. Any trace left behind is mixed with traces from dozens, or even hundreds (it's not like standard cleaning removes every last trace of biological material) of other people. And if you're following me closely enough to find a shed hair, you're stalking. The expectation of DNA privacy remains.

      And you have to understand that identification is not at the core of the issue.

      It is in fact the core of the issue. I don't care about statistical statements about a large social group, provided that they are accurate and based on data collected in an ethical manner. (Which would not be the case in the Havasupai incident.) To say "African Americans have a higher rate of sickle cell anemia than the general population" or "Irish Americans have higher rates of alcoholism" is fine. Discrimination on the basis of those statements is another matter, but is not limited to DNA information, or even to medical information. I care about privacy: about information about individuals.

      the simple fact is that it is silly to expect something to be private if you drop millions of copies of it everywhere you go.

      No more silly than to expect a conversation to be private when your sound waves radiate in all directions. Sure, I might need a super-amplifier to hear your pillow talk from across the street, but too bad, it is silly to expect your words to be private if you let sound waves out of your house, right?

      There's a huge difference between a public conversation, and a conversation that can be overheard given enough ingenuity on the part of the eavesdropper. And there's a huge difference between giving a DNA sample, and having one's DNA collected by a stalker.

      The expectation of privacy is not negated by the theoretical possibility of surveillance.

      --
      Tom Swiss | the infamous tms | my blog
      You cannot wash away blood with blood
    104. Re:Damn them! by HeckRuler · · Score: 1
      The original intent of the Havasupai was a cure for their diabetes only so far as keeping people in the canyon. Sure.
      I dunno what the original intent of Markow was, but it was a grant from schitzo researchers that paid her to go sample their blood. You don't know, nor do I, if they kept things vague for liability purposes, paperwork purposes, or so they could research for whatever ails the tribe. But in the article, and that's all I've read, this was explained to them. Sure, the tribe wanted a cure for diabetes, but the agreement was for any disorder. It's not the letter vs the spirit. It's more like the letter vs. the word vs. what the tribe actually wanted vs. what the scientists actually wanted.

      I think the university should "Suck it up and deal with reality" that they dropped the ball here.

      mmm, yeah. And they did. A payout, destroying the samples. They should have kept closer contact with the tribe and kept them informed.

      or at the very least terminated the agreement after the diabetes research concluded.

      Well this is where I disagree. You've got a sample of interesting DNA from a anthropology perspective, and you've got permission to study it. I would rather it be studied, documented, and have it aid human knowledge rather then it be destroyed because the truth might ruffle some religious feathers.

      The idea that anything personal should be destroyed so other people can't see it has to make anthropologists, historians, and scientists in general cringe something fierce.

    105. Re:Damn them! by melikamp · · Score: 1

      Sure, I might need a super-amplifier to hear your pillow talk from across the street, but too bad, it is silly to expect your words to be private if you let sound waves out of your house, right?

      If DNA was half as private as a whisper in a well-enclosed space, you'd have a point. But it's not. Good luck eavesdropping on my pillow talk from across the street when my windows are closed and my curtains are drawn. This is actually impossible, given the current state of technology, as opposed to getting your DNA without you even knowing, which is easy as pie. Hell, one can collect your DNA without ever coming to within hundreds of miles of you, so no stalking is required. Good luck trying to find another copy of what I said after I finished talking. And if I make enough noise for it to be picked up outside of my property, then I shouldn't be surprised that someone may be recording it.

      Imagine if someone was doing it to software or any kind of digitized info: making millions of unencrypted copies on little dust-sized particles and blowing them into the wind all over the public space. You are saying that it is a breach of his privacy when people collect these memory cells, read them, discuss them, and republish them in a different form? I don't know how else to tell you this: if you expect a piece of information to be private, then publishing millions of copies all over the place is the single worst thing to go about it.

    106. Re:Damn them! by Bill_the_Engineer · · Score: 1

      The idea that anything personal should be destroyed so other people can't see it has to make anthropologists, historians, and scientists in general cringe something fierce.

      So? Why should anyone care about anthropologists or historians when it comes to using their DNA? If these two non-medical institutions really want access then they should ask and come to some agreeable terms.

      Otherwise, they can search the dirt like they do now.

      --
      These comments are my own and do not necessarily reflect the views or opinions of my employer or colleagues...
    107. Re:Damn them! by Mr.+Slippery · · Score: 1

      Good luck eavesdropping on my pillow talk from across the street when my windows are closed and my curtains are drawn. This is actually impossible, given the current state of technology

      Highly questionable as to whether it's impossible with current tech -- see the 2010 update on laser eavesdropping on this page -- but even if it is, so what? Why should you have to close your windows and draw the curtains to enjoy the same expectation of privacy in your own bedroom that your grandfather had, before parabolic mics became common? He could leave his window open on a pleasant summer's night and murmur sweet nothings to your grandma, knowing that no one could hear without hanging right outside the window, trespassing.

      And why should your grandchildren have to put in place active defenses against laser eavesdropping? There's a much better, more respectful solution: the just use of sanctions, including the use of force, against people who violate other's rights to privacy. In an anarchy, I'd simply punch an eavesdropper directly in the nose, and my neighbors would be fine with it; under a government, the state threatens to punch them in the nose (or shoot you) if they don't go sit in a room and have a long time-out and think about what an asshole they've been.

      Hell, one can collect your DNA without ever coming to within hundreds of miles of you, so no stalking is required.

      Would you care to explain how?

      if you expect a piece of information to be private, then publishing millions of copies all over the place is the single worst thing to go about it.

      Your fundamental error is in holding unintentional information leakage to be equivalent to publishing. If I went around leaving vials of my blood for folks to analyze, that would be publishing; the completely involuntary shedding of skin flakes and hairs, is not.

      I repeat: the expectation of privacy is not negated by the theoretical possibility of surveillance.

      --
      Tom Swiss | the infamous tms | my blog
      You cannot wash away blood with blood
    108. Re:Damn them! by sjames · · Score: 1

      That and that some of the research exceeded even the broader bounds in the consent forms.

    109. Re:Damn them! by RockDoctor · · Score: 1

      Like figuring out whether the diabetes is comorbid with other mental illnesses that might be treatable?

      When did diabetes become a mental disease?

      --
      Birds are not dinosaur descendants;birds are dinosaurs, for all useful meanings of "birds", "are" and "dinosaurs"
    110. Re:Damn them! by spamking · · Score: 1

      Medical research doesn't discriminate. However, medical researchers very well could.

      Ongoing treaty violations? I'd love to hear more about those . . .

      I'm Native American and just happen to work for a government agency that provides health care to tribes. For every supposed "treaty violation" I can provide info on things where the government is getting short changed as well. There are often times where both sides lose and where one "wins" more than the other.

  3. as soon as you break common decency by circletimessquare · · Score: 5, Insightful

    you have committed the graver transgression, no matter how silly or zany someone's else's beliefs

    it wounld't have hurt the researchers to simply ask the native americans permission, simply as a matter of obvious and simple due course that a kindergartener would understand the rationale for

    the native americans might even have given their permission beforehand (no matter what they base their objections on after-the-fact), simply because you asked nicely

    when you don't grant people simple social common decency, their positions harden and they get angry at you

    a little niceness goes a long way in this world, and its a shame not enough people understand that

    --
    intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    1. Re:as soon as you break common decency by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wait, just a minute ago, in the Sony PS3 story, I was told that once I have something it is mine to do with as I wish.

      These people gave their DNA to researchers. Why isn't it now up to the researchers what they do with it?

    2. Re:as soon as you break common decency by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The DNA samples were given for an explicit purpose.
      They were not SOLD. The samples are not purchased property to do with as they wish.

      A PS3 on the other hand is purchased property and is it the end user's prerogative to with it what they will.

    3. Re:as soon as you break common decency by vikingpower · · Score: 1

      Very true. Well said.

      --
      Religous speak to God. Insane are spoken to by God. When all shut up, one can finally hear Shostakovich in peace
    4. Re:as soon as you break common decency by FatSean · · Score: 1

      Hardware vs. Software. Stay in school, kid.

      --
      Blar.
    5. Re:as soon as you break common decency by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wait, just a minute ago, in the Sony PS3 story, I was told that once I have something it is mine to do with as I wish.

      These people gave their DNA to researchers. Why isn't it now up to the researchers what they do with it?

      I like your logic.

      Invite me over to your house for dinner sometime (if your mom doesn't mind). One I have permission to go on your property, I can do with it as I wish. Short list includes:

      a. Drinking all of your liquor
      b. Replacing your desktop wallpaper with Mr. Goatse
      c. Feeding your dog chocolate and Redbull.

      Because, clearly, when you give something to someone you are giving them a free pass to do with it as they wish.

      Oh wait, damn it. I was in the middle of trolling you, but now I kind of see your point.

      In the Sony case, the individual wants their property rights to be firm
      In the Havasupai case, the individual wants their privacy to be firm

      If the Havasupai consider their dna samples to be their property, then the question is "What reasonable expectation to privacy should one have"? We don't want, for example, Google to have free reign of our e-mails, even if they are hosted on their servers. We consider our e-mails to be our private property.

      If the researchers consider that the dna samples are their property, then the question is "What are the limitations of law in regards to property rights and this case?" If they gave up their dna samples, if it is legal to dig through dna samples to do research, then I don't see the problem.

      So, in lieu of going back to trollin', yeah. It's a complicated issue. I hope everyone else thinks critically about your comment, it is surprisingly profound.

    6. Re:as soon as you break common decency by pluther · · Score: 1

      And, it's not just YOU they get angry enough.

      Due to the long history of anthropologists, archaeologists, and other researchers such as these guys, screwing over the Native Americans, it is already very difficult to get their cooperation on a lot of research.

      This has been getting better in recent years. ("Recent" beginning in the late 1980s).

      But then, when assholes like this come along, not only are they screwing over the group they're dealing with, they're also making things difficult for every other scientist in the country who depend on the cooperation of native tribes for their research.

      Congratulations, guys, due to your dishonesty, you've set back the course of scientific research in every field related to yours by at least a couple more years. Assholes.

      --
      If the masses can keep you down, you're not the Ubermensch.
    7. Re:as soon as you break common decency by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Typically you get a PS3 by paying for it. Were these people paid for their DNA? Do you think it makes a difference?

    8. Re:as soon as you break common decency by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Medical privacy is an issue quite apart from simple ownership. Apples and Oranges.

    9. Re:as soon as you break common decency by sjames · · Score: 1

      For one, they didn't SELL it to them, they permitted the researchers to examine THEIR DNA for a particular purpose. That's sort like you tell me I can have a look in your new car and then, much to your surprise I take it on a tour of the 50 states (Yes, even Hawaii!).

  4. Settlement details? by jDeepbeep · · Score: 1

    There seems to be a shortage of actual details on the settlement. Bueller? Bueller?

    --
    Reply to That ||
    1. Re:Settlement details? by jDeepbeep · · Score: 1
      Never mind. This was in the NYT blurb.

      Acknowledging a desire to “remedy the wrong that was done,” the university’s Board of Regents on Tuesday agreed to pay $700,000 to 41 of the tribe’s members, return the blood samples and provide other forms of assistance to the impoverished Havasupai

      Did not follow that link due to the implied past tense (seven years ago) of the sentence lead-up to it.

      --
      Reply to That ||
    2. Re:Settlement details? by elrous0 · · Score: 1

      Wow, $700,000 will buy a lot of firewater.

      --
      SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
  5. here comes a relativist conundrum. by gandhi_2 · · Score: 0, Troll

    When Christianity is at odds with a scientific interpretation of history, Christianity are the moonbats.

    tribe's geographical origins that contradict their traditional stories

    So, left-wing postmodern cultural relativists, where is your FSM now?

    1. Re:here comes a relativist conundrum. by gyrogeerloose · · Score: 4, Insightful

      >So, left-wing postmodern cultural relativists, where is your FSM now?

      When the Havasupai start lobbying to put their origin stories in my grandchildren's school textbooks in place of natural selection driving evolution, then I'll worry about it.

      --
      This ain't rocket surgery.
    2. Re:here comes a relativist conundrum. by 99BottlesOfBeerInMyF · · Score: 1

      When Christianity is at odds with a scientific interpretation of history, Christianity are the moonbats.

      tribe's geographical origins that contradict their traditional stories

      So, left-wing postmodern cultural relativists, where is your FSM now?

      Oh don't worry, we think their religious beliefs are just as irrational. The thing is, most of us don't object to people holding irrational religious beliefs. We object to them applying those beliefs to undermine human rights and retard the progress of science. Personally, I believe in an inherent human right to privacy and to control over how my genetic information is used by others. If you want to study my genes, ask permission and I may or may not grant it. That seems completely reasonable. If a christian is unwilling to give a blood sample to be used to study the origin of man, that's fine with me too.

      In short, it sounds like these natives are being irrational, but I'm fine with that so long as they don't try to impose those beliefs on me, change what is taught in government sponsored science classes at schools to something unscientific, or try to undermine the progress of science in some other way.

    3. Re:here comes a relativist conundrum. by Trepidity · · Score: 1

      It's been the case for a while; not too many people in postcolonial studies are big fans of science. There's a decent amount of writing accusing scientific study of non-Western cultures of "epistemic violence", by displacing another culture's explanations with Western-science-culture's explanations.

    4. Re:here comes a relativist conundrum. by Wyatt+Earp · · Score: 5, Informative

      Go to a reservation public school like I did.

      Second year of High School there was a year long course, mandatory for graduation call "Tribal Government", except it wasn't tribal government it was a year of Lakota mythology and religion. Even though I'm not a member of the tribe, I had to take it, as did folks who weren't American Indian, the school board which was 4/5th white would not allow kids to opt out because BIA funding was dependent on it being taught. A non-tribal member could not get a grade better than B+ because "they weren't capable of understanding it fully".

      In biology classes we had a day during evolution of "Lakota creation myth". Again, BIA funding mandated it.

    5. Re:here comes a relativist conundrum. by Wyatt+Earp · · Score: 1

      And I forgot Kennweick Man, science being suppressed by the Federal Government so American Indian creation myths won't be trampled on.

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kennewick_man

    6. Re:here comes a relativist conundrum. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well.. perhaps that is because Christianity has a poor record for decrying science as wrong. Perhaps because Christianity has made some non-trivial effort at telling non-christians that christianity is the way.

      The Havasupai, by contrast, are merely pissed off that some academic douchebags couldn't actually be bothered to ask permission for research beyond the scope of the original agreement.

      I don't even know what the Havasupai belief of the origin of their tribe? race? all people? actually is. So they're quite a bit less intrusive than Christians.

    7. Re:here comes a relativist conundrum. by ElectricTurtle · · Score: 1

      I'm probably not the intended audience, as I'm a right-wing secular humanist. However I think the consensus among most atheists is that all religions are bullshit, regardless of the size or standing of the culture they come from. Usually the people who defend the right of smaller groups to have their ignorance unassailed are left-wing postmodern cultural relativist Christians like Unitarians. Oh snap!

      --
      I support the Slashcott and will not be reading or commenting from 2/10/14 to 2/17/14. Beta is steaming pile of dog shit
    8. Re:here comes a relativist conundrum. by gyrogeerloose · · Score: 1

      And I forgot Kennweick Man, science being suppressed by the Federal Government so American Indian creation myths won't be trampled on.

      I couldn't find anything in the link you supplied that appears to support your claim. Care point out the relevant passages?

      --
      This ain't rocket surgery.
    9. Re:here comes a relativist conundrum. by gotpoetry · · Score: 2, Funny

      It is so typical for a right-wing secular humanist to diss the left-wing postmodern cultural relativist Unitarian Christians for suggesting we stay off their lawn!

    10. Re:here comes a relativist conundrum. by sznupi · · Score: 1

      Though it's also good to remember that there's slightly silly bullshit and then there's actually harmful bullshit.

      --
      One that hath name thou can not otter
    11. Re:here comes a relativist conundrum. by Wyatt+Earp · · Score: 3, Informative

      "Based on the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act (NAGPRA), five Native American groups (the Nez Perce, Umatilla, Yakama, Wanapum, and Colville) claimed the remains as theirs, to be buried by traditional means. Only the Umatilla tribe continued further court proceedings. In February 2004, the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit ruled that a cultural link between the tribes and the skeleton was not met, allowing scientific study of the remains to continue."

      "Robson Bonnichsen and seven other anthropologists sued the United States for the right to conduct tests on the skeleton. On February 4, 2004, the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit panel rejected the appeal brought by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and the Umatilla, Colville, Yakama, Nez Perce and other tribes on the grounds that they were unable to show any evidence of kinship."

      Go back and research the stance of the Department of Interior and Army Corps of Engineers, the Clinton administration pushed the NAGPRA onto these remains to keep the American Indian votes.

      The Federal Government tried to suppress the science by claiming 8000 year old remains were linked to the tribes in the region.

      "As expected, the scientists' documents allege the Corps and Department of the Interior agencies mishandled the case in other ways - from failing to preserve the bones' scientific integrity to being biased in favor of American Indian tribes from the beginning, topics that have long been part of the legal banter while the case was on hold."

      http://www.tri-cityherald.com/2001/01/03/136458/scientists-say-corps-destroyed.html

      In the waning days of the Clinton administration the site destroyed. Ultimately the scientists won in Federal Court and the remains were not suppressed.

    12. Re:here comes a relativist conundrum. by sznupi · · Score: 1

      Hm, was it at least interesting? (plus...many native mythologies and faiths have certain adequate amounts of wisdom in them; popular culture wants to convince me it is quite universally the case with North American Indians...is it?)

      Most importantly, do they actually believe in old mythologies (I hear there were many new movements in response to expansion of Europeans...) or is it mostly treated as cultural / traditional thing to know?

      --
      One that hath name thou can not otter
    13. Re:here comes a relativist conundrum. by Wyatt+Earp · · Score: 1

      No, it wasn't that interesting and it was terribly ignorant of their own history.

      On one hand we have the Winter Counts that show those peoples saying exactly when they got to South Dakota, pushing out the Cheyenne and taking control of the Black Hills.
      http://wintercounts.si.edu/
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_Hills

      And the religion has them being created there, and the Black Hills remain the push button issue with the Lakota because they claim to always have been from there, created there, etc, even though they didn't live there and it was taboo to sleep in the Black Hills.

      I'd guess that 1/8th of the folks on the Reservation follow some of the old mythology and know some of the language. Theres more of a pan-American Indian religion over the last 40 years with tribes who had nothing to do with the Buffalo and horse cultures getting excited about Buffalo, thats a real shame because its destroying their own heritage.

      Lakota religion lacks the morality lessons that the mainstream religions have for a base, the only one that remains important still is Pte Ska Win.

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/White_Buffalo_Calf_Woman

    14. Re:here comes a relativist conundrum. by scorp1us · · Score: 1

      Still better than Kansas, Texas, and Dover, PA, because they clearly label their take on creation as 'myth'.

      --
      Slashdot's rate-of-post filter: Preventing you from posting too many great ideas at once.
    15. Re:here comes a relativist conundrum. by Wyatt+Earp · · Score: 1

      Those places make you sit for a year in a "government class" but teach the Bible?

      Thats what Tribal Government class has been like on Cheyenne River for the last 30 years.

    16. Re:here comes a relativist conundrum. by sznupi · · Score: 1

      Well, Western science (hence also culture, at least somewhat...) is doing something right for quite a while now.

      --
      One that hath name thou can not otter
    17. Re:here comes a relativist conundrum. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In biology classes we had a day during evolution of "Lakota creation myth". Again, BIA funding mandated it.

      I wouldn't mind if they taught the "Jewish Creation Myth" (the one where God creates the world in 6 days and rests on the 7th that bible thumpers believe in) for one day in school to show what many people believe as an example of modern mythology. They could compare that to other ancient creation myths, such as the Greek (Titans & Gods), Hawaiian, Chinese, and other cultural creation myths. Then they could explain how many people continue to believe in these superstitious myths even though there is no scientific or logical evidence to support them. I have no trouble with Creation Mythology being taught as Mythology.

      But when they label "Creation Mythology" as "Intelligent Design" and try to teach it as a science, I have a big problem with that.

    18. Re:here comes a relativist conundrum. by operagost · · Score: 1

      Unitarians don't believe in the divinity of Jesus, so by definition are not Christians. You might call them followers of Jesus.

      --

      Gamingmuseum.com: Give your 3D accelerator a rest.
    19. Re:here comes a relativist conundrum. by gyrogeerloose · · Score: 1

      The Federal Government tried to suppress the science by claiming 8000 year old remains were linked to the tribes in the region.

      Sorry, but I still don't see any evidence to support your claim that the U.S. government has made an attempt to suppress science. You've made several logical leaps and included some completely unsubstantiated allegations here, but you're still short of actual proof. Possible (but merely alleged) incompetence on the part of the Army Corps of Engineers is not the same thing as deliberate suppression of science. Your claim that the Clinton administration "pushed NAGPRA onto these remains to keep the American Indian votes" is not only pure opinion on your part, it's not at all relevant since even if it's true, it doesn't amount to the deliberate suppression of science, only politics as usual.

      I get that you didn't like the Clinton administration and I'm fine with that but that doesn't mean you can state that they had something to do with the destruction of the discovery site without providing some evidence. I wasn't exactly a fan of the G.W. Bush administration but that doesn't mean I'm going to say that they were responsible for the 9/11 attacks as some claim since there's nothing to back it up.

      --
      This ain't rocket surgery.
    20. Re:here comes a relativist conundrum. by Wyatt+Earp · · Score: 1

      Well, the US Justice Department sued on behalf of the tribes. The US Department of Interior's Bureau of Indian Affairs sued on behalf of the tribes and the US Army Corps of Engineers covered the location up so further evidence and research couldn't be done. Since the Clinton Administration ran those three agencies, its pretty clear who was behind it.

      Now 60 Minutes covered this and thats were the out and out allegations of pandering for votes happened, oh and in the Indian Times, but I don't have links for those.

    21. Re:here comes a relativist conundrum. by gyrogeerloose · · Score: 1

      If you understand how the U.S. law system works, you know that the DOJ, BIA et al has no choice but to do what it must to defend existing federal law. It doesn't matter whether the administration in power likes it or not. While I have no doubt that the Clinton administration did whatever it thought would get it more votes (I'm no fan of the Clintons either, BTW), that's still not the same as suppression of science. Sleazy? Yeah, certainly, but there's nothing new about sleaze in American politics.

      --
      This ain't rocket surgery.
    22. Re:here comes a relativist conundrum. by Wyatt+Earp · · Score: 1

      And Army Corps of Engineers destroying the site where the remains were found in spite of a court order protecting the site?

      Defending Federal Law?

    23. Re: here comes a relativist conundrum. by Black+Parrot · · Score: 1

      When Christianity is at odds with a scientific interpretation of history, Christianity are the moonbats.

      tribe's geographical origins that contradict their traditional stories

      So, left-wing postmodern cultural relativists, where is your FSM now?

      Everyone can see the folly of other people's religious beliefs, but no one wants to turn a critical eye on their own.

      Cristianity isn't singled out, and isn't entitled to an exemption either way. But the FSM is reserved for con artists who make up "pretend it isn't God" creators to get around the law.

      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    24. Re:here comes a relativist conundrum. by gyrogeerloose · · Score: 1

      From what I can determine, the ACE didn't "destroy" the site, they just covered it up so it wouldn't be vandalized by zealots on either side of the issue. At worst, they just slowed things down a bit.

      --
      This ain't rocket surgery.
  6. This isn't a new issue... by gront · · Score: 2, Informative
    The IP rights and ownership of biological materials has been an important intellectual property issue for quite a while. Who owns or should commercially benefit from cell lines and tissue samples has been litigated several times.

    Quick google search turned up http://www.dddmag.com/intellectual-property-and-biological-materials.aspx which is a summary of some of the important cases.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moore_v._Regents is one of the "big" cases, and worth reading the wikipedia summary of, " The California Supreme Court ruled that Moore had no right to any share of the profits realized from the commercialization of anything developed from his discarded body parts."

    1. Re:This isn't a new issue... by Intron · · Score: 1

      What's really troubling about Moore v. Regents is the undisclosed conflict of interest. It was in the physicians' interests to remove his spleen and draw samples because they kept and profited from the cells. If Moore had gone to a different doctor who was just providing him with treatment and not doing research would he have received the same care?

      --
      Intron: the portion of DNA which expresses nothing useful.
  7. Where Was The Arizona State University by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Institutional Review Board on subject consent?

    Yours In Ishfahan,
    Nick Halflinger

  8. WO-WO-WO! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Scalp the palefaces!

  9. How sad by vikingpower · · Score: 1

    A clash of the cultures. How sad that this has to happen in the western world of 2010. Shall we ever learn anything from history, dammit ?

    --
    Religous speak to God. Insane are spoken to by God. When all shut up, one can finally hear Shostakovich in peace
    1. Re:How sad by elrous0 · · Score: 1

      I suspect that if you dug deeper into it, you would find out that it's more about money than culture. But then again, that's the story of most conflicts.

      --
      SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
    2. Re:How sad by vikingpower · · Score: 1

      Your first phrase is what you say it is: a suspicion, i.e. an uncorroborated conjecture. Your second phrase is an unproven generalization.

      --
      Religous speak to God. Insane are spoken to by God. When all shut up, one can finally hear Shostakovich in peace
  10. Interesting... by fuzzyfuzzyfungus · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I'm torn here. On the one hand, I would not want research on tissue samples being done outside of the scope of the informed consent permissions document under which the samples were collected. If that did, indeed, occur, the researchers lied to their test subjects. That is all kinds of unethical.

    On the other hand, every time I here a "waaah, cry cry, science is being mean to my bullshit creation myths, mommy make it stop!" my blood starts to boil and I get serious about implementing a method of punching people in the face over the internet.

    Yeah, of course we'll be able to do genetic research into your nasty-and-probably-heritable-disease without comparing your DNA to that of other populations, probably in ways that cast doubt on your bullshit story of having been plopped down by the gods, ready made, in the Grand Canyon... No problem at all. Also, we'll definitely not have to mention that inbreeding might have occurred, after we see those stacks of homozygous alleles. Oh, of course inbreeding would never occur in your precious (and very genetically isolated) little culture, and it hurts your feelings when we mention that the genetic evidence says that it did. Cry, cry.

    Listen, fuckers, science isn't some magically wish fulfillment machine "Why yes Dr. Scientist, please use your science magic to cure my diabetes...", it's just the best method we have for learning about the world. If you don't want to know, GTFO. If you want science to solve your little problems, be prepared to learn about how the world actually is.

    If the researchers went beyond the scope of their subject's informed consent, fuck them.

    However, if our picturesque little tribe signed up for the research, but is just getting all touchy because they don't like the results, then fuck them. Maybe next time they can ask the mythical entities that plunked them down in the Canyon to solve their medical problems for them, if the idea of having crossed the Bering Strait is just too culturally insensitive for them...

    1. Re:Interesting... by dcollins · · Score: 1

      "On the other hand, every time I here a 'waaah, cry cry, science is being mean to my bullshit creation myths, mommy make it stop!'..."

      So shall it ever be.

      --
      We know where leadership by an anti-intellectual "strongman" who scapegoats minorities and likes boisterous rallies goes
    2. Re:Interesting... by bluefoxlucid · · Score: 0

      Inbreeding did NOT occur; my cousin was on the pill and we used condoms anyway. I play the game pretty safe, no harm no foul.

    3. Re:Interesting... by girlintraining · · Score: 3, Insightful

      However, if our picturesque little tribe signed up for the research, but is just getting all touchy because they don't like the results, then fuck them.

      About that punching people over the internet device-- I'd start with your own face. It isn't about cultural sensitivity "getting in the way of" science, nor does it even have anything at all to do with the scientific method, nor are these people challenging it, nor did they expect a "magical wish fulfillment machine" to cure their illness. This was about a very specific rule in medicine, which is do no harm.

      Harm is not just physical, it can also be psychological. And in this case, by violating the terms laid out by the informed consent agreement, they did cause psychological harm. It's not for you to decide whether it's justified or not. We know tons about medicine because of WWII experiments done on unwilling subjects, and no -- I don't just mean Germany. And it hasn't just been in wartime -- any time social inequity has existed, there has been a potential (often realized) to hurt a smaller group of people to benefit a larger in the name of progress. Many advances in medicine have been looked back on with shame -- because we hurt people to get the information we have. So we learned from our mistakes and now we are very specific in what we tell patients, howe we tell them, and the specifics of the doctor-patient relationship, and all of this branches from the ethical fundamental of do no harm. That's a line that any self-respecting scientist, doctor, engineer, or decent human being doesn't cross lightly, if ever.

      These researchers breached that foundation of trust. Doesn't matter why they did it. Doesn't matter what benefit there was. It's tarnished by the fact that they broke their own rules and harmed another culture doing so. That is indefensible. Let me be clear: This isn't about science or technology. This is about ethics and these people did something unethical because they thought the ends justified the means. And frankly, if science as an instutition is to survive, it needs to recognize that it is not an end unto itself, nor is it a religion, but simply and justly a tool in a box, to be picked up and used when society needs it, and put back in its box when it is no longer needed.

      The idea that progress for its own sake is justified has been the source of some of the darkest chapters of human history. Do not drag an institution that has strived to learn from its past mistakes back through the mud purely to justify your own cultural intolerance.

      --
      #fuckbeta #iamslashdot #dicemustdie
    4. Re:Interesting... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Look, everybody murdered everybody a long time ago. Yet we're still alive. Now please, don't resort to such arguments to justify everything that has to do with Indians.

    5. Re:Interesting... by pz · · Score: 4, Informative

      I'm torn here. On the one hand, I would not want research on tissue samples being done outside of the scope of the informed consent permissions document under which the samples were collected. If that did, indeed, occur, the researchers lied to their test subjects. That is all kinds of unethical.
       

      And it should have been blocked by the local Institute Review Board (IRB) who is supposed to oversee research involving samples of human tissue for this very reason (shades of Tuskege and vulnerable populations come immediately to mind). Either the researchers didn't get IRB approval, which is a career-ending mistake, or the IRB gave approval for what seems to be unethical use of the samples.

      Neither of those seem likely so I'm betting there's more to the story here.

      For those who are interested in understanding more about regulations concerning human research, the basis for current theory and practice is something called The Belmont Report (use Google). Also, for Federally Funded research, DHHS has specific guidelines (based on The Belmont Report recommendations): http://www.hhs.gov/ohrp/irb/irb_guidebook.htm

      --

      Put my fist through my alarm clock with its ding-dong death inside my ear. - The Blackjacks.
    6. Re:Interesting... by Herkum01 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Just because they are scientist does not mean they are angels out to do humanity good.

      Take the insurance company getting hold of your DNA. All of a sudden, the next time you go to use your benefits you find a whole list of exemptions. You have the markers for cancer X? Not Covered. Heart disease, epilepsy? Not covered. You get the idea.

      If you don't think that these things will happen you only have to read about Wellpoint to see if someone cancel your coverage to make a buck. Image what they would do if they had your DNA as well. They would drop you and you would never know what they found.

    7. Re:Interesting... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Show a little respect for their fucking culture, asshole.

      Chances are they got their diabetes from eating our HFCS anyhow.

    8. Re:Interesting... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But you guys keep doing it. Learn from your mistakes.

    9. Re:Interesting... by monkeygrudge · · Score: 1

      excellent. i'm sick of these richard dawkins-types who condescendingly think they have all the answers. no one does. i'll repeat: NO ONE DOES. i'm native myself, and a bit of an animist by choice, as well as a firm believer in science...but who are you to tell me i'm wrong?

    10. Re:Interesting... by girlintraining · · Score: 1

      If I were on the IRB, I'd gag these guys, put them in a van, drive them out the reservation, and drop them off there as an example to others of why we don't cross those lines. And if they're lucky and aren't fed feet-first to a rez gang, they'll maybe come away with a better appreciation of their craft and their ethical responsibilities when peforming it. In my mind, it's no different than extraditing a criminal to face charges in the country where the crime was committed. Most reservations have treaties granting them autonomy from the government so they really could be tried under these people's justice system, and then imprisoned there or punished accordingly.

      --
      #fuckbeta #iamslashdot #dicemustdie
    11. Re:Interesting... by mcgrew · · Score: 1

      bullshit story of having been plopped down by the gods, ready made, in the Grand Canyon...

      Well, they were plopped down, ready made, in the Grand Canyon -- by their mothers, who were plopped down, ready made, in the Grand Canyon, by their grandmothers. Yeah, their ancestors emigrated there from Asia fifty thousand years ago but so what?

      I'm not going to argue with anyone's belief systems. That's just foolish.

      Listen, fuckers, science isn't some magically wish fulfillment machine "Why yes Dr. Scientist, please use your science magic to cure my diabetes..."

      It managed to magically get rid of polio and TB, and promises to magically get rid of cancer and yes, diabetes.

      If you want science to solve your little problems, be prepared to learn about how the world actually is.

      Well, science managed to cure my extreme nearsightedness and age related farsightedness, and although I did a little research to find out what it was all about, I didn't have to. When my great nephew asks my little sister how a computer works, she shrugs and says "it's magic". Most people aren't as curious as we are.

      The problem here is the researchers went back on their words and acted unethically. It had nothing to do with Indian gods or incest.

    12. Re:Interesting... by LWATCDR · · Score: 1

      What it does come down to is that they had an agreement. You have no right to force people to think they way you do. I have an idea let's forbid them from teaching their silly creation myth at all. Heck just take their kids away and put them in boarding schools so we can teach them science and math and how to fit into the modern world....
      That was tried and not all that long ago folks. In this case I think you need to take a look at the historical context. 99% of the time I think the old saw of the white mans guilt is BS but in this case it seems like such a case of history repeating it's self that it just isn't funny. These are people not lab animals after all and should have the right to have some control of what research is done on them. Ignore the creation myth part and just think about this. The tribe claims that the samples where used for research they did not agree too. That is all that matters in this case.

      "On the other hand, every time I here a "waaah, cry cry, science is being mean to my bullshit creation myths, mommy make it stop!" "

      --
      See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
    13. Re:Interesting... by fuzzyfuzzyfungus · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Did you miss the part where I noted that, if the researchers violated the terms of the informed consent agreement, that would be "all kinds of unethical"?

      I even put it before the other stuff, just to make it especially obvious that it was the primary consideration. If the researchers didn't have informed consent for their use of the samples, they can hang out to dry for all I care. "Career ending" is just fine by me.

      The point that I was addressing, in the second bit, was that it was not clear that the informed consent had been violated, just clear that the research subjects didn't like the results of the research. If you have informed consent, nothing(except the arguably ignoble and unethical habit of lying to preserve your access/funding supply) requires you to deliver only what people want to hear.

    14. Re:Interesting... by Bobb9000 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Everyone keeps saying that they violated the terms of the agreement, but from TFA, I'm not so sure that's the case. The agreement said that the blood would be used to “study the causes of behavioral/medical disorders”. Most of the research described seems to fall under that category. It was originally presented as work to help understand the high diabetes incidence in the tribe, because that was why the blood was collected in the first place, but when that work was done, they still had the DNA. Why not do research to the full extent covered under the agreement? It would have been more polite, perhaps, to for the various researchers working with the samples to keep the tribe updated on their work and findings, but nothing in the agreement required that.

      Regarding your insistence that this was a violation of "do no harm" - I'm not buying it. I understand it's place in medical lore, but if you think it's really a useful guide, you're wrong. If "do no harm" was truly a useful rule for guiding doctors' actions, then they could never perform surgery, they could never prescribe drugs with harmful side effects, and the entire structure of medicine as we know it would cease to exist. They have to do some harm; the question is whether the harm is outweighed by the benefits. "Do no harm" sounds nice, and as a sort of generalized medical philosophy it's salutary, but it's so vague as to be useless for actually making decisions. That why, when doctors are actually looking at the ethics of their decisions, they don't ask "Did I do harm?". They look to the rules of medical ethics which have been developed through a lot of hard work by people actually dealing with real-world problems. Much as with science generally, relying on the writings of people who have been dead for thousands of years rather than your own judgement and the evidence is a terrible idea.

      --
      Bobb9000 - raised by the wolves,
      Oxford education as phrased by the wolves.
    15. Re:Interesting... by Bobb9000 · · Score: 1

      Sorry for the excessive italicization; I broke my close tag and then didn't look at the preview.

      --
      Bobb9000 - raised by the wolves,
      Oxford education as phrased by the wolves.
    16. Re:Interesting... by Paracelcus · · Score: 1

      Yeah, if you scream loudly enough you CAN make science stop investigating your "bullshit creation myths" you know like federal law saying that any remains older than XXXX number of years have to be turned over to the "native American" community before any tests are run so that they can be "properly" re-interred. This is so we won't find out that the first wave of Homo sapiens made their way across the frozen north Atlantic from Europe ten thousand years before the second wave arrived from Asia (don't take my word for it, look it up).

      --
      I killed da wabbit -Elmer Fudd
    17. Re:Interesting... by Myopic · · Score: 1

      You seem to have a deep grasp on medical ethics. Where did you earn your MD or MD/PhD?

    18. Re:Interesting... by oh_my_080980980 · · Score: 1

      Hey fucking moron. The tribe did not ask for anything. WTFA! The researchers approached the tribe and asked them to participate in a study that might help their diabetes. The tribe was NEVER informed that their DNA samples would be used for other research such as schizophrenia!

      Idiot!

    19. Re:Interesting... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      Part of me wants to LOL at your post, and part of me is professionally embarrassed.

      I work with IRB's. Our interaction with them is essentially "how much do we have to tell you about what we are doing for you to say that its ok?". Researchers fib on Protocol and Site Renewal submissions all the time; the less they have to tell IRB's the better. It is wildly unethical, and is a major violations of Participants rights, but it happens. It is very common for Researchers to submit a Protocol just to get the "ok" to begin recruiting Participants, and then try to sort out the study design later

      Either the researchers didn't get IRB approval, which is a career-ending mistake, or the IRB gave approval for what seems to be unethical use of the samples.

      Neither of those seem likely so I'm betting there's more to the story here.

      I think you are absolutely spot on. Seems likely to me that someone realized that they had these samples and wanted to do some analysis to "see if there is anything there". When working with Human Subjects data, you just can't do that.

    20. Re:Interesting... by jandrese · · Score: 1

      Harm is not just physical, it can also be psychological. And in this case, by violating the terms laid out by the informed consent agreement, they did cause psychological harm.

      Wait, so if a scientist discovers a result you might not like, they should just not publish and lie to you to avoid causing psychological hardship? Isn't this pretty much the opposite of what an ethical scientist would do? Sometimes the facts may not be what you want to hear, but that doesn't mean they should be hidden from you.

      I don't understand why they could just do what Creationists do and just ignore any facts that don't conform to their preconceived worldview? Why make such a big fuss about it?

      --

      I read the internet for the articles.
    21. Re:Interesting... by jythie · · Score: 1

      From the sound of it, they did not violate the terms of the informed consent agreement, but instead violated what a group of people who's english was not very good thought the terms meant. Personally, this case actually scares me a bit since it focused on glurge and what the signer *thought* something meant rather then the actual wording of the contract. If this was not a group that people had sympathy for, the results probably would have been very different.

    22. Re:Interesting... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Didn't you guys (Americans) just get a new set of laws that explicitly prevent insurance companies from screwing you like that?

    23. Re:Interesting... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So by your logic if a person believes that they are a rabbit and a doctors proves to them that they are human, they have done 'harm' because the patient feel bad about the truth?

    24. Re:Interesting... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Damn, you're on a roll today. As a partial native american, engineer, and buddhist, I completely agree with you. The reseachers breached their agreement with the tribe, insulted the tribe's religion, and perhaps worse of all the patrenizing attitude of "it's for your own(or greater) good". Native americans are tired of this crap. It was fed to them time and time as their land was taken away, their children were shipped of to christian schools, they were relocated to new lands, at the point of a gun. It's a sensitive area, and the researchers should have realized what they were dealing with and asked permission beforehand.

    25. Re:Interesting... by neutralstone · · Score: 1

      excellent. i'm sick of these richard dawkins-types who condescendingly think they have all the answers.

      Those types never said they have all answers. (But if you have a counterexample, I would be willing to stand corrected.) And the answers that they do have tend to be pretty well substantiated. Take for example the establishment of common ancestry by comparisons of genomes. But do not mistake the kind of confidence that results from a firm grip on a specific subject for a delusion of omniscience. Also note that these people tend to promote a willingness to change their own opinions when new evidence challenges said opinions.

      i'm native myself, and a bit of an animist by choice, as well as a firm believer in science...but who are you to tell me i'm wrong?

      What harm do you think is done by calling bullshit? Do you think it's worse than the harm that may result from failing to face up to the nature of reality implied by observable evidence, and if so, why?

    26. Re:Interesting... by brillow · · Score: 1

      IRB's don't review studies like this. In fact, studies on "previously collected samples" are specifically exempted from IRB review. After all, this is not a study on human subjects, its a study on biological samples. I wish I could find more information about this case. In most cases when you submit a biological sample you have very little recourse as to how its used. In that, it is no longer your property. There may have been a violation of trust, but if the researches said "We want to do genetic research which could give us insight on why you are prone to diabetes." Then there was no violation of trust, the tribe was most likely simply ignorant that "genetic research" entails a lot of things. Likely the researchers who did the original study did study diabetes or whatever, but the samples are usually then stored or submitted to a tissue bank where other researchers are using them (and scientists have an obligation to share samples with other scientists). The problem is they settled out of court, so the details of the case are probably lost to us.

    27. Re:Interesting... by brillow · · Score: 1

      There are laws in several states which prevent the use of DNA evidence to deny coverage. Also, thanks to Obama, having a preexisting condition (such as possessing a "cancer gene") would not be grounds for refusal of coverage.

    28. Re:Interesting... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "if science as an instutition is to survive, it needs to recognize that it is not an end unto itself, nor is it a religion, but simply and justly a tool in a box, to be picked up and used when society needs it, and put back in its box when it is no longer needed."

      When exactly is science no longer needed? Because if you are done with yours, I'd like an extra helping.

    29. Re:Interesting... by stephanruby · · Score: 1

      Didn't you guys (Americans) just get a new set of laws that explicitly prevent insurance companies from screwing you like that?

      Yes, and no. Yes, Insurance Companies are now explicitly forbidden to use genetic testing information to deny health coverage, or health benefits.

      But no, Life Insurance is specifically not included in those laws (even in the US). Life Insurance represents a peculiar thorny problem in that regard. If you do give guaranteed privacy, even in the case of Life Insurance Claims. Then, the people that know they're going to die because of some genetics tests they did, would invest all their money in Life Insurance policies, and that would give them an unfair edge in the Life Insurance system (it would be like playing with a stacked deck in a casino, just having the knowledge that the deck is stacked a particular way would give a player an unfair advantage over the others in the game).

      Also even for health insurance, insurance companies could pretend that they did not discriminate based on genetics test results, but if for some reason, they found a particular high incidence of costly genetics markers in a particular region, they could shut down their offices in that region (red-line it, so to speak), and try to use some other reasons to justify their decisions (thus, they could try to discriminate based on that information, and it would be very difficult for outsiders to really know/prove that they had been discriminated against).

      And last but not least, ancestry and ancestral migration patterns doesn't just affect belief systems. That data, and its corresponding interpretation, can be leveraged to make property claims to former burial grounds or hunting grounds (at least politically, if not legally), and I guess it could possibly be used to deny/accept the claims of Native American tribes/individuals that are currently receiving ongoing reparations from the US government. Also such genetic testing could even put into question the tribal legitimacy of some Native Americans individuals that were the products of white-on-native rapes that occurred as an indirect result of the Eugenics program (forced removal of the kids to educate them, and to make them work as maids) that occurred as late as the 60s in some States.

    30. Re:Interesting... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is really pretty typical of medical research, when dealing with un-sophisticated peoples. The same thing has happened more than a couple of times with the human genome project in Central America. The arrogance of the researcher should not trump basic human rights. Some would argue that medical privacy is not a right, especially when other can benefit. Old Joe Stalin comes to mind among others.

    31. Re:Interesting... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Harm is not just physical, it can also be psychological.

      True. But psychological harm from finding out something you didn't know before: that's good for you. Equating WWII-era German experiments ("Let's see what happens if we remove this piece of brain.") with what these researchers did (Telling someone: "You know, you're distantly related to this other group of people X miles to the north.") seems ridiculous to me.

    32. Re:Interesting... by pz · · Score: 1

      In fact, studies on "previously collected samples" are specifically exempted from IRB review.

      Not at my institution. They are considered "minimal risk" studies (as would the initial study that collected the data), but are still required to be reviewed.

      --

      Put my fist through my alarm clock with its ding-dong death inside my ear. - The Blackjacks.
    33. Re:Interesting... by jc42 · · Score: 1

      It was originally presented as work to help understand the high diabetes incidence in the tribe, because that was why the blood was collected in the first place, but when that work was done, they still had the DNA. Why not do research to the full extent covered under the agreement? It would have been more polite, perhaps, to for the various researchers working with the samples to keep the tribe updated on their work and findings, ...

      The "It would have been more polite" part is my main reaction. Whether any printed agreement requires it, I'd think that researchers should have the common courtesy to keep in touch with their research subjects, and inform them of anything that's learned.

      And yes, I have done this sort of thing, as part of a number of projects that I've worked on. It can go a long way toward making your clients happy with what you're doing for them. (And it can help to think of them as "clients" rather than "subjects". ;-)

      In this case, diabetes is known to be partly genetic, and this is something that should be explained to the people involved. You should also make it clear that scientists don't know everything the genetic patterns, and you'd like to take the opportunity to compare their DNA with other closely-related populations, to see what (if anything) you can learn about their particular form of the disease. I'd probably say something like "Maybe we can get a paper out of it, maybe we'll learn something that will be of medical value to you. Or maybe not." I'd think that a lot of the Havasupai would be intelligent enough to understand this, and would encourage you to learn whatever you can on the topic.

      And speaking of closely-related populations, it's now well known that most of the "Native American" groups on the Colorado Plateau arrived there from places much farther north only a few centuries before Europeans arrived. Some of the population would like to keep their mythology, but others would find it interesting to know just which groups up north they're actually closely related to. If these researchers had mentioned that this was a possible outcome of the research, I'd expect that a good portion of the tribe would have found it very interesting, and would have encouraged the study.

      It's mostly when you do such things in secret that people get their hackles up.

      (A few years ago, after some medical lab tests, a doctor asked me if I was partly Native American. I told him that I'd wondered whether they would spot that corner of my DNA, from my father's father's mother. He said they couldn't identify the tribe, so I told him. But he just shrugged and said it was just something they'd noticed. It wasn't relevant to anything at hand, though it could be useful medical information in the future if I ever developed any of a list of conditions related to those genes.)

      --
      Those who do study history are doomed to stand helplessly by while everyone else repeats it.
    34. Re:Interesting... by LongearedBat · · Score: 1

      I'm not torn. All the scientists had to do was say "please" and then respect the reply.

    35. Re:Interesting... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      'Do no harm' - what does the most harm? Telling people the truth, or leaving people falsely believe in something? I for one am glad to be told that the Earth (more or less) orbits the sun, instead of the other way around. Or that the Earth is (more or less) a ball, instead of a flat circle.

  11. beautiful place by stoolpigeon · · Score: 2, Informative

    I've camped down there a few times. It's a great hike in and out and just a beautiful place to spend some time. Reserve your spots early, the space is limited.

    --
    It's hard to believe that's how Micronians are made. Why don't we see it right now by having you both kiss one another?
    1. Re:beautiful place by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Totally. Just be careful of the people requesting a blood sample who say "We are from the university and are here to help."

    2. Re:beautiful place by Myopic · · Score: 2, Funny

      Dude, "reserve" might be a poor choice of diction.

    3. Re:beautiful place by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I've camped down there as well. It is definitely a beautiful place to visit, if all you're looking at are the waterfalls.

      My only complaint is how poorly kept the place is. The village is very dirty. There is trash everywhere. Their horses run free at night and eat garbage out of the dumpsters. It's very obvious why most of them are obese and have diabetes. Their diets and sedentary lifestyles are to blame.

    4. Re:beautiful place by stoolpigeon · · Score: 1

      I've always found it to be nice once you get past the village and down into the camp grounds. The further you go, the better it gets.

      I grew up in AZ and spent a lot of time up on the rez with some good friends that have family there. It's a rather complicated mess and not as simple as the native americans "cleaning up their act".

      The trail down is gorgeous as well, with some rather ancient drawings to be found along the way. This is all making me home sick. I miss the desert.

      --
      It's hard to believe that's how Micronians are made. Why don't we see it right now by having you both kiss one another?
  12. Damn liars everywhere, damn them! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How dare they lie indeed, sue their lying asses, sue.

  13. i'm going to come take your dna by circletimessquare · · Score: 4, Insightful

    i'm going to say i'm going to use it for one thing then secretly use it for another purpose without telling you

    and then i'm going to publish your dna and draw conclusions from it which aren't necessarily flattering

    also, when i publish this detailed info about your dna without your permission and without telling you, i'm going to do it in such a way that it is easy to figure out that it is your dna i am using

    do you object to any of that?

    --
    intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    1. Re:i'm going to come take your dna by ElectricTurtle · · Score: 1

      Did I give you the DNA voluntarily without any written terms to limit its use? Then I guess I'm not going to object, because that would only highlight what an irresponsible idiot I am, and how I'm willing to shift that blame for how irresponsible I am on to other people.

      --
      I support the Slashcott and will not be reading or commenting from 2/10/14 to 2/17/14. Beta is steaming pile of dog shit
    2. Re:i'm going to come take your dna by lgw · · Score: 1

      Don't confuse "contract" with "written agreement". If two parties come to an agreement, and each receives (or will receive) something of value, that's a binding contract. A written agreement is a good way to document that contract, but it's the agreement that matters. If the researchers make statements about how the DNA would be used, in return for access to the DNA, that's a very straightforward contract, and the University is doing the right thing by trying to make good, instead of claiming "you can't prove we said that".

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    3. Re:i'm going to come take your dna by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      Except they DID get the consent for that exact thing.

      "Roughly 100 tribe members who gave blood from 1990 to 1994 signed a broad consent that said the research was to “study the causes of behavioral/medical disorders.” The consent form was purposely simple, Dr. Markow said, given that English was a second language for many Havasupai, and few of the tribe’s 650 members had graduated from high school. They were always given the opportunity to ask questions, she said, and students were also instructed to explain the project and get written and verbal consent from donors."

      OOPS THERE GOES YOUR ENTIRE ARGUMENT.

      Idiot.

  14. Precious Bodily Fluids . . . by PolygamousRanchKid+ · · Score: 1

    You gotta be careful about the folks that you give your essence to, Mandrake.

    You really can't trust them folks who say they need your blood to do some research, or something.

    Won't those Havasupai Indians be surprised when their DNA winds up in Bratislava in a murder trial.

    Suspect: "Hey, but I've never been out of Arizona . . . and I don't even know where Bratislava is!"

    Prosecutor: "DNA evidence doesn't lie!"

    --
    Schroedinger's Brexit: The UK is both in and out of the EU at the same time!
  15. "scientific" use of police and military DNA by peter303 · · Score: 1

    I wonder what is to prevent DNA studies of large, existing "captive" databases. There could be a imperative moral reason, like a new bioweapon aimed at soldiers with the military looking at prevention. But that would be different use form what these samples were obtain for.

    Supposedly police DNA is just distilled to the 30-some markers used for an ID match. And the military is discarded after the soldier is discharged. But I doubt bureaucrats always carry these out.

  16. they gave their dna by circletimessquare · · Score: 2, Insightful

    with the understanding it would only be used in certain ways

    it's not like giving you my bike or my car. with physical objects: do whatever you want with them, who cares, the new owner is the 100% owner

    but these people are giving their genetic identity to someone else. that's not like the transfer of ownership of a physical object. it's not free and clear of any continuing considerations, because the continued use of their dna has implications and meaning about how they view themselves, how they live their lives, and the way others see them

    simple ethics means that whatever you do with these people's dna, you have to ask them first, forever

    --
    intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    1. Re:they gave their dna by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      simple ethics means that whatever you do with these people's dna, you have to ask them first, forever

      Tell that to the Peking Man.

    2. Re:they gave their dna by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You don't own your DNA. It owns you. Gettit?

      Sorry, GGP is being an ass, and so is the tribe. This is like saying you don't have permission to look up in the sky and triangulate your actual location.

  17. Good Precedent by whogben · · Score: 1

    Even though there was little harm to the Havasupai here this case sets a critically important precedent for the future.

  18. LOL by FatSean · · Score: 1, Flamebait

    When you benefit from a nation built on the genocide of a group of people, you take your chances.

    Nobody murdered 90% of Christians in order to build the USA.

    It's just a liiiiiiiiitle bit different.

    --
    Blar.
    1. Re:LOL by Wyatt+Earp · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Since I'm from the Northern Great Plains, American Indian and a Great Plains Indian Wars historian just wanted you to know that it wasn't a genocide.

      The Indian Wars were a low intensity conflict between small US Army units and small warrior bands.

      90% of the American Indian population on the Great Plains were not killed, in fact only 8-9,000 American Indians died in the Great Plains from 1850-1900.

      So the fact remains, the Federal Government is pushing a religion in BIA funded schools.

    2. Re:LOL by sznupi · · Score: 1

      Weren't there only two alternative to fighting though?

      a) look how your source of livelihood is destroyed by settlers

      b) pitiful existence in reservations

      Cultural genocide, at the least.

      --
      One that hath name thou can not otter
    3. Re:LOL by Wyatt+Earp · · Score: 2, Informative

      Nope, not cultural genocide, your mileage may vary, I spent 20 years on the Cheyenne Indian Reservation which is Minnecojou, Sans Arc, Blackfoot and Two Kettle.

      There is much more cultural history in the people there today than there are of Europeans who have come to the US over the last 200 years. Tribal music, dancing, language, arts and crafts are all strongly remembered and participated in.

      A. - The livelihood of the Plains Indians was not destroyed by settlers, the Great Plains west of the Missouri River were and still are greatly unsettled by the Europeans. My Reservation did have homesteading which brought Germans and Dutch there, but that extra economic boost has made it a stronger reservation that those like Pine Ridge and Rosebud.

      B. - Pitiful existence because of cradle to grave welfare. If you know you'll get a house when you let yours fall apart from neglect for free, why keep your home up? If you know you'll get a check for doing nothing, why get a job? If you are an American Indian you can get free 2 and 4 year college educations, in my high school class of 50, 5 of us made it off the Reservation and stayed off.

    4. Re:LOL by Ramahan · · Score: 1

      Since I'm from the Northern Great Plains, American Indian and a Great Plains Indian Wars historian just wanted you to know that it wasn't a genocide.

      The Indian Wars were a low intensity conflict between small US Army units and small warrior bands.

      90% of the American Indian population on the Great Plains were not killed, in fact only 8-9,000 American Indians died in the Great Plains from 1850-1900.

      So the fact remains, the Federal Government is pushing a religion in BIA funded schools.

      God! Are they still paying guys like you to do history rewrites? Do you still use that old History book that leaves out all of Custer's killing of women, children, and elders while burning villages before his "Heroic" last stand?
      I also guess you and the poster you were commenting on are youngsters since you think teaching Tribal customs is Gov. funded religion. I say this since it seems you weren't forced to take a last name (for Church/Gov records), attend Sunday services, or do a daily prayer in order to attend school like Myself, and the generations before you!

  19. IRBs ???? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    If the Arizona State University research group violated their IRBs (Federal Title 45 CFR Part 46) by performing tests not specified in those documents, they can be in significantly deeper doo doo than being banished from one reservation. This can result in the loss of Federal research funding not just for a particular research group but for an entire institution - to say nothing of disciplinary action within the University itself. That's why, at least at our University, if you're doing research involving human subjects you have to be certified yearly on the rules and regs related to IRBs.

  20. traditional stories? umm. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Just a tangent story here. A few years ago my family went to Grand Canyon NP, and one of the things we did was to go to a ranger talk (the kind in the rustic wooden amphitheaters), where the ranger was of Native American background. I believe her tribal territory was from just east of the Grand Canyon, but I'm not too sure about that now. Either way, they were closely linked to the Grand Canyon.

    Well, the story that she told was this: their cultural tradition holds that Grand Canyon formed 200 years ago.

    Not to poke holes, but if your origin story involves a cataclysmic event that can be disproved in recent recorded history, why not just say that it was formed yesterday? I found this pretty odd to believe in. Only slightly less crazy than a 6000 year old Earth.

  21. Told but didn't understand..... by NiteShaed · · Score: 5, Informative

    From the looks of the article, it seems more like a case where the people were told but didn't understand the ramifications of their decision:
    The consent form was purposely simple, Dr. Markow said, given that English was a second language for many Havasupai, and few of the tribe’s 650 members had graduated from high school. They were always given the opportunity to ask questions, she said, and students were also instructed to explain the project and get written and verbal consent from donors.
    So, were they mislead, or is this more of a type of "buyers remorse"? There are plenty of places where the local population is uneducated and unlikely to fully understand genetic testing, should we stop studying them, and in the process deny them the good (potential treatments for disease that they suffer from) to protect them from "the bad" (the possibility that their world-view will be challenged, or that the data will be applied to larger studies)?

    Also, one of the big issues here seems to be that the findings contradict their folklore:
    Another article, suggesting that the tribe’s ancestors had crossed the frozen Bering Sea to arrive in North America, flew in the face of the tribe’s traditional stories that it had originated in the canyon and was assigned to be its guardian.
    Listening to the investigators, Ms. Tilousi felt a surge of anger, she recalled. But in Supai, the initial reaction was more of hurt. Though some Havasupai knew already that their ancestors most likely came from Asia, “when people tell us, ‘No, this is not where you are from,’ and your own blood says so — it is confusing to us,” Rex Tilousi said. “It hurts the elders who have been telling these stories to our grandchildren.”

    So science showed that their fable about springing from the ground in this canyon was, at best, unlikely. So what. We don't accept that the Earth is the center of the universe, that sex with virgins cures disease, that human sacrifice improves crop yield, or that it's turtles all the way down, why should we care about this story either. I'm not inclined to "turn off" science just because results show that a stone-age story is just a story.

    --
    Some bring out the best in others, some the worst. Some bring out far more.
    1. Re:Told but didn't understand..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They were neither misled, nor was this buyers remorse. The researchers originally planned to use the DNA exactly as they were told, which they were okay with. A graduate student later came up with a new idea that he tested using the DNA, that went beyond what the initial agreement was. Because the consent form was so broad, they did not go back to get permission for this new test, despite it not being covered in what that agreement was understood to mean.

    2. Re:Told but didn't understand..... by linear+core · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately, if they can't understand the consent form then they can't give informed consent, can they? This could be remedied by helping them to understand the consent form, which was done. However, if you purposefully mislead people, then again, they didn't give informed consent at all.

      If I sign a paper before surgery that states the doctor has my permission to remove my appendix because it is infected, then I have given him informed consent. But, once in there, he can't just decide that my gall bladder, also an extraneous organ, looks like something his research students could use in their doctoral theses. They didn't just use the DNA for something the Havasupai didn't want them to use it for. Doctoral students and other researchers effectively made a profit from the DNA which was obtained in an unethical manner.

      --
      Human beings are the biological version of Von Neumann machines.
    3. Re:Told but didn't understand..... by The+MAZZTer · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Uh I'm sure we knew about the Bering Sea crossing even before this specific DNA testing. So this is like pretending that it's the first you've heard someone say something negative about you and demanding an apology, when 70 or so other unrelated people have as well and so you should be used to it by now?

    4. Re:Told but didn't understand..... by NiteShaed · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Unfortunately, if they can't understand the consent form then they can't give informed consent, can they? This could be remedied by helping them to understand the consent form, which was done. However, if you purposefully mislead people, then again, they didn't give informed consent at all.

      I agree, that's tricky, but ultimately it comes down to it being done in good-faith. If this was explained to the people (which seems to be the case), and if the people seemed to understand and agree at the time (which I see no evidence against), then the researchers acted in good faith. Just because they didn't foresee certain consequences (such as their creation myth being busted) doesn't mean that they did not give informed consent.

      If I sign a paper before surgery that states the doctor has my permission to remove my appendix because it is infected, then I have given him informed consent. But, once in there, he can't just decide that my gall bladder, also an extraneous organ, looks like something his research students could use in their doctoral theses.

      I think that's a poor example. These people signed on for broadly defined "medical/behavioral" studies. Their main interest was the diabetes study, and if that's all they were interested in giving consent for, they should have said so.

      They didn't just use the DNA for something the Havasupai didn't want them to use it for. Doctoral students and other researchers effectively made a profit from the DNA which was obtained in an unethical manner.

      Grad students are researchers. That's how a lot of research gets done. Who do you think would be doing this work, when it's a university who shows up at your door and says "We'd like to study your genetics"? Further, what's wrong with profiting from this research (either by gaining a degree, or monetarily)? Lets say they actually came up with a cure for diabetes during the course of the study. Are they then barred from marketing this new drug? If so, how does anyone get this treatment? Like it or not, volunteers are the basis for medical study, people profit from the results of the research, and hopefully, overall, life improves all around due to new treatments.

      --
      Some bring out the best in others, some the worst. Some bring out far more.
    5. Re:Told but didn't understand..... by Quantum+Jim · · Score: 2, Interesting

      So, were they mislead, or is this more of a type of "buyers remorse"? There are plenty of places where the local population is uneducated and unlikely to fully understand genetic testing, should we stop studying them, and in the process deny them the good (potential treatments for disease that they suffer from) to protect them from "the bad" (the possibility that their world-view will be challenged, or that the data will be applied to larger studies)?

      Also, one of the big issues here seems to be that the findings contradict their folklore: Another article, suggesting that the tribe’s ancestors had crossed the frozen Bering Sea to arrive in North America, flew in the face of the tribe’s traditional stories that it had originated in the canyon and was assigned to be its guardian. Listening to the investigators, Ms. Tilousi felt a surge of anger, she recalled. But in Supai, the initial reaction was more of hurt. Though some Havasupai knew already that their ancestors most likely came from Asia, “when people tell us, ‘No, this is not where you are from,’ and your own blood says so — it is confusing to us,” Rex Tilousi said. “It hurts the elders who have been telling these stories to our grandchildren.” So science showed that their fable about springing from the ground in this canyon was, at best, unlikely. So what. We don't accept that the Earth is the center of the universe, that sex with virgins cures disease, that human sacrifice improves crop yield, or that it's turtles all the way down, why should we care about this story either. I'm not inclined to "turn off" science just because results show that a stone-age story is just a story.

      I agree with your second part. Challenging anyone's worldview is always a good thing. Whether they are Christians, Havasupai, or even athiests, challenging people with evidence contradicting their ignorance is a good thing! It keeps society from stagnating by encouraging free thinking!

      --
      It is impossible to enjoy idling thoroughly unless one has plenty of work to do.
      - Jerome Klapka Jerome
    6. Re:Told but didn't understand..... by GrayNimic · · Score: 1

      We don't accept that [...] that human sacrifice improves crop yield,

      It does if you fertilize the fields with the dead and/or their byproducts.

    7. Re:Told but didn't understand..... by NiteShaed · · Score: 1

      okay, I concede your point :)

      --
      Some bring out the best in others, some the worst. Some bring out far more.
    8. Re:Told but didn't understand..... by tophermeyer · · Score: 1

      So, were they mislead, or is this more of a type of "buyers remorse"?

      Maybe not mislead, possibly just insufficiently informed. IRB's usually require Researchers provide some reasonable accommodation for people that are unable to understand the consent process. They also require that the consent process be complete, and fully inform Participants about what they are agreeing to. In studies I've worked on that meant having at least translated consent forms and protocol documents, and in some cases meant having interpreters to facilitate communication.

      I know absolutely nothing about Havasupai written language, or the availability of interpreters that are familiar with research methods. I suspect that both would have been incredibly difficult for the research team to accommodate, so I understand why they would have simplified the consent forms. That still doesn't make it ok.

    9. Re:Told but didn't understand..... by EdIII · · Score: 1

      We don't accept ..... that sex with virgins cures disease

      I think the general consensus is that more research needs to be performed before we come to any sort of conclusions like that...

    10. Re:Told but didn't understand..... by linear+core · · Score: 1
      The example with the surgery was a poor example. I'll agree to that; fair enough. However, the problem is not with the researchers profiting from the research; the problem is that they profited knowing they did not have consent to perform the tests they did. From the second article:

      "“Did you have permission,” she asked during the question period, “to use Havasupai blood for your research?” The presentation was halted. Dr. Markow and the other members of the doctoral committee asked the student to redact that chapter from his dissertation."

      The article, which is all we have to go on, implies there, and elsewhere that the researchers knew they did not have informed consent to perform extra research beyond the scope of the diabetes research. I have no problem with them profiting from a cure for diabetes if they found it. But if they profited from a cure for alcoholism from these DNA samples, then they did so in bad faith and by unethical means. That is the problem. Their extended research was predicated on tissue samples that were obtained for another purpose and may have been obtained in bad faith. I do not support unethical medical treatments or research. Unfortunately with a settlement we may not know definitely if they obtained the tissue samples in bad faith.

      --
      Human beings are the biological version of Von Neumann machines.
    11. Re:Told but didn't understand..... by JustNiz · · Score: 1

      The point was not to prove that some early people came over that way, it was to prove that the Havasupai specifically are definately decendents of them.

    12. Re:Told but didn't understand..... by JustNiz · · Score: 1

      >> We don't accept ..... that sex with virgins cures disease

      Hell yeah it does if the disease is depression caused by lack of sex.

    13. Re:Told but didn't understand..... by CheshireCatCO · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately, if they can't understand the consent form then they can't give informed consent, can they?

      True, up to a point. How do you verify that they really understood all the ramifications of the agreement, including all of the things you assume are obvious? (Or that they assume you mean?) You could give a 2-hr test to every person, I suppose, to verify that they understand, but that seems a bit excessive.

      In general, misunderstandings and failures to use the same underlying assumptions will always exist.

    14. Re:Told but didn't understand..... by brillow · · Score: 1

      Also consider, that this tribe is probably broke, and the university looks like someone with money. I am sure a slick lawyer made off with a lot here.

    15. Re:Told but didn't understand..... by brillow · · Score: 1

      If I sign a paper before surgery that states the doctor has my permission to remove my appendix because it is infected, then I have given him informed consent. But, once in there, he can't just decide that my gall bladder, also an extraneous organ, looks like something his research students could use in their doctoral theses.

      No, but if he saw that your gallbladder was also infected, and it presented an imminent threat to your life, he could remove it at his discretion unless you had specifically instructed him not to.

    16. Re:Told but didn't understand..... by NiteShaed · · Score: 1

      The article, which is all we have to go on, implies there, and elsewhere that the researchers knew they did not have informed consent to perform extra research beyond the scope of the diabetes research.

      I don't think it implies that at all, but I guess it's all in how you read it. The researchers themselves state again and again that they believe they were acting within the ethical bounds of the project, and in the article published in Nature (I don't have a link handy, but someone further down provided the text) they further contend that the Havasupai were unlikely to win in court before the University pulled the plug. What I do see though is a university that is trying hard to position itself as a center for "Native American Studies", which will (by necessity) go out of its way not to alienate those same Native Americans. It's not sinister on the university's part, but it does muddy the waters a whole lot since their actions precluded a nice, clear outcome to the whole thing.

      --
      Some bring out the best in others, some the worst. Some bring out far more.
    17. Re:Told but didn't understand..... by sjames · · Score: 1

      I think that's a poor example. These people signed on for broadly defined "medical/behavioral" studies. Their main interest was the diabetes study, and if that's all they were interested in giving consent for, they should have said so.

      Which would still leave studies on population diversity and origin out of bounds (both were done).

      You also forget that there was a language and culture barrier involved. Perhaps it wasn't clear TO THEM that the papers they signed granted a lot more than the diabetes study.

      In the rest of your post, you act as if they have ever objected retroactively to the diabetes study. They have not. They clearly understood that they gave permission for that and have stood by that. They also didn't object to grad students doing studies, they objected to WHAT studies some of the grad students did.

  22. Live from Arizona by arizwebfoot · · Score: 4, Informative

    I live not too far from the Havasupai reservation and I have to tell you that these Indians are not playing with a full deck.

    For example, they try to license the air space over the reservation, regardless of the fact that the FAA has told them many times that only the FAA may do that.

    They (the Havasupai's) bend the laws to their own will and then when someone tries to go after them, they hide on their reservation where you can't serve them with any notices and even if you did, they would ignore them.

    --
    Beer is proof that God loves us and wants us to be happy.
    1. Re:Live from Arizona by arizwebfoot · · Score: 2, Informative

      Oh and the Havasupai don't live in "the deepest part of the Grand Canyon" that would be the Supai Tribe. The Havasupai live on top and is where they charge $75 for the sky walk over the GC.

      --
      Beer is proof that God loves us and wants us to be happy.
    2. Re:Live from Arizona by AshtangiMan · · Score: 2, Interesting

      As for the first point regarding air-space, perhaps you should put yourself in their shoes for a minute. You are part of a sovereign nation, and some dudes come in over sea and take over, relegating you to a small patch of land. Eventually these conquerors (after killing most of your kind) grant you sovereign rights once again. It is up to Germany to determine what happens over German airspace, right? It is up to the FAA to determine what happens over USA airspace, still right? Now, the tribes have mineral rights over their lands, what is so absurd about them claiming the airspace above as well? Just because the FAA tells them? Who are the FAA to dictate rules to a sovereign entity? The arrogance is astounding. All people bend the laws to their own will, or at least anyone with the power to do so does. Sounds to me like you are a bit jaded with regards to the Havasupai . . .

    3. Re:Live from Arizona by WastedMeat · · Score: 3, Informative
      You are very misinformed. I have been to the Havasupai reservation recently. The Hualapai have the sky walk and the Havasupai do indeed live 8 miles below the rim of the Grand Canyon. "Supai" is the name of their village.

      It is probably unrelated but worth knowing, that in a village of 450 people that is 8 miles from the nearest road, they have a very nice modern diabetes clinic and exercise center.

    4. Re:Live from Arizona by WastedMeat · · Score: 2, Insightful

      ...and any issues they have with controlling their airspace are probably rooted in the fact that for several days per week they have multiple helicopters continuously bringing in construction supplies, food, etc, making trips about once every 20 minutes. Having their supply lines disrupted for aerial tourism would probably be a significant issue.

    5. Re:Live from Arizona by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, I think there is a federal law that says the US Govt has jurisdiction over all of the US airspace, from border to border.

    6. Re:Live from Arizona by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Native tribes do not have full sovereignty. They are also not native, and they certainly didn't treat the people they displaced any nicer than the Europeans treated them.

      I think we should just eliminate reservations altogether. Give the land to these people as private property, make them normal citizens, and let them live their lives.

    7. Re:Live from Arizona by Biggseye · · Score: 2, Insightful

      not relevant. The FAA, such as it is, is the only agency that controls the skies about the US. Even those that are over Indian Reservation. I live in Michigan and we have many here. While the Indian Nations are sovereign on that land, it does not extend to polluting the ground, water or air. It does not extend to control of the Air space above the land, they no more have control or that air space then you do over your home. As for interfering with their supply runs, this is a matter of scheduling. Just as it would be if they were flying in and out of a commercial airport.

    8. Re:Live from Arizona by jythie · · Score: 1

      Historical guilt is not sufficient reason to allow present poor behavior. If it was, the mess would be endless,.... It should also be noted that the tribal sovereignty is not equivalent to being a sovereign nation. They are granted limited additional control over their territory, but functionally are much more like states in many ways.. they are still under the umbrella of the US federal government.

    9. Re:Live from Arizona by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Most countries are not where they originally started. Take Poland for example. Part of it is where Germany used to be not long ago and another part that used to be Poland is now part of Ukraine, Latvia and other nations that otherwise would never existed. Heck, check out history of Ukrane or even Poland. Poland, a nation that existed over 1000 years, once dominated everything from Baltic Sea to the Black Sea. And then it disappeared until Napoleonic times.

      Moral of the story?

      Countries change. Nations change. Currently FAA is the airspace authority for all of USA and that includes reservations. Now people living there either deal with it, or they want another war?

    10. Re:Live from Arizona by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There was a tribe of people that lived in the Grand Canyon before the Havasupai.

      I wonder what happened to that tribe?

  23. Also mades it harder for legitimate research by pavon · · Score: 4, Informative

    There was already fallout from cases like this when it was first discovered in the mid-nineties. I grew up more or less on the Navajo reservation, and remember sitting in on a PTO meeting as a high school student. There was a doctor there who was explaining the diabetes screening that was going to be taking place in the coming months.

    She was a Navajo gal who had returned to the res after getting her degree (despite the fact that she could have got a much better job elsewhere), and had managed to secure a government grant to perform free diabetes screening of every native student in the district. I thought this was a great thing given the high rate of diabetes on the res, the low health care coverage, and the importance of detecting diabetes early.

    However, one of the school board members, who also held a tribal government post, kept railing on her and accusing her of all kinds of crap, including asking why she hadn't gotten permission from her as a tribal officer first (in fact the doctor had, and even had papers signed by the board member with her). At first I thought it was just because she was a territorial bitch (she was). However, after later hearing about this case, I understood why she was so sensitive to this particular issue, and agreed that her concerns (although not her behavior) were absolutely justified.

    1. Re:Also mades it harder for legitimate research by spamking · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I actually worked on the Navajo for 5 years. I totally understand where you're coming from. I was in several similar meetings. The Navajo Nation Institutional Review Board has it's work cut out for it . . .

  24. nice ivory tower sentiment by circletimessquare · · Score: 4, Insightful

    but the truth is, science does not operate in a vacuum

    you have to be sensitive to people's beliefs, no matter how self-serving, hypocritical, or absurd, not because their beliefs are valid, but because otherwise the peasants rise up and burn down your lab

    for all of the creationists, all if the jenny mccarthies, all of the anti-global warming corporate apologists: there is a grain not of truth in their resistance, but of atavistic reactionary distrust: "i don't understand this science stuff, and i am afraid. is it good for me? is it bad for me?"

    and then, if you talk to the people, if you remain sensitive to what they want and fear, and you give them feedback and assuage their concerns, their fears subside and they grow appreciative and cooperative

    but if you rain down insults and abuse and derision from your ivory tower like you do in your comment above, you will find their distrust deepens, their fear grows. and what you get is that seed of atavistic reactionary anger grows into a lynch mob: "see: the wizard in that castle is doing evil things, burn him at the stake!" and then you aren't doing science anymore, you're dead... you're research grant is defunded

    so you should be sensitive to what the common man thinks and believes. ridicule him at your own folly. when he tells you his concerns, do not belittle him, patiently console him and explain to him

    because if you don't you will find that your ivory tower is being tipped over by peasants with pitchforks

    all you really demonstrate in your comment above is a profound lack of social intelligence and an intense insulation from the real world. work on your humility. a little grace and decency to your fellow human beings, no matter in how little regard you hold their thoughts, is all you need. but instead, to engage in the hostility you do, simply means you are arrogant and full of blind pride, hubris

    you're setting yourself up for a fall mr. ivory tower

    --
    intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    1. Re:nice ivory tower sentiment by scorp1us · · Score: 2, Funny

      You offend me sir! I am an astrophysicist and my science and I do operate in a vacuum!

      --
      Slashdot's rate-of-post filter: Preventing you from posting too many great ideas at once.
    2. Re:nice ivory tower sentiment by circletimessquare · · Score: 2, Funny

      You offend ME sir! I am a georheologist and my science doesn't even exist below 10,000 kilopascals!

      --
      intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    3. Re:nice ivory tower sentiment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      so you should be sensitive to what the common man thinks and believes. ridicule him at your own folly. when he tells you his concerns, do not belittle him, patiently console him and explain to him

      Sure, I do all that. But it's nice to be able, at some point, kick back and sound off about all the little stupidities the common man has perpetrated lately - and I think that Slashdot is a reasonable place to do that. The tech support workers can sound off about the stupid customers who used their CD drive as a cup holder, too.

  25. I've solved the mystery by kwiqsilver · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I've been to Havasupai (which is actually in Havasu Canyon, not the Grand Canyon, but they are connected). It's known locally for it's really beautiful falls (Moody, Havasu, and Beaver). If you remember the Indian village from Next , that's the place.

    While I was waiting to get helicoptered out (you can hike ten miles, or fly, there are no roads) after my girlfriend twisted her ankle, I got to watch for three hours as the locals flew in from their shopping trips. I do not remember a single one who was not obese. Most were morbidly obese. And the crap they were getting off the helicopter was, well, crap. They subsist on a diet of Hot Pockets, Cheetos, and Pepsi. They don't farm, they don't work, they do all have satellite TV, though.

    Morbid obesity, a high-fructose corn syrup heavy diet, and a sedentary lifestyle are all factors for an increased rate of diabetes.

    The other reservations in AZ that I've visited are primarily agrarian (with a few casinos), so for the most part, they're eating healthier foods, and they're out there performing physical labor to cultivate the food. A good diet, and plenty of exercise reduce the risk of diabetes.

    1. Re:I've solved the mystery by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      Their diet is not their fault. We must find someone to shoulder the blame for their lousy nutrition and sedentary lifestyle. Sue the government!

    2. Re:I've solved the mystery by kwiqsilver · · Score: 1

      I agree that the Feds created a situation where obesity became so common, by 1) subsidizing the production of crap food, as detailed fairly well in the documentary Food, Inc. , and 2) creating a welfare system that perpetuates laziness and ignorance.

      However, I think the Havasupai bear a significant portion of the responsibility, because nobody is forcing them to stay in that lifestyle.

    3. Re:I've solved the mystery by misexistentialist · · Score: 1

      you can hike ten miles, or fly, there are no roads

      is a pretty good excuse for

      they do all have satellite TV

    4. Re:I've solved the mystery by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So I was at my local grocery chain the other day waiting for a ride (my girlfriend has twisted her ankle), anyhow I noticed that all the people of every color coming out of there where obese, I mean morbidly obese. They had nothing but junk in their baskets, soda, chips, and candy. I don't know what they did for a living, but I'm guess they all had cable....etc.

    5. Re:I've solved the mystery by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

      HAVASUPAI COUNCIL OF ELDERS
      P.O. Box 10
      SUPAI, ARIZONA
      (928) 448-2731

      NOTICE

      THIS IS AN OFFICIAL NOTICE OF THE HAVASUPAI INDIGENOUS PEOPLES TO SLASHDOT, ALL READERS, AND ESPECIALLY THE USER 'KWIQSILVER'.

      You have been banished. Don't ever come back to visit, don't sprain your ankle and then hang around oggling us, and don't even ever talk about us again.

      You are dead to us. May your spirits find another path; this path is closed. We suggest Boulder, CO -- great vibe, same pseudo-spiritualism you seem to gravitate toward.

      Good day.

      Chief Iwanna Nata Hapocket

    6. Re:I've solved the mystery by illtud · · Score: 1

      While I was waiting to get helicoptered out (you can hike ten miles, or fly, there are no roads) after my girlfriend twisted her ankle, I got to watch for three hours as the locals flew in from their shopping trips. I do not remember a single one who was not obese. Most were morbidly obese. And the crap they were getting off the helicopter was, well, crap.

      Maybe you were just watching the lazy helicoper members of the tribe? Could it be that you saw the richest, "spoiltest" (is that a word?) members? Presumably with the other tribes you didn't hang about the helipad?

    7. Re:I've solved the mystery by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A sedentary lifestyle and diet may only be part of the problem. The Havasupai may have the so-called "frugal gene" which basically means they have a very efficient metabolism. This, it is thought, developed as a result of the harsh conditions they have lived under for many thousands opf years. It's a "problem" they could share with the Navajo and Hopi. As I undertsand the the only "cure" is to eat very sparingly.

  26. make them a bona fide offer. by SpeedyG5 · · Score: 0, Troll

    I am sure they will trade their dna for a handful of beads.

  27. Needless Drama by BJ_Covert_Action · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Meh, it all seems like another case of irrational, needless drama. Should the researchers have asked permission to use the DNA samples for other research? Probably. At the very least that would have been respectful. Nonetheless, who gives a crap if they didn't? So what, some scientists took your DNA, ran some tests, did some comparisons, and found out that, shock and awe, you are descended from other human beings just like the rest of us. Furthermore, they took a few extra steps and did some research on mental illness which may or may not have provided some beneficial medical data somehow. What's the big deal?

    I mean, sure, if the DNA samples were used to catalog and track the individual members of the tribe, associate them with their facebook pages, and then all that data was sold to the government or some ad agencies or something then yeah, that would suck. If your DNA was used to genetically modify some two headed cat that went on a rampage and ate babies, then yeah, that would suck. But what is the big deal with using it for more research?

    Like I said, the researchers definitely should have asked permission, but banning them from the tribe seems like overkill. At worst, this situations seems like it calls for getting miffed and then shrugging it off.

    1. Re:Needless Drama by Biggseye · · Score: 2, Insightful

      the big deal is that they have no right to do anything other than was agreed to. Medical researcher have to live by the same code of conduct that every one else does. having a blood sample in ones position does not make it OK to do any form of testing you desire. There are legal and moral issues that cover every medical procedure. It would be the same as if a hospital took your blood to check for an infection and decided to forward your sample to a lab to do genetic testing with out your permission. The courts have held repeatedly that it is a violation of your rights and a violation of contract law to do so.

    2. Re:Needless Drama by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I have to post this AC.

      I'm a white person who lives in Arizona and works in computer sciences for a genetic research organization and I am very, very, familiar with this issue.

      Should the researchers have asked permission to use the DNA samples for other research? Not "Probably". Absolutely definitely and completely. It was a huge ethical violation to do any sorts of tests outside of what they originally got permission for. This is right up there with Tuskegee.

      This is just another example of the white man farking over the Natives and not giving a damn about it, or even thinking twice about it. Take their land, burn their houses, feed them poison and diseased blankets. Same old story as what was going on two hundred years ago. Use and abuse.

      White people like to b**ch and whine about how mean and unfair those "Indiuns" are. Hypocrites can't take a little of their own medicine that they've been forcing on those people for hundreds of years now. You've got to be stupid to not realize how these people have been farked over by every means possible and then wonder why they are not happy to see your pale/pasty butt hanging around.

      The Natives in America have problems with the white-man food. Their bodies were meant to live high-efficiency with minimal food. Suddenly you have booze and sugary food -- bamn, you've got obesity and diabetes. The solution is pretty obvious: Don't eat that crap. But for complex social and economic reasons, they do.

      The Havasupai falls area gets lots of tourists. White people tread on in, note how beautiful it is, then proceed to walk all over the place, leave trash and crap (no, I mean literal feces crap), and then leave. The Havasupai put up with it because it's one of the very few sources of income that they can have. Otherwise, they would probably just not allow anyone on their land.

      So, yea, GTFO their land if they say you can't go there any more. Get over it. It's theirs and they can do what they want. Markow can go die in a fire, unethical, unscientific moral-abuser.

  28. you're ignorant by circletimessquare · · Score: 1

    we're not talking cell phone company contracts here, we're talking common decency

    if you won't be decent to your fellow man in your relations with them, and instead use the logic that comcast uses when they gouge your bill, then you will reap ill will and you won't be doing any research again

    comcast and verizon get away with their gouging because they are abusing an imbalnace of power. you don't benefit from the weasel room you cite above when the footing is between equal entitities

    i fear for whomever considers you a friend or girlfriend, in such low regard do you value their trust. assuming you have any friends. with the colossal lack of common decency you display, i don't think anyone would want to be around you. you're a snake

    --
    intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    1. Re:you're ignorant by NeoSkandranon · · Score: 1

      Don't be a jerk. Snakes aren't anything like that (plenty of experience talking)

      --
      If you can't see the value in jet powered ants you should turn in your nerd card. - Dunbal (464142)
    2. Re:you're ignorant by ElectricTurtle · · Score: 1

      You're conflating what I would do with what I recognize as permissible to do. (Though to be fair I probably wouldn't balk at this particular scenario.)

      There are many, many things I don't do that I could do. I've had people hit my car and rather than go all apeshit on them and go after their insurance, I have the common decency to realize that my car was old, not really damaged, and I just let the go on their way. I eat food that is not the way I ordered it. Most of the time in fact I accept what comes my way and move on, because I don't like making a big deal out of things. That doesn't mean that I'm blind to the issues of responsibility. That doesn't mean I trust everything with a pulse, and I don't respect people who are so naive that they do.

      --
      I support the Slashcott and will not be reading or commenting from 2/10/14 to 2/17/14. Beta is steaming pile of dog shit
    3. Re:you're ignorant by Pyrus.mg · · Score: 1

      You're all wrong! This is just like my last trip to the mechanic, except I don't have a really good lawyer who works for free.

  29. Researcher Behaving Correctly by Biggseye · · Score: 5, Informative

    I a bit of background. My dear lady has Leukemia. A particularly nasty type. She has undergone Treatment and came through in great shape, so well that after 2 years there is no sign of it coming back. Remission is a good thing. Now I do not know if you are aware of this, but most research work on this nasty problem occurs at only a handful of major research centers. They also do the vast majority of the final diagnostic work. Anyway, Several weeks ago she had to go into the office and have a blood draw for CBC and the like. At the time the Doctor asked if she was willing to allow the Mayo Clinic have some blood for testing to see if there is a genetic reason she did so well and other do poorly. She agreed. To make a short story even shorter there was a document that needed to be signed that stated exactly what test were to be done and that any additional testing would require authorization in writing. I asked why all the paperwork. The Dr. response, " it is the right thing to do, morally and legally" So this is how it works. They have no right to do any tests other than those that were authorized and a violation would be a breaking of a legally binding contract. And remember, that is what it is, a legally binding contract.

    1. Re:Researcher Behaving Correctly by SecurityGuy · · Score: 1

      So this is how it works. They have no right to do any tests other than those that were authorized and a violation would be a breaking of a legally binding contract. And remember, that is what it is, a legally binding contract.

      Exactly. I'm the kind of person who doesn't say "why all the paperwork", but "ok, go get lunch or something, because I'm going to read ALL of it before I sign it." If you didn't, you might want to. If it's like the typical paperwork I saw, the uses you allowed are basically anything, or any research purpose. There's usually a long winded section about what they intend to do, and the risks and benefits to you and others, and a tiny little bit at the bottom that allows anything else.

  30. "...that contradict their traditional stories" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    "...and theories of the tribe's geographical origins that contradict their traditional stories."

    Their other objections I can sympathise with, but their objection to research which shows they traditional stories up for the nonsense they are doesn't bother me at all, and it shouldn't bother them, unless they want to live a lie for the rest of eternity.

    1. Re:"...that contradict their traditional stories" by NeoSkandranon · · Score: 1

      "unless they want to live a lie for the rest of eternity."

      They (among vast numbers of other people) don't seem too bothered in general by it now!  Insular societies of any type tend to create people perfectly happy to stick with what they know.

      --
      If you can't see the value in jet powered ants you should turn in your nerd card. - Dunbal (464142)
    2. Re:"...that contradict their traditional stories" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >> "...and theories of the tribe's geographical origins that contradict their traditional stories."

      This is not unusual at all. They're Americans, and Americans overwhelmingly reject scientific evidence for origins and instead cling to their myths.

  31. Re:I wish native americans would assassinate.. by couchslug · · Score: 1

    After they off the palefaces, which of THEIR intra-racial conquests should stand and which should be revoked?

    --
    "This post is an artistic work of fiction and falsehood. Only a fool would take anything posted here as fact."
  32. Did they have good representation by Shivetya · · Score: 1

    because frankly far too many people, researchers included, rely on people trusting then to do what they said not what is signed. It isn't beyond reason to believe that many of these tribal members are not well versed in contract law.

    --
    * Winners compare their achievements to their goals, losers compare theirs to that of others.
  33. The diabetes cause is simple... by hsthompson69 · · Score: 1

    ...carbohydrates. Prior to the adoption of a high-carb western diet, the Pima indians were just fine too. There's no mystery about why diabetes happens - trying to blame it on a genetic code is like asserting that smoking doesn't cause lung cancer, only a certain genetic code does.

    That all being said, it doesn't sound like there was an malfeasance here, or particularly egregious profit motive -> if they were taking their DNA and creating patentable drugs with it, and making billions, I can understand, but simply exploring history doesn't seem like something that should be punished by some sort of civil fine.

  34. Re:America needs DNA by biryokumaru · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    It all started when they wanted to put fluoride in the water! POE! POE!

    --
    When you're afraid to download music illegally in your own home, then the terrorists have won!
  35. Where we find out who's serious by weston · · Score: 1

    On the other hand, every time I here a "waaah, cry cry, science is being mean to my bullshit creation myths, mommy make it stop!" my blood starts to boil and I get serious about implementing a method of punching people in the face over the internet.

    Which is where we find out that you're apparently not actually serious about consent and medical privacy issues -- that whatever principled stance you ostensibly have about these things simply evaporates if you get a chance to push forward another agenda that's important to you.

    I suppose there's nothing wrong with outright stating that you believe it's more important to knock down any religious or cultural origin narratives that conflict with the modern scientific ones. Tension between principles is inevitable, and it's there you find out who really believes in them But don't be surprised if you get attacked by people who are actually serious about consent and privacy issues... and are willing to let the marketplace of ideas handle issues of belief.

  36. Science depends on trust by ThrowAwaySociety · · Score: 1

    Meh, it all seems like another case of irrational, needless drama. Should the researchers have asked permission to use the DNA samples for other research? Probably. At the very least that would have been respectful. Nonetheless, who gives a crap if they didn't? So what, some scientists took your DNA, ran some tests, did some comparisons, and found out that, shock and awe, you are descended from other human beings just like the rest of us. Furthermore, they took a few extra steps and did some research on mental illness which may or may not have provided some beneficial medical data somehow. What's the big deal?

    In order for science to work, the public must be able to trust the scientists. The subjects need to be able to trust that when a scientist says, "You will not be exposed to any danger from this experiment," or "Your information will be kept private," that that scientist is not going to go back on his or her word. There have been too many cases of scientists playing God, from Milgram to Tuskegee to the Nazis.

    If that trust breaks down, then people will lose their trust in both the scientific process and the results it obtains.

    1. Re:Science depends on trust by BJ_Covert_Action · · Score: 1

      I don't disagree, scientists and science in general does need to be trustworthy and capable of standing up to criticism. My point wasn't that what the researchers at this university did was in anyway acceptable, just that an outright ban from tribal lands and an inflamed article being written about the incident seemed like overkill. Should the abuse have happened? No. Did it happen? Yes. Is getting pissed off, becoming vindictive, and seeking public sympathy for the tribe after the abuse overkill? In my opinion, yes.

      Again, I am not trying to defend the researchers. This just seems like a particular case where, although there was a scandal, the scandal didn't really end up hurting anyone or anything, so shrug your shoulders, get over it, and go on with your life. Vengeful power trips are not the answer to an abuse of any kind. If the tribe leaders were offended, they should have addressed their concerns to the university clearly, concisely, and maybe requested research transparency on any topics of study that they happen to be involved with. Throwing the researchers off tribal lands permanently may very well prevent further diabetes research being done with this tribe which could endanger the future of the tribe. Thus, the reaction seems both short-sighted and silly.

      Shit happened. The damage was done. Move on with your lives. That's all I was getting at. Publicizing this story on the internet isn't going to do any good other than bring out some crazies who like to look for reasons to hate on research so I just don't see the point in it all.

      However, as I said, I do agree that science needs to adhere to ethical standards as you stated. I would note, however, that a case like this doesn't compare, in any manner or respect, with cases like Tuskegee, Milgram, or the Nazis. While science must be held to an ethical standard, if those standards are abused, then the response should scale to the nature of the abuse. In this case, it seems pretty trivial so I just don't see what the fuss is about.

  37. What exactly is the problem? by Pfhorrest · · Score: 1

    If I voluntarily gave someone a sample of my blood/tissue/whatever, along with demographic but not personally identifying information about myself, I wouldn't give a damn what they did with it or the information they derived from it. The donation was voluntary so it's not like they're experimenting on *me*, my physical body, against my will, so it's not a physical invasion of my privacy; and whatever they find out from my DNA only tells them things about my people, not about me in particular, so it's not an informational invasion of my privacy; so what do I care?

    Lets try an analogy: say they were researching some congenital skin condition that manifests along the spine, and they took lots of photographs of these people nude from behind, with their consent. Then while looking at this photographic data they notice some kind of correlation regarding hip shape or buttock size and research that as well. There's no names associated with those asses, so they're not going to drag your butt print in as evidence to a murder trial; and it's not like they're coming into the village and demanding that people pull their trunks down, they're just using data they've already collected. So who is harmed? Why should anyone object?

    --
    -Forrest Cameranesi, Geek of all Trades
    "I am Sam. Sam I am. I do not like trolls, flames, or spam."
  38. Silly Researchers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    All they had to do was claim their decision to check for links to mental illness was related to diabetes. Perhaps the tribe has a rare mental illness that makes them "forget" when they hit up Jack N the Box at 2am and gorge themselves on super size soda and chilli cheese fries? Here these poor researchers are spending so many man hours and thousands of dollars in grants to figure out a genetic predisposition and its really the Indians fault all along. They do have Jack N the Boxes at the bottom of the Grand Canyon right?

  39. Havasupai Indians not native... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In a related story, the Havasupai Indians have lost their native American Indian status, and as a result have lost their federal Indian support payments.

  40. Blaming the victims by Nerdposeur · · Score: 1

    Look, I don't lend my car to strangers, either. But your position is a bit sociopathic.

    Just like what these people did. They gave over samples apparently with no written guaranty of how they would be used, and now they're stunned that they have been used for other things.

    Yes, they were naive. But they were misled, too. Why are you blaming the victims? If somebody tells you they're doing something to help you, whether that's analyzing your DNA or installing an internet connection or doing your taxes or removing your gallbladder, then they violate your trust, that's wrong. Whether you should have been suspicious of them is a different question.

    Universal mistrust doesn't scale. I can't get through a single day without trusting a bunch of strangers not to veer into my lane and kill me, trusting my landlord's employees not to go into my apartment with their maintenance keys and steal my stuff, and trusting my bank not to steal my money. These are calculated risks, but I can't be right all the time. I'd say that trusting researchers from a legit university to do what they said is a pretty reasonable thing to do. But these people got burned.

    Yes, we all have to be careful, and try not to get suckered. But traditionally, we don't punish suckers. We punish deceit. I don't know how you can have a sane society otherwise. And I think you'll want more sympathy than you've shown here on that distant future day when you make a mistake and find that you're the sucker.

  41. Scales by Improv · · Score: 1

    As far as I can tell, this use falls outside the consent form signed when the samples were collected.

    I hold:
    1) We should have little specific sympathy for the tribesmen's origin myths being challenged
    2) We should take that violation of consent seriously - it's not about property, it's about the integrity of human subjects research and the validity of the promises we make when we deal with people
    3) The data, being already collected, should not be destroyed out of any property-like concerns
    4) The data is nontheless a black eye on an academic unit that has breached its promises. Their IRB should be furious. In order to regain the trust of those they have betrayed, it is likely a very good idea to bury the data unless real (and retroactive) consent can be acquired. Whatever people were responsible should be dealt with using normal IRB-like practices.
    5) If there is not yet strong IRB-type protection for this kind of research, it needs to be established post-haste. IRBs are not (only) meant to deal with legal threats - they protect the reputation of research. It is entirely appropriate for them to decide that legally permissible things are not worth the bad PR (and they have done so many times).

    --
    For every problem, there is at least one solution that is simple, neat, and wrong.
    1. Re:Scales by geekoid · · Score: 1

      2) The researchers had permission.

      4) Again, they had permission.

      It was all fine until the finds contradicted there stories.

      This is complete crap. IT's all about people feeling sorry about a fat native crying.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
  42. Dream on Junior by tacokill · · Score: 1

    The other reservations in AZ that I've visited are primarily agrarian (with a few casinos), so for the most part, they're eating healthier foods, and they're out there performing physical labor to cultivate the food.

    Bullshit! I am calling shenanigans. You have NOT visited any "primarily agrarian" reservations where "most" indians are eating healthier food, and doing physical labor buy cultivating said food. You sir are 100% completely full of shit and I'm calling it.

    Wanna know how I know you're full of shit? Because it is Arizona. Look at a map and look at average temperatures. Nobody is "subsisting" out there. Not even the Indians. And yes, I have traveled extensively through the state and I've been to plenty of reservations. You might be right if we were talking about (eastern) Oklahoma but we're not.

    ...or did you think the US government gave them the "good" land?

    1. Re:Dream on Junior by Em+Emalb · · Score: 1

      having grown up in New Mexico, I'd have to say it is you, sir, who is the one that is full of bovine excrement. Plenty of farming going on in the Southwest. /I am really hoping you were just being extremely sarcastic. Otherwise...wow.

      --
      Sent from your iPad.
    2. Re:Dream on Junior by kwiqsilver · · Score: 1

      Are you joking, or just an idiot? Fire up Google maps (or earth) and look to the east of Scottsdale, AZ. You'll see an area where the suburban sprawl stops cold and turns into tracts of farmland. That's the Salt River/Pima reservation.

      According to this, agriculture accounts for $6.6 billion per year in AZ. And it's probably gone up since that was published.

      Plants don't mind the extreme heat as much as people do. What they do mind is extreme cold (December and January are growing months around here), and lack of water (did you ever wonder why there are so many dams on the Colorado River?).

      Good soil can be imported, water can be imported, sunlight cannot.

  43. To sum up by geekoid · · Score: 1

    researchers got permission, but the finding where counter to their made up myths, so now they are angry.

    You don't like science? Fine. Keep you ass in the Canyon and let your 'Creator' amputate the limb for you.

    Problem will solve itself in a couple of generations.

    FYI: According to the courts, when you give a sample or donation of blood, you have no claims to it. NONE. So the university is being exceptionally kind here.

    --
    The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
  44. Nature had an even better article by nbauman · · Score: 2, Interesting

    The NYT story was pretty good, but Nature had an even better story (from the scientists' perspective). For the subscription-challenged among you:

    http://blogs.nature.com/news/thegreatbeyond/2010/04/native_american_research_lawsu_1.html

    Native American Research Lawsuit Settled - April 22, 2010

    Posted for Rex Dalton. ...

    The researchers denied the charges then, and still do. Mick Rusing, a Tucson attorney representing the one remaining researcher defendant, notes that all those charges were rejected by judges as the case moved through state and federal courts. The remaining claim in state court related to alleged negligence. ...

    The tribal government will receive no money, state attorneys say. The award will cover legal expenses [emphasis added] for the 41 tribal members who remain as plaintiffs, with those members dividing the amount left after the legal costs, their attorney says. The exact details of those distributions are private, say Stephen Hanlon, a Washington, DC attorney for tribal members; he adds he isn’t being paid. ...

    Geneticist Therese Markow – the former ASU leader of the project and the remaining researcher defendant – told Nature: “I’m glad it’s over; but it never should have happened. There was no basis for any claim. They would have lost had it gone to trial.”

    When the project began, the ASU Humans Subjects Committee approved genetic studies of diabetes, schizophrenia and depression. Markow, who is now at the University of California at San Diego, says the research was conducted properly, tribal leaders were briefed on the studies, and patients were treated with respect. ...

    Markow’s attorney, Rusing, said at least a half dozen of the original suing tribal members were shown not to have been in the study. Markow added that plaintiff Tilousi “wasn’t in the canyon” during the study. ...

    “Tribal members were mislead by various parties,” says Markow. “This created suspicious sentiments; made them feel vulnerable. That was a shame; a travesty.”

    In the end, she says, these misconceptions spread through various Native American communities making them more suspicious of researchers.

    “It is a bitter irony that a group of people who historically have been under-served with respect to health-related research may now become even more under-served,” says Markow.

  45. Not always a bullet... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Only 8-9k were shot you mean.

    The native population went way down in large part due to the unintended consequences of disease. Thats not fair to classify disease as part of genocide. Except you could also consider that European settlers had a vaccine to smallpox that could have been traded/given to the Indians, but instead smallpox infected blankets were passed out.

    It is also hard to deny that the bison was hunted to near-extinction to cause mass starvation.

    So it kinda depends how you categorize genocide.

    1. Re:Not always a bullet... by anss123 · · Score: 1

      Except you could also consider that European settlers had a vaccine to smallpox that could have been traded/given to the Indians

      Not really. Smallpox raced ahead of European settlers so the majority of dead died before Europeans knew they existed. Whole tribes could have been wiped out, leaving no history behind.

  46. I feel like asking.... by Gaian-Orlanthii · · Score: 1

    If this was about aliens on another planet, would we be blithering on and on about 'first contact' rules? I mean I feel like asking because from a lot of the posts here, they might as well be aliens on another planet - and not human beings with all the understood rights given to them by the United Nations, amongst other institutions.

  47. Not the same thing by ThrowAwaySociety · · Score: 1

    I a bit of background. My dear lady has Leukemia. A particularly nasty type. She has undergone Treatment and came through in great shape, so well that after 2 years there is no sign of it coming back. Remission is a good thing. Now I do not know if you are aware of this, but most research work on this nasty problem occurs at only a handful of major research centers. They also do the vast majority of the final diagnostic work. Anyway, Several weeks ago she had to go into the office and have a blood draw for CBC and the like. At the time the Doctor asked if she was willing to allow the Mayo Clinic have some blood for testing to see if there is a genetic reason she did so well and other do poorly. She agreed. To make a short story even shorter there was a document that needed to be signed that stated exactly what test were to be done and that any additional testing would require authorization in writing. I asked why all the paperwork. The Dr. response, " it is the right thing to do, morally and legally" So this is how it works.

    So in other words, in your case, the researchers were open and honest with you and your "dear lady," therefore it is okay for them to be dishonest with a few poorly-educated native Americans?

    They have no right to do any tests other than those that were authorized and a violation would be a breaking of a legally binding contract.

    That's the thing. The determined that the researchers in question had not received the proper authorization, and thus the contract was not legally binding. Because the people providing the samples often could not understand the written contract, they had to rely on what the researchers (apparently grad students) told them, and what they were told may not have been complete or correct. That can cause a court to void an otherwise "legally binding" contract.

    And remember, that is what it is, a legally binding contract.

    Funny thing about that. Scientists performing experiments are held to a higher standard than, say, payday lenders or used car salesmen. There is no expectation of caveat emptor when dealing a scientist. A scientist who says one thing while pushing a legally binding contract that says another is acting against the standards of his or her profession.

    1. Re:Not the same thing by BJ_Covert_Action · · Score: 1

      So in other words, in your case, the researchers were open and honest with you and your "dear lady," therefore it is okay for them to be dishonest with a few poorly-educated native Americans?

      What the hell kind of retarded inference is that? The original poster, whom made a very good point, was telling his story in order to display precisely what should be done, in all medical cases. Nowhere in the block of text you quoted, nor in his post, did he state anything that would even allude to the Native Americans in the article being entitled to some form of lesser treatment. Are you blind, hyperbolic, or just plain stupid?

      Furthermore, the parent post seemed to indicate that, in the case of him and his dear lady, the contracts they signed were understood by the doctor to be both morally and legally binding. Thus, he is stating very clearly, that he has had first hand exposure to the need for proper authorization in the medical profession. If anything, you should be affirming his story as the proper way to handle things, not highlighting your response in bold to declare just what the researchers did wrong in the article. The parent knows what the researchers did wrong in the article. His anecdote was posted to clarify what should have been done to handle the situation properly. Do you throw knee-jerk reactions to every post or is it just a random comment ID generator that you use?

  48. Humanity in general by Almost-Retired · · Score: 1

    IT's all about people feeling sorry about a fat native crying.

    I don't think so. Speaking as a wasp diabetic, type 2, the research should have provided a link. Unfortunately, the link as others have pointed out, is likely far more related to the modern diet than to any one specific genetic factor.

    What every respondent here has failed to ask, is: "Did they find what they were looking for?" Barring info to the contrary, I have to assume that they did not manage to find that "smoking gun". What pi$$e$ me off, is that no one else here even asked the question. And you call yourselves Homo-Sapiens?

    I do not know these people, but I do have extensive experience with several other tribes, and between the genocide we have visited on many of them, and our current policies, I can state with a reasonable certainty, that these folks are reasonably intelligent, and that they have learned to both like the diet we provide, and how to game the system. Had there been a magic elixer developed from this research that really could improve their lifespan even beyond the 20 years that our modern medicine has already provided them if they can dodge the diabetic bullet, I suspect the benefits to all mankind would have rapidly accrued, and that there would not now be the hullabaloo about 'Informed Consent'.

    Rant mode ON.

    Unfortunately for a lot of us, that magic pill has not been brought to market if it does indeed exist. So far, it appears that the most promising treatments appear to be related to some of the stuff on the shelves outside the pharmacists authority. The drug companies have tried to get patents on some of it, and the Patent office, because the stuff is natural, laughed their asses off while pointing the applicants at the door.

    So what do they do next? Simple really, now they are trying to get stuff like the Chondroitan Sulfate and Glucosamine and all patent medicines like it, declared as something the FDA has authority over so that it requires a prescription to get it. St. Johns Wort, comparable to Prozac & probably fewer side effects like obesity, and Saw Palmetto is comparable to all the fancy FloMax stuff for prostate problems. The cost to you? Will be 50 to 1000x what you can buy it for at Wallies today. Such BS is their way of trying to inject themselves into the revenue stream, and when you next are in touch with your congress critters, make sure the vote you cast next time depends on how they voted no on any such legislation.

    Rant mode OFF.

    --
    Cheers, Gene

  49. summary: by Nyder · · Score: 1

    Tribe agreed to letting them take blood.
    Tribe did not like what they heard. (being inbred, being from asia)
    Tribe decided to bitch using a loophole (people didn't understand what they were signing)
    Tribe gets paid ($700K, after a $1.5M lawsuit)

    --
    Be seeing you...
  50. Henrietta Lacks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Reminds me of the situation going on w/ Henrietta Lacks, her cells are being used by labs all around the world and profited on w/ no agreement with her or her descendants.