Stanford, U.C. Berkeley Offer Students Genetic Testing
cappp writes with this snippet from Scientific American: "This week Berkeley will mail saliva sample kits to every incoming freshman and transfer student. Students can choose to use the kits to submit their DNA for genetic analysis, as part of an orientation program on the topic of personalized medicine. But U.C. Berkeley isn't the only university offering its students genetic testing. Stanford University's summer session started two weeks ago, including a class on personal genomics that gives medical and graduate students the chance to sequence their genotypes and study the results."
They can choose to participate or not. Seems like a non-story to me.
Well, I can't possibly foresee any way that this could ever be abused.
I mean, it's a bit paranoid, but imagine: "I'm sorry, but we've found you too liable to get cancer/something else undesirable. We're giving your seat in the class to this more guy who's more likely to be successful and not dead."
It's not a privacy story yet, but when they start asking for DNA samples with your admission essays you can expect the discussion to heat up here.
So imagine you get someone drunk and passed-out, swab their saliva, and submit it as your own.
Voila - you get a prediction of their future medical history!
Now that would open the door to some interesting conversations in the future with that person!
That's always puzzled me, even if you do manage to transform the memories, all you get is a situation like the 6th day. A clone that has your memories, but isn't really you.
I think there's a big difference between what Berkeley's doing and what Stanford's doing.
At Stanford, seeing as how it's a graduate level class, the students understand that the purpose is to explore the implications of genetic testing for this kind of application (not unlike a graduate-level MIT class I read about some years ago about wearable computing where the purpose was to explore how wearable computing might affect our lives.) It doesn't bother me too much that they do this, so long as the institutional review board was consulted (if it was appropriate to do so.)
At Berkeley, on the other hand, the Freshman orientation program treats this as a more or less settled societal issue.