In Iceland, Tap Cellphones To Avoid Incest
Kozar_The_Malignant writes "Students at the University of Iceland have written an Android app that helps you avoid dating your cousins. The app accesses the Icelandic national genealogical database that contains information on all living citizens and their ancestors going back 1,100 years. Tapping two phones together will bring up an alert if you share a common grandparent." Just one of the consequences of having a population small enough (and well documented enough) to have a well-known genetic makeup.
Do you really need an app to tell you who's family?
"Tapping" anything seems to me like a very poor choice of words when talking about incest.
Mit der Dummheit kämpfen Götter selbst vergebens
Tap that before you tap that.
"I awoke in a daze - sticky, smelling of stale alcohol, only imagining that her head would hurt as badly as mine when she finally awoke. Vague memories of drinks, friends, laughter, and sex. Lots of sex. As I picked my pants up off the floor, my cell phone fell from the pocket and by some cruel twist of fate tapped her cell phone lying nearby..."
while [ 1 ]; do echo -n -e "\xe2\x95\xb$((($RANDOM&1)+1))"; done
Guy 1: "Is it illegal to shag your cousin in France?"
Guy 2: "Only if she's ugly."
Interestingly different attitudes to cousin love...some places it's encouraged, others, illegal incest.
10% of marriages worldwide, apparantly...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cousin_marriage
Or differ between Springfield and Shelbyville.
bickerdyke
73 comments so far and no one's linked the obligatory xkcd?
I am not a crackpot.
Incidentally, in Alabama the same app is used to find dates.
The likelihood that I'd pick up a cousin at the family reunion is orders of magnitude greater than turning to /. for mating advice.
Happiness in intelligent people is the rarest thing I know.
Ernest Hemingway