this post was submitted on 06 Dec 2023
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Nobody's genome was lost. What happened was, users with weak passwords had their accounts compromised, something like less than 2,000 of them, and from those accounts, bad actors were able to access and download family tree data for something like 6.5 million accounts.
I don't really see how the data lost is actionable in any way except for the spoofed "Hey gramma! It's me! I'm in jail and I need bail money!" phone calls.
One of the typical arguments is selling ancestry history to insurance companies, effectively handing them health data which could lead to up-pricing or rejections for customers with bad health history.
That's 23andMe's end game anyways
That is a whole different can of worms and should be illegal as well
But at least the second one isn't allowed anymore. I'm not sure if the ACA addresses the first point.