Google Invests In Genetic Indexing 74
Bibek Paudel point us to a BusinessWeek report on Google's interest in the cataloging and analyzing of people's DNA. Google has recently invested in DNA screening firms Navigenics and 23andMe, which test customers' DNA for characteristics such as ancestry and predisposition for certain diseases. The customers are then able to give the information to their doctors. This is not Google's first foray into the medical industry.
"Google wants to plant an early stake in a potentially large new market around genetic data. 'We are interested in supporting companies and making investments in companies that [bolster] our mission statement, which is organizing the world's information and making it universally accessible and useful,' Google spokesman Andrew Pederson says. 'We felt it was important to get involved now, at the early stage, to better understand the information generated by this fast-moving field.'"
Be afraid, be very afraid.... (Score:5, Funny)
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It would be neat to see medical charts from 100 year olds compared to infants, that would get you 3 generations of good data. You could work out the genetics into the past and predict the future pretty well. Imagine dating by emotional and Genetic compatibility. T
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"OK, something's not right here. Did one of you fart?"
I'm just dying to know (Score:5, Funny)
the mind boggles....
marker for a small penis and low intelligence? show them a camarro
small penis and high intelligence? corvette
Re:I'm just dying to know (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:I'm just dying to know (Score:5, Insightful)
I think this is it. The Next Big Thing in the Medical Industrial Complex (other than taking out all of the insurance company executives and shooting them) is going to be managing enormous amounts of data. The Industry has shown it can't do it: Insurance companies have a vested interest in NOT letting anyone else see what they are doing / what data they're finding. The government - Bush's weak pronouncements aside - won't do anything. The various private companies involved in Health Care computing are still too small and fragmented to get anything done on a major scale within the mess that is the current US Healthcare system.
This means either medical information will remain balkanized for the foreseeable future (which isn't necessarily a bad thing), or somebody (ie. Google and / or Microsoft) is going to try to tie everything together. Of course, this won't fix the major issues in healthcare delivery and financing in the US but it's one piece of the puzzle.
How do I get in touch with these guys? (Score:2, Interesting)
I would love to get in on that aspect of things - either as a consultant or beta-tester. A Google Earth like genome browser is at the top of my wish list.
Privacy (Score:4, Interesting)
I suggest people in the US contact their Congresscritters about revising HIPPA to cover online web accessible databases.
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The problem isn't necessarily that Google would misuse any healthcare data -- Google has too much at stake to do anything stupid like sell personal data to the highest bidder. The problem is that any concentration of that much data in one company's hands--from email to search
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Yes, I am quite sure that some companies will pay a lot of money for the results in this research. I'm also quite sure that it's a bit double-sided: the company with the winning bid could be researching the cure for cancer, but it could also be an insurance company. I don't know but I suggest to be careful in these matters.
They told us at uni... (Score:1, Offtopic)
...that the field of biology was ripe for an investment of programmer time. We even had a course touching on the basics of DNA and the types of searching/sorting/etc that would be relevant.
I suppose it's not surprising that the big boys are coming to play, then :)
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This will also help recruiting (Score:1, Funny)
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How long before we see genetically enhanced, cyber augmented killing machines storming microsoft headquarters?
Hopefully not long
hehe (Score:3, Interesting)
Sweet! (Score:1)
I read about this in Wired (Score:5, Informative)
http://www.wired.com/medtech/genetics/magazine/15-12/ff_genomics [wired.com]
I thought it was interesting then. It's also important to point out, Anne Wojcicki's husband's name is Sergey Brin. Having access to massive amounts of computing power makes sense for a genetics company.
The new meaning of DNA (Score:2)
Do No Anvils
Sorry, I know..
Insurance implications? (Score:5, Informative)
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Don't trust everything your professors (or lawyers) tell you.
A genetic predisposition for a disease in a currently healthy individual is not the same as having the disease. According to HIPAA [genome.gov], genetic information in the absence of a current diagnosis of illness does not constitute a pre-existing condition.
But HIPAA [wikipedia.org] is just the beginning of genetic information protection. The real deal is something called GINA: Genetic Information Nondiscrimination Act (GINA) [wikipedia.org], which recently passed in the U.S. Congres
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"More than a decade after we began the effort to protect Americans from genetic discrimination, the Senate is finally poised to see the fruition of those efforts," [Olympia J. Snowe, Republican of Maine] said in a press release that quoted another senator describing GINA as "the first civil rights act of the 21st century."
Big stuff.
Our Mission: (Score:2)
"organizing the world's information and making it universally accessible and useful"
23andMe = Sergey Brin's wife's company (Score:1, Informative)
universally accessible and useful (Score:4, Interesting)
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I assume you are only talking about your DNA sequence. There is much more than simply the base pairs. There are epigenetic modifications, RNA genome, and your proteome to name a few. In my work, it would be very advantageous to have a large number of sequences for a particular gene. This information can be used to learn how conserved the sequences are. Conservation is often a hint at function. But the k
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And it isn't the notion of free will that is under assault, it is the definition of free will. "I'm a product of incredibly complicated information and I am not particularly subject to the information in my immediate surroundings" isn't really all that less satisfying than "I have a soul that exists separate from my body", unless you are very hung up on the "separate f
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Last time I checked, most liberal secularists openly accept differences. This is where racism ceased to exist in their minds. Let's say we find out that africans, asians, and europeans have differences in genes that we didn't notice before. The only people who will take advantage of those differences are people who are closed-minded, unhappy, are scared of people who look different, and still be
not a reason, but a means to (Score:2)
Let's say we find out that africans, asians, and europeans have differences in genes that we didn't notice before...
and imagine
Let's say we find out that africans, asians, and europeans have differences in genes that we didn't notice before...
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no-- not at all.. (Score:2)
I wasn't thinking of anything as complex and gentle as the original posters suggested " not breed out "
I was thinking more like a very specific engineered bio-weapon, something based on your comment of
"Let's say we find out that africans, asians, and europeans have differences in genes that we didn't notice before..."
if specific such gene were discovered, that allowed for five 9's of probability that a person was black, how long do you
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That's the problem, there are too many of those sorts of people in the world who will take advantage of any small shred of evidence they can bend towards their cause. Imagine if we discover that race X tends to have genes which make them less intelligent and more aggressive. Doesn't matter th
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No they don't. They are just as fanatical about their ideals as people on the opposite side of the idealogical divide. Besides, the thing is, the people most likely to commit genocide are those who think they are incapable of wrong.
Let's say we find out that africans, asians, and europeans have differences in genes that we didn't notice before.
That's not what I'm talking about. I'm saying, what if we find that people with some gene, c
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LOL.
A government that acknowledges that most people have some genetic complaint that will appear later in life, and puts the appropriate resources in would be able to give people the support they need, with preventative treatment, lifestyle advice, etc.
I would be more willing to bet that the government is the last place you would want to have accumulating genetic data.
n summary, knowledge can be used for good or bad, and the constant fear that it will be used for
Google DNA Mashups! (Score:4, Interesting)
Just login, choose your favorite DNA Samples (or upload your own), and select the chromosone pairs from the samples you wish to combine!
Next choose Preview to see what your new organism will look like! Also, upload a base sample for a comparison chart between the original organism and your new lifeform!
Last but not least our engineers hope to have a special suprise ready by April of 2010. Ordering! We hope to offer both "Retrovirus" for exisiting organism modification, and "Test Tube Compatible" for creating new lifeforms!
Warning: Google claims no responsiblity for lifeforms based on DNA created with the beta.
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Searching for a mate just got easy (Score:1)
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The adage is "Like the mother, marry the daughter" as I recall, and yes my tounge is lodged in my cheek.
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2. Enquire if the potential father-in-law sleeps in the same room as the mother-in-law.
3.
4. Profit (at least in terms of not dreaming about chewbacca every night, then waking up to discover its just the wife lying on her back again with her head tucked into her chest).
Direct to consumer genetic testing (Score:5, Informative)
The New England Journal of Medicine actually had an interesting article about direct-to-consumer genetic testing (Jan 10, 2008 [nejm.org] -- sorry not a free link (unless you can get it through your institution)). Three main points it makes is that
1. There are questions regarding quality control and transparency. Due to the numbers involved, even small percentage mistakes in sequencing can add up and give wrong information.
2. What is the clinical validity of the sequence such that it can accurately predict the disease? Lack of a sequence may give a false sense of security, and presence of a sequence may cause unnecessary harm.
3. What can you do clinically given the answers? There is little observational or clinical data for how the genetic information can be used effectively, especially for low penetrant conditions.
Clearly, there are disease where knowing ones gene status is very helpful (e.g. BRCA1/2, MEN1/2A/2B, etc...) but many disease we are just in the infancy of determining their genetic basis. The article sums things up like this:
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Free Alerts! (Score:2, Funny)
George Orwell's predicted this long ago (Score:1)
Um, pass... (Score:3, Funny)
I'm sure Google will enable one to opt out of this kind of thing, but I'm not sure which chromosome I need to store my robots.txt file in.
Ooooh! (Score:1)
For those who aren't already afraid. (Score:3, Interesting)
The Medical Information Bureau is a private company that almost every insurance company reports your medical information to under the guise of (fraud prevention). The maintain records on everyone and then sell that information to their members. Also interesting, they are classified as a âoeconsumer reporting agencyâ according to FACTA. And, according their website, they are required to comply with FCRA, but Its wholly-owned operating subsidiary, MIB Solutions, Inc., MAY be required to comply with FCRA.
Also from their website "Most of MIB's codes signify medical conditions. A very few of these indicate risks involving HAZARDOUS AVOCATIONS or ADVERSE DRIVING RECORDS, etc." (These are currently being used to deny insurance to people.)
"MIB's Security Alert Services is a compliance solution designed to assist insurance and FINANCIAL SERVICES companies in fulfilling their legal obligations under the USA PATRIOT Act - U.S. Treasury Department's Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) and Canada's Office of the Superintendent of Financial Institutions (OSFI)" (OFAC, OSFI, PATRIOT Act!!!!)
For those who think they have some protection under HIPAA. HIPAA, the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act, has been publicized as helping to protect your privacy by instituting huge penalties for disclose of medical information. It's a joke. Its definitions of when disclosure of your information are so general that almost anything can be allowed. For 10+ years I was a professional preventer of natural selection. As far as privacy is concerned, there is no HIPAA.
I don't thing Google will add a feature to street view that shows that the resident has CF or Sickle Cell. I do however think that once the information is in a form where these links could be made, they will be.
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Intellectual Property? (Score:1)
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