1. There will be many mistakes, at least with current methods. Get ready for lots of false positives and negatives relating to risk.
2. People will use it against you. Companies. Friends. Relatives. The government. This is not to discourage people from doing it (well, maybe a little bit). But given our current inability to keep anything important private in this country and our apparent inability to not snoop into people's lives, this is going to be one overwhelming temptation for many people. Now is clearly the time to move forward with anti-discrimination laws.
3. Having your genome sequence will not automatically improve your health. It could even make it worse (e.g., see false positives above)
4. If you REALLY want to understand some of your biology from your genome, you are going to want to take a peak at the genomes of relatives. Good luck on all the family issues that will come up.
5. Just because Watson and Venter are releasing their genomes to the public does not mean you have to (for medicine it is VERY useful to have a genome associated with an individual ... even many individuals, but there is no real need for names to be there)
6. The methods being used may not recover the haplotypes well (e.g., see Keith Robison's blog).
ALSO check out some other articles on this topic
- Matt Herper in Forbes
- Steve Connon in The Independent
- Nick Wade in the NY Times
- Slashdot article
- Wired article by Kristin Philipkoski
- Good (though old) article on the ethics of a $1000 genome by
wow!it’s great to read articles that come directly from the heart. Thanks for sharing
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