Company Gains Research Rights To Tongan Genome 108
spam_it_to_me_baby writes: "An Australian listed company, Autogen, has acquired research rights to the Kingdom of Tonga's gene pool. The Pacific island's 108,000 residents will be used by the company to identify genes that cause common diseases. Autogen says serum or DNA samples collected in Tonga shall remain the property of Tonga, while Autogen will build the genetic database on which the research will be based. More here." Similar to research going to collect the genetic information of everyone in Iceland, another place with a winning combination of low population and historical isolation. A single company (Decode) also won the "rights" to that information, for a mere $200 million.
Re:genetic copyrights? (Score:2)
As for your questions about the United States, where would you find protection from such DNA mapping? I would no doubt expect someone would take the US Government to court (esp in this modern litiginous society) if they were to try it, but do any real laws prevent them?
As for fingerprints when you are born, AFAIK, your fingers are not sufficiently developed w/ regards to the skin, and thus your fingerprint wouldn't really work. And if they were to use ink, instead of the only-recently introduced optical biometric scanners, then the potential for ink with such small channels being between the rings is too great to get an accurate sample. Small fingers are much harder to measure.
In light of all of this, I'm reminded of the one-funny joke which now brings back a rather sour aftertaste....
Just because you are paranoid doesn't mean they aren't after you
Where is exclusive mentioned? (Score:1)
What I wonder is how they want to do the sampling? Is every citizen of Tonga now obliged to give blood/gene samples to Autogen? What happens to people who refuse?
While I do not see a problem with the research, I think it's a violation of human rights if samples are not given freely.
Yet, if Tongans(?) have to volunteer to give samples, what's the deal with the deal?
The Brits are already there, dude... (Score:2)
Re:So that'd be genome.to would it? (Score:2)
Makes ya wonder if Faust was Tongan
</allusion>
Re:DeCode and Iceland (Score:1)
I can understand that people some people might be concerned, but you have to remember that those who receive these records don't know that they are your records. In fact, in the format that they leave the doctors' hands, they are absolutely useless to insurance companies.
I also doubt that you mother has to co-operate with Kári personally :)
This is nice... (Score:1)
So, one day you wake up and you discover that your DNA - the very thing that makes your body what it is - is no longer yours! Your own government sold it to a private company.
Even Franz Kafka [yahoo.com] wouldn't come up with this one. This world is positively going insane.
Re:So that'd be genome.to would it? (Score:3)
In case you are unaware, Tonga is an extremely poor country.
The "autocratic monarchy" derided in other posts are really not the uncaring sycophants that people might think. I happen to know someone related to the Tongan royal family (who lives in Australia) and he is one of the kindest, most honest and genuine men that I have met. He regularly involves himself in fund-raising activities to better the lives of the people in his home village in Tonga.
I believe that the sale of a TLD, and some anonymous scientific data is a very wise revenue-raising decision for a developing nation to make.
Re:Whats the date? (Score:1)
Hold on - this could be good news! (Score:1)
Kill them all (corrected) (Score:2)
Kill them all, and let God sort them out.
According to some discussions, it was during the , a (now) Southern French fortress of the Albigensians, 13th century, I think. [ukans.edu]
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Re:The Israelis have already thought of this... (Score:3)
My memory on this is a little fuzzy, but I believe the genetic sequence the Israeli researchers were said to have sought and found was specific to certain communities of Iraqis.
IIRC they had gotten as far as identifying the sequences they would need to exploit to engineer an Iraqi-specific disease, but had not figured out how to exploit those sequences. A major sticking point was how to distinguish Iraqi Arabs from Sephardi Jews of Iraqi background; I don't recall whether this problem was resolved or not.
In fairness to the Israelis, it is worth noting that there was a tremendous uproar in the Knesset when this research was made public, and IIRC the plug was pulled at that time. But it is fairly shocking that the Israelis, of all people, would contemplate such a Mengele-esque project.
And I don't think anyone would be too surprised if research in this vein was still going on in secret.
I believe similar research was also done in Apartheid-era South Africa.
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Re:Are Tongan civil rights eroded? (Score:2)
Typical bias. Hate to tell you this but monarchy != corrupt regime. The worst criticism of the Tongan system I've been able to find by searching is their refusal to accept a UN report on free speech violations. But big deal, the United States of America does that and worse on a regular basis. For instance, their refusal to live up the UN charter of rights with respect to natives and other issues.
But this is the same old US-centric view we see over and over here on /. If it isn't a democracy, if someone doesn't hold Free Speech up as a religion, if it's got to do with anyone else in any way, it's demonized.
Feh. I'm sick of it.
Re:Are Tongan civil rights eroded? (Score:1)
1. You don't know that I'm white
2. I strongly doubt that there is a monolithic Tongan culture, tradition or set of values to which all Tongans subscribe - else why would Tongan commoners such as Akilisi Pohiva be trying to change their system? See http://138.25.138.94/acij/ACIJ/Tonga/tonga-terror
3. White, bigoted imperialist is a weird term of abuse to apply to someone who criticizes a class-ridden society with a hereditary aristocracy
4. Robust systems that exist with the consent of their people generally don't need to imprison their critics.
Re:Are Tongan civil rights eroded? (Score:1)
The poster was making the more specific statement that Tonga is undemocratic, corrupt, and imprisons dissenters.
I'd rather have some more information before labling Tonga corrupt on that basis alone. What form did this dissent take? Were they peaceful protests or pampheteering, or were they something more? Who, if anyone, outside the country was backing them and for what purpose?
To say nothing of what the imprisonment entails. That's a loaded term for us westerners, who conjure up images of roach and rat infested cells in banana republics, or frozen gulags. It may be that the conditions are much more humane and amount more to "detainment" than "imprisonment".
Snap judgments are uninformed judgments.
Example of ethics document (Score:2)
Personally, I am not so worried about the privacy aspect of these projects. It seems to me that both deCode and Uman Genomics work hard on solving that problem. More pressing to me is the kind of deals they are making. Is it really right for a society to favour one company before many others when the resources are actually public? This is an old problem in that countries has sold mining rights, fishing rights, and other natural resources for a long time, but we are not talking about a scarce resource here. This is information and it is not expensive or impossible to share that resource with others as long as they can pay.
And Celera [celera.com] has shown that it is certainly possible to have a business model an a truly open resource: The human genome. No one has exclusive rights to this data, and yet you can make a good business selling it.
Lars
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Re:The Israelis have already thought of this... (Score:2)
Would this work? There are lots of Sephardic and Yemeni Jews that lived centuries in contact with Arabs (of course, not all the people in "Arab countries" are genetically Arab, if such thing exists. I think there would be some degree of intermixing, kosher or not.
as soon as the radiation fades
How long is it for current neutron bombs?
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Re:Are Tongan civil rights eroded? (Score:1)
The dissenters I was referring to were journalists who wrote and published stories critical of the government and the royal family in local newspapers.
Reading human rights materials on the web, I understand Tongan prisons are pretty primitive, but in line with general living conditions.
I don't think that's of any great comfort for anyone imprisoned in Tonga though.
You are quite right that snap judgements are uninformed ones. But writing off my post as a snap judgement was a snap judgement itself.
If they tried this in 'Merica (Score:1)
Re:So that'd be genome.to would it? (Score:1)
I agree that selling some rights to anonymous data is an excellent way to get some revenue for Tonga, which could certainly do with it. But the original article implies rather more than that: in particular the sentence "any serum or DNA samples collected
in Tonga shall remain the property of Tonga " implies that ownership of the data does not lie with the donor but with their government.
It's a shame there isn't more detail about that, or about whether data will be anonymised, or whether it will be accessible to other researchers, etc.
Re:Facts about Tonga (Score:1)
This is not as bad as it looks (Score:1)
The company can then work on that gene directly in other systems to find drugs to either fix the problem or bypass it. They do not own anybody... in fact, all they are collecting is information, which is useless outside of context...
The hardest part of human genetics is in pinpointing exactly what genes are responsible for what... this is the best way to do it. Hopefully you'll see the fruits of this research in 10 years, and live 10 years longer and healthier because of this :)
Ba.
Re:Are Tongan civil rights eroded? (Score:1)
I for one want to see Decode succeed for the greater good of mankind and would have gladly given them access to my medical history and DNA samples. However, I don't propose to have any right to control whether other people do the same. It follows that I don't propose that the officials who derive their power from my vote have any right to do so either.
--
Re:Are Tongan civil rights eroded? (Score:1)
The second thing, you seem to think that whatever crimes you think white people are guilty of doesn't apply to other races. Do you think white people invented murder? Genocide? Slavery? Subjugation? All of this has been around as long as humanity has existed. By participating in those crimes, all white people have done is prove that they are as flawed as everyone else.
The third thing is, you seem to think that a crime committed by a white person applies to all white people. This is not true. This is, in fact, the core of racism, and it is what needs to be fought, on all fronts, in order to live in a multicultural world. Treat people as individuals, and not as how they are portrayed in media and stories, and have respect for everyone as an individual.
The tongans gave up their genome? (Score:2)
Does this mean we can figure out what's wrong with Jar-Jar? Maybe we can genetically engineer them some smaller ears, too....
Re:Are Tongan civil rights eroded? (Score:1)
If you are an American citizen, you are free to emigrate to any country you want to, and renounce your citizenship if you want to. True, the last 20 years or so has seen an alarming erosion of the classical concept of "citizen" and replace it with "consumer". Not just corporations, but the government itself is turning citizens into "consumers" of ever encroaching government services.
I'd hope that any attempt by the US government to sell the rights to American's genetic code would be met with riots and the storming of Washington DC. The pessimist in me thinks that there are too few who understand the Declaration of Independance and it's implications.
Re:This is not as bad as it looks (Score:1)
What I'm wondering is if this sort of thing has already been legally applied to a person's body, or if there's any general consensus in the legal world on if such action is possible. The government does own the body of anyone enlisted in the military, so the general principle of the government owning a person is alive and well in modern America. I just want to know how hard it would be for the government to apply the same ideas to civilians.
Re:DeCode and Iceland (Score:1)
Actually, it's very capitalistic. It is the concentration of wealth (future though it may be) into the hands of a large profit-minded corporation.
The entire point of the corporation (in turn the entire basis of capitalism) is to generate as much wealth as possible for its shareholders. Since a monopoly is the utmost wealth generating mechanism, it should be the ultimate goal of goal of any corporation. Any saying otherwise is not a true capitalist, and has at least a little dose of the communist ideal in them.
Re:DeCode and Iceland (Score:1)
In such a few numbers that it was statistically insignificant. Most of Icelanders were poor farmers who couldn't afford the monopilistic prices the Danes (the previous rulers of Iceland) put on seafares across the Atlantic.
It is not true that almost every person from Iceland has a well known family tree going back hundreds of years.
There are church records dating back to the 14th century (if not farther back) noting the father/mother, date of birth, date of death of almost every individual ever born in Iceland.
Also, Icelanders have been pretty meticulous family historians for centuries. Always highly annoying when your gran tells you that a person you don't like is actually your n-th cousin.
Since when have newspaper reporters gotten their facts straight about foreign countries?
Ah, Another Israel Basher (or Bashar ? ;-) (Score:1)
I remember how an article about alleged development of genetical weapon by Israel got about 600 responces in 1997 or 1998 (?); only Microsoft bancrupcy would get more responces at that time!
The first problem with your thinking is that there is no single Israeli genome. Even though studies show apparent Middle-Eastern heritage of Jews participating in the research (and their closeness to Arabs in this regard), modern Jews are pretty assimilated; significant portion of new immigrants is only 1/2 or even 1/4 Jewish genetically. You can't test them all!
The second problem is that Jews and Arabs are REALLY close. Half of Jews (Sefardim) has never left Middle East/Northern Africa, thus living among Arabs for many generations.
The third problem is that many Palestinians are really descendants of Jews!
And what do you think of the way to propagate this virus at the modern times when every country (except maybe China) is open to the world ??? Have you heard of any epidemy that would spread fast and kill a lot of people lately ??? AIDS does not count; it not a recent phenomenon, it's brewing since 1936, as some reseachers think.
So, stop bashing Israel and look at the other side of the conflict
Here are some links:
http://www.abcnews.go.com/sections/science/Dail
http://www.jpost.com/Editions/2000/11/06/News/N
http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/sci/tech/newsi
http://www.assyrianfoundation.org/genetics.htm
Long quote from the last article:
The latter point is also made in studies of Jews. Based on earlier studies using classical genetic methods7 , Cavalli-Sforza et al. came to the conclusion "that Jews have maintained considerable genetic similarity among themselves and with people from the Middle East, with whom they have common origins." Evidence for the latter concept was very convincingly made and extended by an international team of scientists in a very recent research article8
Re:Creepy (Score:1)
In perpetuity? (Score:1)
Do Autogen have the rights over all samples in perpetuity or just for the next 5/ 10 / whatever years?
The Human Genome and The Insurance Industry (Score:1)
"An Australian listed company, Autogen, has acquired research rights to the Kingdom of Tonga's gene pool. The Pacific island's 108,000 residents will be used by the company to identify genes that cause common diseases. Autogen says serum or DNA samples collected in Tonga shall remain the property of Tonga, while Autogen will build the genetic database on which the research will be based."
Arguably, the big concern in the purchase of the genome (ie. genetic information) about a given population is not the fact that people are literally being "bought" by corporations (which is entirely false because they have only bought the information regarding the people's DNA for research) but that this information might be misused by insurance companies.
Insurance companies charge people on the basis of risk. The higher the risk, the higher the premium. The risk with DNA is that if the insurance company finds out that a person is prone to a particular disease or condition (such as heart disease or diabetes) then the insurance company might charge a higher premium or even deny insurance altogether, because the person presents too great a risk.
This would make medical (and other types of) insurance harder to get because of people's genetic history, something which they cannot change. It's not the purchase of genetic information that we have to worry about, but the exploitation of that information for commercial gain at the expense of the people.
- Self Bias Resistor
"Anyone who says that money is the root of all evil, hasn't got any!" - Ben Affleck, Boiler Room
When they're done... (Score:3)
Mark [zwienenberg.com]
"Only two things are infinite, the universe and human stupidity, and I'm not sure about the former."
Re:When they're done... (Score:1)
Re:l33t h@x0rz (Score:1)
Isn't USA a republic as well? (Score:1)
Re:Are Tongan civil rights eroded? (Score:1)
Facts about Tonga (Score:2)
"When Britain's Prince Charles married Diana, a special chair was built in Westminster Abbey for the King of Tonga. At his heaviest, in 1976, he weighed 462 pounds. By 1993, he had slimmed down to a slender 280 pounds."
Another thing I remember reading is that there's an age old custom - when the king walks around, people are supposed to be at a height below him. So apparently those around him fall down like ninepins when he goes around.
Here's a pic of him. [tvb.gov.to] He looks kinda like a l33t p1mp.
Tonga is also responsible for all those
Tonga and its king inspire the kind of satirical lunacy that the teletubbies normally do.
w/m
Do governments have the RIGHT to do this? (Score:1)
Especially if the profit is being made by a corporation, and more importantly, the money collected is benefitting the GOVERNMENT, not the people who's right to their own genetic code has been sold without their consent.
While I hate to bring up politics, this is an example of conflicting philospohies... Socialism/Fascism/Liberalism holds that property and people ultimately belong to the State or "society". Capitalism/Conservatism holds that all rights, property are vested in individuals. Even if I do not own anything else, I own MYSELF. And that includes my own source code. If I want to release it via GPL, sell it closed souce, etc, that right is up to me.
I feel that selling the rights to the genetic code of ALL individuals in a country reeks of the sick experiments that Hitler did to Jews in the concentration camps. While I have no doubt that the are NOT torturing people, etc, they are having medical experiments conducted upon their own code WITHOUT consent. They also are being denied the right to decide for themselves when, how and by WHOM their genetic code would be allowed to be used.
And that, weakens the presumption that the individual is owned by himself, NOT the state.
Re:Fingerprints (Score:1)
Re:DeCode and Iceland (Score:1)
It said:
A little love on /. (Score:1)
Have a great day you guys! 8^)
Re:Creepy (Score:2)
As they used to say during the Counterreformation,
Re:This is not as bad as it looks (Score:1)
I believe that the FIRST and FOREMOST Human Right is the right of self-ownership. I'm mine, and forcing me to give up any part of me against my consent is slavery.
Re:So that'd be genome.to would it? (Score:1)
"sex on tv is bad, you might fall off..."
Re:If they tried this in 'Merica (Score:1)
The Constitution does not in any place say anything about group "rights", social "rights", or government "rights". All freedoms in the Constitution are granted to INDIVIDUALS.
Now I said theoretically, because that's not how it works anymore. It would in my opinion, be grossly illegal for the US government to do any such thing as sell the US gene pool.
Given that most Americans are allowing the party in power to use cronies in power in a state to usurp an election to keep that party in power (something the USA condemmed in Serbia), I can't say that this (selling gene rights) is something that the government would be called to task on.
After all, we've now had generations of people dumbed down and under-educated on the principles that this country was founded on. They won't understand it because it's too technical. They also won't realize tha the Constitution, by the 9th and 10th amendments SPECIFICALLY prohibit the government from doing any such thing.
Re:This is not as bad as it looks (Score:1)
But they are getting the rights from a GOVERNMENT, not with the direct consent of the individuals involved. Also, the individuals are being denied the right to sell their OWN code for their own profit, if they were to choose to do so.
By presuming to have the right to exclusively sell such information, the governments of Tonga, Iceland, and any other is presuming to ultimately own the individual. If you do not own YOURSELF, you are a slave.
Microsoft Press release (Score:1)
from the "ah but is it open source" dept:
Not to be outdone by Autogen, Microsoft founder and chief software architect Bill Gates today announced plans for "one of our most innovative products yet." Although few details were given at the press conference, he mentioned that this new product, dubbed "Microsoft Genome", would be "loosely based upon human dna, exhibiting a surprising level of standards compliance. However, in the fine Microsoft tradition, we have introduced a number of innovations that we think will really have the public excited. You know, just some minor improvements to the codebase." Analysts expect a release date about nine months from now.
Re:Are Tongan civil rights eroded? (Score:1)
I don't want people to be color-blind. I want people to see my color. To see my heritage. I just don't want them to pre-judge me based on it. Just respect me for who I am, my thoughts and opinions. Don't disrespect me based on my appearance.
It's bleeding heart liberalism like this that is preventing us from moving forward. Do you thing affirmative action is helping or hurting? Do you think mandating minority hiring is raising people's opinion of minority's qualifications or abilities?
Re:Are Tongan civil rights eroded? (Score:2)
You are also not understanding what they are selling in Iceland and Sweden. It is not your genes or genome that is taken away from you; You can take it to anyone else to sell it or whatever. The deal is about the exlusive cooperation of healt authorities and the access to data and statistics that same authorities have collected.
One controversial issue is of course whether anonymous medical records belong to the originator or not. Representants of the people(s) have decided that is OK, but understanding it is a controversial issue, and very much an issue of trust, they have made it possible for people not to participate. I don't understand what more you can ask for.
What is really debatable is whether a government should be able to sell those publicly owned rights to one single company, shutting out everyone else.
Lars
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Re:Example of ethics document (Score:2)
These projects cannot be done without the cooperation of health authorities, simply because they sit on data (not only samples that you could drive around and collect, but medical records) that are essential to the project.
if you don't put rule and laws to regulate the market, don' t expect the market to regulate itself!
Right. And that is why I don't want these health authorities to create monopolies by selling exclusive rights!
Now, please, let's keep Hitler out of this. OK?
Lars
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Re:Are Tongan civil rights eroded? (Score:1)
We can only hope they can avoid the fate of the indians.
Re:Are Tongan civil rights eroded? (Score:1)
Re:DeCode and Iceland (Score:1)
The objective of true capitalism is to provide the cheapest and best services to everyone, while the companies benefit as well.
No sane person can doubt the value of an open capitalist market. Just look at the poor Russian sods.
Are Tongan civil rights eroded? (Score:5)
So if Jonah Lomu gives blood in New Zealand, it belongs to him. If he goes home to Tonga, all rights over it belong to Autogen.
./ers may not be aware that Tonga still has a autocratic monarchy, with a parliament with a majority of seats guaranteed to noble families. Tongans who want a democratic system tend to find themselves in jail. Looks to me like Autogen has cynically found a jurisdiction with a compliant and corrupt ruling clique. Shame on them.
Whats the date? (Score:1)
Are there any slashdot readers from Tonga? Did you sign a consent form? How much have you been paid?
To the rest of us, how long before Microsoft buy your DNA? Will you have to sign a EULA before conceiving a child?
Can you believe this? (Score:3)
Rather than sell their people into slavery, something clearly socially and morally unacceptable, they are essentially selling the people into a life of lab-monkeying. I'm sorry, but where is the outcry? When commercialization and trampling of human rights combine, it only makes me fear the day of MegaCorp (also known to some psychics as Microsoft) owning our governments.....
Re:Can you believe this? (Score:2)
Re:God's laughing at us. Gosh, this is just funny. (Score:2)
I don't know how things work in Tonga, I don't even know where it is on the map. I do know something about how things work in Iceland (but not all the details) since I am not only an Icelander, but work in computer security for Íslensk Erfðagreining, the Icelandic daughter company of Decode Genetics. Of course, nothing I say is official in any way. In fact I'm probably just making the lot up.
Here, no company has exclusive rights to do genetic research. No company has the right to take samples from an individual without their consent. The government (democratically elected, high voter turnout, no infinitely iterated recounts needed) agreed to the deal. What was sold was not the people's genome, but access to medical health information already collected. You may also opt out of the database, f.ex. by mailing the free-postage form that was sent to every person in the country.
First, any personally identifying information is removed from the data. Second, the data is stored in sealed rooms with camera surveilance and all code which has access to the data is validated by a third party. Third, the code must never return result sets with fewer than a specified number of people. I.e. it is very difficult to use rare traits to get additional information about a person or a small group of people.
The security requirements are incredible. If banks had to adhere to these kinds of standards, I think they'd just decide it wasn't worth the effort and close. We're required to use 10000 bit RSA keys, for example (I wonder if they'd accept 8192 bits keys?) which is just preposterous. But I expect the result will be secure.
I think that, assuming you want to allow large-scale statistical research of this kind at all, it is being done the right way in Iceland. I wouldn't want to guess about Tonga.
Re:Are Tongan civil rights eroded? (Score:4)
Technically, I think the samples belongs the one collecting them. What these companies buy is the exlusive cooperation with public healt authorities. Presumably, Jonah donates blood to a company which also collects genealogy info, it would all be in order. However, without clinical records, this information will no be so valuable.
The deal seems good to me. A crucial fact is that Autogen is setting up a facility in Tonga, instead of shipping all the samples to Australia.
Lars
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Re:Creepy (Score:1)
Re:who does enforcement? (Score:1)
The real question is when will the organizations devoted to human rights step in?
Re:Creepy (Score:2)
However, the very nature of the virus to attack a cell makes it nearly impossible to 'program' a virus to selectively attack cells which posses a certain DNA strand. To draw an analogy, it would be like being shown 3 identical black boxes, and that one of these has a bomb in them, and that you must get rid of it. But, add in the effect that touching the 'bomb box' will set it off, killing you, and it makes it nearly impossible to use some method to identify it.
However, if the Tongans posessed something not genetically different but biochemically different, such as the presence of a minimum amount of such and such hormone, or the presence of some third-party cell/virus/bacteria within them all, then you could 'program' a virus to be such that. But I'm sure you'll find such a correlation between all Tongan's a statisical near-impossibility.
Re:Are Tongan civil rights eroded? (Score:1)
Re:Are Tongan civil rights eroded? (Score:1)
The original poster made the claim that "Tongans who want a democratic system tend to find themselves in jail". Now, I can't comment on the validity of this claim, but nowhere did the original poster claim that Monarchy => corrupt. The poster was making the more specific statement that Tonga is undemocratic, corrupt, and imprisons dissenters.
Re:who does enforcement? (Score:2)
If, however, a sample has been taken for some reason and stored with your medical records, a copy of this would be sent to Decode along with your other records, but without personally identifying information. I.e. there would be a DNA sample and a medical history. Given a large number of these, you could statisticaly find genes that are likely to be related to particular diseases.
Well, unless the person opts out, in which case those data would not be used for research.
Genetic information of everyone in Iceland? (Score:1)
What they have bought the rights to is to build a centralized database with the medical journals of the people of Iceland will be stored and use that database to figure out statistics about diseases and correlate that with genealogical database.
They will not have access to medical records of individuals, the can only look at statistics of anonymous groups.
This has absolutly nothing to do with the DNA of the people of Iceland.
Oh and "mere $200 million", don't forget that we get all the drugs that result from research done with the database for free, forever.
2 Sides (Score:1)
You would have thought though that they'll soon find out that no-ones immortal and we're all genetically programmed to die of something at some point, making it a bit of a moot point.
Re:Are Tongan civil rights eroded? (Score:1)
But I'm not white, and I agree with everything he said, so your argument falls down.
Re:Are Tongan civil rights eroded? (Score:4)
Indeed not. But this one certainly has been. If you haven't found anything by searching, you haven't looked very far.
A simple search on Google for Tonga and Corruption yields this:
1. Imprisonment of dissenting journalists.
http://www.transparency.de/documents/newsletter
2. Passports and citizenship are sold to foreign nationals.
http://sunsite.anu.edu.au/spin/SPINDOC/larmour9
3. The current land minister has been convicted of illegal land transfer deals in the 80s. Critics of his appointment as minister were imprisoned.
http://www.tongatapu.net.to/tonga/news/briefs/s
4. The king dissolved the parliament after it voted to impeach the minister for corruption.
http://jinx.sistm.unsw.edu.au/~greenlft/1996/25
Etc.
I am not an American. I'm a New Zealander. (And I'm far from impressed with American efforts in the South Pacific thus far. Had there been an article about American Samoa, Kiribati, Paula, the Marshall Islands, etc, you would have seen criticism of US policy from me.)
As it is, New Zealand has a large Tongan minority and Tongan affairs are commonly in the news here. I strongly suspect I'm better informed than you are.
Re:Are Tongan civil rights eroded? (Score:3)
How can you tell? Suppose I'm an indigenous Australian? Would that change your view?
What about if I were Japanese?
>You are subconcious racist, you write harmful things without even realizing it.
How was what I wrote harmful? To whom, precisely? If it was harmful to King Tupou, then I can't say I'm very sorry.
> Only with long and painful process of soulsearching and admission of (historical) guilt can a white learn to live as a world citizen in a colorblind multicultural world.
If you want to live in a colourblind world, you sure have a funny way of showing it
GATTACA soon? (Score:2)
First, there are companies making nanotechnology highly parallel gene analyzers. They borrow chip circuit technology and put tens of thousands simple sequences on single device.
Second, is what to analyze for? Part II of the genome project is to look for the *differences* in coding between humans. That amount is estimated to be about 0.1% of the 3% non-junk genes, or one hundred thousand base pairs.
Given that Moore's Law seems to apply to all information technologies, I suspect both problems will make great progress in the next couple decades toward a GATTACA device.
Re:Creepy (Score:2)
Re:Selective Reproduction? (Score:1)
More info on the infamous "posture photos" here [urbanlegends.com], though I can't vouch for the site's veracity.
Interesting is the comment that the tobacco industry did a study using the male photos to try to detect a link between smoking and, uhm, "manliness".
I have heard elsewhere that some very famous women in US politics were photographed under the system; I don't see a link right off.
Re:Are Tongan civil rights eroded? (Score:2)
Tonga ain't to be laughed at (Score:1)
For all its fuedalism, Tonga has a terrific education system, great public health, and a general morality that most of us should envy.
Oh, and the Tongan dollar is worth more than the greenback, and has been for a long time. Not that that has anything to do with anything, granted. And did I mention your kids can go to school without being shot at, and you can drive your pig down the trail without a drive-by shooting. And they're about the only country on earth that's never been conquored. By anyone. Including the English or the Americans. Until now.
Sure, Joe Badnick is exploiting these great people. Let's just understand a bit about the place of which we speak. It ain't no Alabama.
Re:Are Tongan civil rights eroded? (Score:1)
Elected "democracies" have the RIGHT to sell exclusive access to the source code to it's citizens? I don't think so. No government that presumes to own it's people is a free country. Can't be. The principle of self-ownership is of first and foremost of all human rights. To deny self-ownership is to allow slavery. I'm no bigger a fan of state slavery than I am some plantation master owning other humans.
If I as an individual CHOOSE to sell research rights to my genetic code to a company, then it's my choice, and it will be ME who is paid. To do this any other way is coercion.
Any government which peddles in human flesh or human genes is already, or is about to be tyrannical. If the government set this up as an "opt-in" voluntary program where the individual CHOOSES to co-operate or not, and gets compensated, that's different. But these are cases of governments coercing participation (by granting exclusivity an individual cannot himself sell his own code to the highest bidder) for it's OWN enrichment. This is wrong in any moral sense. The governments are selling rights to things it DOES NOT OWN.
Re:Are Tongan civil rights eroded? (Score:1)
Kill them all (Score:1)
Kill them all, and let God sort them out.
According to some discussions, it was during the , a (now) Southern French fortress of the Albigensians, 13th century, I think. [ukans.edu]
__
Re:The Israelis have already thought of this... (Score:2)
Well, during the Crusades, the Europeans killed Arab Christians along with Muslims. I suppose they thought they were all the "infidel"!
A closer examination reveals that religion is often used as an excuse by the greedy to acquire property (see Salem Witch Trials, Spanish Inquisition, Holocaust, Crusades, current Israel occupied territories).
Re:The Israelis have already thought of this... (Score:1)
Read my quote at the bottom and then look at this book. [amazon.com]
RNA (Score:1)
Autogen (Score:1)
Lactose Intolerance (Score:2)
I believe that the genes targeted were those which caused lactose intolerance in Africans, but not in the majority of Caucasians.
More information on this nefarious research is available in the article Ethnic Weapons For Ethnic Cleansing [excludedmiddle.com]
Regret for the past
Is a waste of spirit
God's laughing at us. Gosh, this is just funny. (Score:1)
I wonder if each individual person in each of those communities agreed to turn over his/her genetic rights or if it was by fiat? In other words, if I'm a poor Tongan or Icelander, do I get paid for my gene info, or is it taken by the government who has already been paid?
Phrase the question another way: did the people of these communities agree to this or did their governments agree to it? Do the individuals get any proceeds from the multi-million dollar deals or does it go into the government coffers? What if an individual in one of these communities doesn't want to turn over their gene info? Do they have to? What if they don't?
So that'd be genome.to would it? (Score:4)
IS there anything that these tongan's won't sell?
Its a super footballer plot (Score:1)
Re:Whats the date? (Score:1)
Yes, your eyes do deceive you, it's 108,000 people.
Re:Selective Reproduction? (Score:4)
In either event, I don't quite remember what happened to him after that. Either there was a public cry much like that against Frankenstein's monster... or there was apathy... either way, I wouldn't place it very far in the future, with such atrocities occuring....
Mind you, this was primitive studies, and in today's world of DNA manipulation and understanding, with the human genome mapped, you really have to wonder if there won't be some Neo-Sheldon who will attempt such a thing. I suspect it would be someone with a large amount of money and the guise of helping the public...
and his name shall be Bill, for he shall be evil.
l33t h@x0rz (Score:1)
MWAHAHAHA!!
--
Fingerprints (Score:1)
Unfortunaly, I don't think it's computerized, so the benefits from it are next to none. Only criminals get into the police files, and those are in digital form.
I remember that the US (and the UK ) do not have an ID card, so when you are asked to identify yourself you end up showing your drivers licence... That's nonsense...
What are you afraid off?
A World DNA database would help a lot in police investigations... And would allow lots of evil experiments to be done... Gee, are there any bones without a catch?
Universal Declaration of Human Rights (Score:1)
An interesting thought if we were to actually see the company try to subject Tongan's to mandatory DNA testing. This is a UN document, so I don't know it's affect on Tonga, but it just reaffirms that the conspiracy theories many (including myself) have tossed around may be unfounded.
Re:Its a super footballer plot (Score:1)
Morons all. (Score:2)
When will they learn?
--Shoeboy
Re:Morons all. (Score:1)
That's the point. These genepools are fairly uniform, so any genetic deviations (we're talking statistics here, right) are easier to identify and correlating such deviations with particular illnesses becomes much easier.
In fact, her ein Iceland, you are not entered in the database unless your ancesters a couple of generations back were all Icelandic. My great-grandfather was Norwegian, so I might have been rejected.
In other news... (Score:3)
-------------------
Re:Whats the date? (Score:1)
Offtopic, but when I used to shrink wrap software for a living, I would to tape license agreement stickers over my fly.
By opening this package you agree to abide by the acceptable use policy defined by the manufacturer.
This product is intended for non-commercial use only.
It still amazes me that I didn't get fired from that place.
--Shoeboy
DeCode and Iceland (Score:1)
The Israelis have already thought of this... (Score:4)
Creepy (Score:3)
Someone had to put all that chaos there!
______ "Our 'n about"
\_bi_/