- Information gleaned from at-home ancestry DNA kits can help foes better tailor their weapons, the Navy’s top officer said last week.
- While DNA information can be misused and should be treated with personal information, it’s unlikely that enemies would use it to design a unique weapon for a specific person.
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The Navy’s top officer warned against using popular at-home ancestry DNA test kits last week, saying scientific advancements are making biological weapons more tailorable.
Biological weapons that can target specific groups or individuals vulnerable to pathogens or other diseases are a growing national security concern, Chief of Naval Operations Adm. John Richardson said during a July 3 speech on nuclear deterrence in Washington, DC.
“Be careful who you send your DNA to,” Richardson said at the event, hosted by the Mitchell Institute for Aerospace Studies. “There’s a number of those companies where you can go and find out what your makeup is. That’s a lot of information.
“You learn a lot about yourself, and so does the company who’s doing it,” the CNO added.
More than 26 million people have taken at-home ancestry tests, according to a study from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Based on the rate at which people are buying the kits, that number could jump to 100 million by 2021, the study adds.