Try GOLD - Free
Strand of worms
New Zealand Listener
|April 29- May 05, 2023
Online DNA testing may reveal more than we bargained for and be used against us in far-reaching ways, warns NOEL O'HARE. It could also save our lives.
A few months ago, out of idle curiosity, I filled a tube with saliva and sent it off to Ancestry.com. It wasn’t the best decision I’ve made in my life, but fortunately, I don’t have a whole life to regret it.
At the time, it looked like a bargain. Over the past couple of decades, the price has dropped about $1000 to less than $100 today. No wonder, then, that consumer DNA testing has skyrocketed and is now an $8 billion industry. It’s promoted as an easy and fun way to find relatives or uncover ethnic origins. Discovering you are, for example, 20% Italian is a fun fact to share with friends on Facebook or over drinks.
But this is only scraping the surface of the technology. DNA therapies open the door for personalised medical measures to both prevent and cure disease. DNA analysis has the potential to give us real insight into our traits and behaviours. The pious entreaties of philosophers down the ages “to know thyself” takes on new meaning. But we’re not there yet. And where we are now can sometimes be scary and threatening.
Most people would be reluctant to shed their clothes in public, but nudity is nothing compared to how they expose themselves by handing over their DNA. Personal privacy is ripped to shreds and family secrets laid bare. Sperm donor conceptions, infidelities, adoptions and even crimes can no longer be covered up. DNA testing means it’s no longer possible to bury the past. That drunken one-night stand, workplace romance or holiday fling decades ago could turn out to be unfinished business that involves a back demand for child support. It takes only one relative to upload DNA to a genealogy site to make it possible to trace an individual.
This story is from the April 29- May 05, 2023 edition of New Zealand Listener.
Subscribe to Magzter GOLD to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 10,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
MORE STORIES FROM New Zealand Listener
New Zealand Listener
Cut off in infancy
A new way of delivering health services would have benefited Pākehā as well as Māori.
8 mins
December 13-19, 2025
New Zealand Listener
Take a dive
The ethics of the mosh pit allow for a safe place to get down and physical.
2 mins
December 13-19, 2025
New Zealand Listener
Law flip-flops bad for all
If people are expected to know the law, they must be sure that the law is certain and predictable. That way, individuals and businesses can organise their affairs with confidence.
2 mins
December 13-19, 2025
New Zealand Listener
Let it blow
Startlingly original tale of a wind in Cumbria and its power over the people.
3 mins
December 13-19, 2025
New Zealand Listener
The old and the destitute
Once you start looking for them in Berlin, you realise how many there actually are: older people who rummage around in public trash looking for plastic or glass bottles. If the bottle has a recycling symbol printed on it, you can get anything from 5-25 eurocents when you return it to the grocery store.
2 mins
December 13-19, 2025
New Zealand Listener
Getting into the groove
Morag Atchison swings from choral work to a tango-based mass that might get her dancing.
2 mins
December 13-19, 2025
New Zealand Listener
Goering's last stand
Crowe steals the show in war crimes drama
2 mins
December 13-19, 2025
New Zealand Listener
Gagging for it
The search for the worst recipe of all times is over. The people have spoken.
8 mins
December 13-19, 2025
New Zealand Listener
Shelf life
In the teeth of a cost-of-living crisis, Kiwi consumers are back to buying Kiwi books
3 mins
December 13-19, 2025
New Zealand Listener
Musk's wiki hallucinations
My Wikipedia entry began as a joke. Eighteen years ago, a friend created an article that consisted of a couple of lines about the work I did at the time and several other in-jokes. Another editor mercifully removed the joke lines a couple of weeks later, and then some more silliness a week after that. But in the process, a new “fact” about me became enshrined.
2 mins
December 13-19, 2025
Translate
Change font size
