The FDA just forced 23andme to shut down the medical information they were giving me, tailored to my genome. What's the cost in lives of delaying the genomic revolution in health care 5 to 10 years?
Interestingly, FDA will have achieved this obstruction by merely adding a trivial inconvenience to personal genomics. A consumer can still get essentially the same health info through free tools (which interpret your data file with info from sites like SNPedia), except they have to spend an extra 1-2 hours on this extra step. Of course, this more than suffices to decimate 23andme's sales.
I've been using SNPedia for years.
It's a trivial inconvenience, if you know about SNPedia, and if you're willing to trust them with your information.
I found out about SNPedia after I had purchased my 23andme kit, and poked around with the information they gave. Right now, 23andme gives you your genome, and some ancestry information. Unlikely I would have purchased it in the first place without the promise of associated health care info.
Amusingly, the NIH just gave those criminals at 23andme a grant for a research front end to their system.
http://www.ibti...
This is prompted by Scott's excellent article, Meditations on Moloch.
I might caricature (grossly unfairly) his post like this: