I'm not aware that the FDA was responsible for Google ending Google Health.
This seems like and debating point more than a good faith evaluation of the situation.
Really, it's a mystery to you that Google would want to create a health service, and that the regulatory environment would have a significant effect on their ability and desire to create such a service?
Google is in the business of getting eyeballs, largely by aggregating data to be able to make better predictions than other people can.
People's records are already stored, and they flow through the medical system. The value add from the point of view of most patients view comes from making diagnoses and recommendations. Exactly what the FDA is prohibiting 23andme from doing.
Of course there would be much greater value add if we were able to act on those recommendations, and purchase medications, tests, treatments, and devices. You know, what would happen if we were free.
Google said they closed it for lack of demand.
Do you find the link between what functionality they're allowed to provide and the associated demand for that functionality mysterious?
The question would be whether the companies would still run the trials if they weren't legally mandated.
"The" trials?
They almost certainly wouldn't run trials in the form the FDA requires today. They'd still want to convince people to buy their products. They'd still want to avoid getting sued. People would still want convincing.
We want to be well, we want to find medicines that will make us well, and companies want to sell us stuff, but you can't imagine us arranging that without threats of violence from the government beyond enforcing contracts?
Presumably, then, we couldn't get together on this list and find a solution to some shared medical problem without the government stepping in and threatening us all with violence?
People's records are already stored, and they flow through the medical system. The value add from the point of view of most patients view comes from making diagnoses and recommendations. Exactly what the FDA is prohibiting 23andme from doing.
The FDA seems to say that 23andMe is supposed to provide some evidence that the diagnosis and recommendations they make are better than rolling a dice. The FDA also gave them years to do that it didn't shut them down immediately to give them some time to actually provide evidence.
As far as the timing goes Google He...
This is prompted by Scott's excellent article, Meditations on Moloch.
I might caricature (grossly unfairly) his post like this: