It's not clear that the results of 23andMe where much better than chance:
Not clear, to whom?
23andme market their product in a way that suggested that the numbers they provided were bunch more informative than they were in practice.
That's a claim about about the accuracy of the information that 23andme provides, and how that compares to the accuracy of their claims of accuracy. Where's your evidence for that claim?
The FDA is tasked with stopped people from selling snake oil ...
Not by me. If they disappeared into a black hole tomorrow, I would sing "Yippie! Yippie! Yippie!"
And what's their evidence that 23andme is selling snake oil? What's yours?
if you get random results on your risk type based on whether you send your DNA to 23andme or it's competitor Navigenics
I suggest you read Jaynes on probability. The results aren't "random", they're based on different information. You use different information, you assign different probabilities.
How badly should 23aneMe be allowed in your opinion to misbehave?
definition: Misbehaving - offering me information that I want, that those in power don't want me to have, and will use guns to prevent me from having.
I like it when people "misbehave".
People who don't know what they are doing won't anymore be mislead by 23andme.
Yes, people "misled" by their own incompetence about what 23andme says will now be "protected" from such confusion. They, and everyone else, will also be "protected" from the relief of their ignorance of any and all of the accurate information 23andme might have put out as well.
Couldn't they be equally "misled" by anything anyone anywhere ever says to them?
And what's their evidence that 23andme is selling snake oil?
From the FDA perspective 23andme has the burden of proof.
From my perspective: If SNP based genetic testing produces useful risk diagnoses that the diagnosis of different SNP based genetic testing companies should agree. As far as I know those people who used multiple of those services get different results from each one.
If you get completely different answer based on the company that you ask about your risk, do you really think that's no issue?
...The results aren't "random", they're
This is prompted by Scott's excellent article, Meditations on Moloch.
I might caricature (grossly unfairly) his post like this: