Commercial genetic information and criminal investigations: The case for social privacy

Taking a DNA test with a commercial company is an increasingly popular enterprise, with tens of millions of consumers worldwide. In recent years, these genetic databases have also been used for so-called investigative genetic genealogy (IGG): uploading a crime scene DNA sample in these databases to...

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Main Author: Nina F. de Groot
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2023-07-01
Series:Big Data & Society
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/20539517231216957
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author Nina F. de Groot
author_facet Nina F. de Groot
author_sort Nina F. de Groot
collection DOAJ
description Taking a DNA test with a commercial company is an increasingly popular enterprise, with tens of millions of consumers worldwide. In recent years, these genetic databases have also been used for so-called investigative genetic genealogy (IGG): uploading a crime scene DNA sample in these databases to find a distant relative of the unknown suspect. This forensic use of genetic consumer information has already helped solve many crimes. The debate on IGG tends to focus on individual rights and values, such as individual consent, individual control over information, and – perhaps most prominently – individual privacy. In this paper, I propose to approach IGG through the lens of privacy's social value, in contrast to merely its individual value. First, I discuss the conceptualization of privacy as a social value. Next, I explore several issues of IGG that privacy's social value allows consideration for: the informational and decisional interconnectedness, the risk of a tyranny of the minority, the involvement of multiple contexts, and the relationship between citizens and state. I conclude that this approach offers a fruitful perspective to evaluate the ethical and social desirability of IGG, evading the simplified dichotomy between individual privacy versus the security of society, in which the former will almost automatically lose. A focus on privacy's social value recognizes the effects for society on both sides of the balance. It brings into the light fundamental ethical, social, and political concerns of IGG, that extend beyond individual data control or consent.
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spelling doaj.art-d0924ffc4c8547098118127afbdd38782023-12-18T20:04:01ZengSAGE PublishingBig Data & Society2053-95172023-07-011010.1177/20539517231216957Commercial genetic information and criminal investigations: The case for social privacyNina F. de GrootTaking a DNA test with a commercial company is an increasingly popular enterprise, with tens of millions of consumers worldwide. In recent years, these genetic databases have also been used for so-called investigative genetic genealogy (IGG): uploading a crime scene DNA sample in these databases to find a distant relative of the unknown suspect. This forensic use of genetic consumer information has already helped solve many crimes. The debate on IGG tends to focus on individual rights and values, such as individual consent, individual control over information, and – perhaps most prominently – individual privacy. In this paper, I propose to approach IGG through the lens of privacy's social value, in contrast to merely its individual value. First, I discuss the conceptualization of privacy as a social value. Next, I explore several issues of IGG that privacy's social value allows consideration for: the informational and decisional interconnectedness, the risk of a tyranny of the minority, the involvement of multiple contexts, and the relationship between citizens and state. I conclude that this approach offers a fruitful perspective to evaluate the ethical and social desirability of IGG, evading the simplified dichotomy between individual privacy versus the security of society, in which the former will almost automatically lose. A focus on privacy's social value recognizes the effects for society on both sides of the balance. It brings into the light fundamental ethical, social, and political concerns of IGG, that extend beyond individual data control or consent.https://doi.org/10.1177/20539517231216957
spellingShingle Nina F. de Groot
Commercial genetic information and criminal investigations: The case for social privacy
Big Data & Society
title Commercial genetic information and criminal investigations: The case for social privacy
title_full Commercial genetic information and criminal investigations: The case for social privacy
title_fullStr Commercial genetic information and criminal investigations: The case for social privacy
title_full_unstemmed Commercial genetic information and criminal investigations: The case for social privacy
title_short Commercial genetic information and criminal investigations: The case for social privacy
title_sort commercial genetic information and criminal investigations the case for social privacy
url https://doi.org/10.1177/20539517231216957
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