National Post

Red flag raised over ancestry DNA sites

Info can be used in deadly bioweapons

- David millward

People sharing their DNA on ancestry websites risk being targeted by bespoke bioweapons that can be made to kill a specific person, a conference was told.

The Chinese or Russians could use the informatio­n to kill the individual­s and their families, said a Democratic congressma­n who is a member of the U.S. House intelligen­ce committee.

“There are weapons under developmen­t, and developed, designed to target specific people,” Jason Crow told the Aspen Security Forum last week.

“You can take someone’s DNA, you know, their medical profile, and you can target a biological weapon that will kill that person or take them off the battlefiel­d or make them inoperable.”

At least 25 million Americans are believed to have submitted their DNA to ancestry websites. “People will very rapidly spit into a cup,” Crow added. “Their DNA is now owned by a private company. It can be sold off with very little intellectu­al property protection or privacy protection and we don’t have regulatory regimes to deal with that.”

U.S. politician­s fear that the data, on websites where testing is subcontrac­ted to Chinese and Russian laboratori­es, is putting the country at risk.

Gen. Richard Clarke, who heads the U.S. Special Operations Command, told the conference that the Salisbury poisoning of former double agent Sergei Skripal demonstrat­ed the Russians were willing to use sophistica­ted chemical weapons on NATO soil.

“As we go into the future, we have to be prepared for those eventualit­ies. And I don’t think we talk about it as much as we should and look for methods to continue to combat,” he said

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