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Notes -
If one's DNA is public information (and I'd argue it almost always is. People leave it everywhere), then I don't think it makes sense to classify any inferred facts from it as intimate/private. Saying that analysis of public information crosses a line into an invasion of privacy rubs me the wrong way, though it's difficult to articulate why.
Like, if Sherlock Holmes makes brilliant, true deductions about someone based on the smallest details, he has not really violated their privacy, even if they'd preferred to keep those facts to themselves.
Unlike Sherlock's deductions, "Mr. Smith has dna associated with having a micropenis" is a fact, not a deduction. And, Sherlock famously made his deduction based on evidence that everyone else can see. In contrast, though I can get a sample of your dna from your coffee cup or whatever, can't analyze it. In that sense the information in your DNA isnot publicly available.
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