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California Attorney General Rob Bonta urges 23andMe users to delete their genetic data amid the company's financial concerns.
T he genetic testing and information company, 23andMe, announced on March 23 that it has filed for bankruptcy, after years of ...
While federal privacy laws shape how the data could be used, the vague wording and large amount of room between what is allowed and what 23andMe does with the data prompted California Attorney General ...
The South San Francisco-based company has publicly reported it is in “financial distress” and stated in recent securities ...
As 23andMe files bankruptcy to facilitate the company's sale, some worry whether customers' genetic data will stay secure ...
Me has filed for bankruptcy, and an attorney general in California is reminding customers that they have a right to request ...
California Attorney General Rob Bonta told ABC News that he struggled to delete his own information from the platform, ...
23andMe has filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy, and CEO Anne Wojcicki, whose takeover bids failed, has stepped down. The genetic testing company has the genetic data of more than 15 million customers — ...
Would you trust a company with your most personal data — your DNA — if it was on the brink of collapse? Millions of 23andMe ...
Attorney General Rob Bonta sent out a warning ... revoke permission for their genetic data to be used for research. A 23andMe spokesperson sent the following statement to ABC7 News: 23ndMe ...