California has some of the strongest privacy laws in the country — and the only dedicated privacy agency — but 23andMe has ...
The direct-to-consumer DNA testing service 23andMe filed for bankruptcy earlier this month, putting millions of customers' ...
The California Attorney General is urging 23andMe users to ask the company to delete their data and destroy any samples of ...
Genetic testing company 23andMe’s bankruptcy has led to a new consumer privacy issue: what happens to the DNA of millions of ...
Just months after it started trading on the Nasdaq in June 2021, the company was valued as high as $5.8 billion. As of Friday ...
California consumers can delete their genetic data and make other changes under the Genetic Information Privacy Act.
A company spokesperson told HuffPost that 23andMe isn't changing the way it stores, manages or protects customer data.
Me, one of the first companies to provide direct-to-consumer genetic testing kits, has filed for bankruptcy. Since its ...
The South San Francisco-based company has publicly reported it is in “financial distress” and stated in recent securities ...
Would you trust a company with your most personal data — your DNA — if it was on the brink of collapse? Millions of 23andMe ...
“Good Morning America” anchor Whit Johnson revealed that his 23andMe test was a “missing link” that led to a “bombshell” discovery for his family after the company filed for bankruptcy — sparking ...
The company, which went public in 2021 with a $6 billion valuation, has never turned a profit and faced challenges including a data breach and a class-action lawsuit. 23andMe plans to sell ...