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A bankruptcy judge approved the sale of 23andMe's assets and business operations to a nonprofit led by 23andMe’s co-founder and former chief executive, Anne Wojcicki.
When popular genetic testing company 23andMe filed for bankruptcy earlier this year and announced it was for sale, privacy experts and consumer advocates raised concerns over the future of the sens… ...
The DNA data of millions of people who used 23andMe's services won't be sold to a pharmaceutical company. A bankruptcy judge ...
The California-based company, which allowed customers to learn about their ancestry by submitting saliva samples in the mail, filed for bankruptcy in March. As part of that process, it's auctioning ...
The DNA data of millions of people who used 23andMe's services won't be sold to a pharmaceutical company. A bankruptcy judge greenlighted the sale of the remnants of the firm, including its wealth ...
Bankruptcy judge approves Anne Wojcicki's $305M bid to control 23andMe through a nonprofit, including customer genetic data, despite privacy concerns from states.
On Wednesday morning, Pennsylvania Attorney General Dave Sunday announced that his office would be joining a multi-state lawsuit to block 23andMe's sale of consumer data.
California says the sale of 23andMe to a nonprofit formed by the company's former CEO would skirt a state law specifically designed to protect genetic information.
A lawsuit against 23andMe is stirring a debate about what the proper role of government is in regulating how private companies use sensitive data.
Anne Wojcicki's winning bid to reclaim control of 23andMe doesn't necessarily end the fight over what happens to the DNA of 15 million people collected by the bankrupt consumer genomics company.
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