Re: Proof of ownership?
The only person who's privacy has definitely been violated is the owner of the sample from the crime scene.
In all other cases, as far as I am aware, the person submitting the dna signs a declaration that it's their DNA and they give permission...etc. Unfortunately I can't find my copy to say exactly what it said.
So yes, anybody could submit a suitable sample from anybody - I have done it myself, using my credit card, but only with the permission of that person. Otherwise it would be in violation of that person's privacy, not to mention various laws, depending on which country I was in.
However I do not see it as a violation of the privacy of everybody else in the system, which is what some people seem to be getting worked up about. All testing companies are like this - they do not carry out background checks to ensure the name and signature is from a real person.
There are a lot of commentators here who don't seem to understand what is going on, including the author. The statement...
"we imagine that anyone learning that they can pay to have their DNA details handed over to the FBI will jump at the chance to improve society by allowing criminals to be tracked down faster."
is a complete misrepresentation. As Greenspan explained it, nobody's DNA details are handed over to the FBI - all they get is a list of names - usually meaningless aliases - and sometimes an email address together with a value indicating the fraction of shared DNA. Anything else would require court order. The FBI starts with no more access than I do. They cannot do the same types of comparisons that they could with the police databases.
Now, all this is assuming the description Greenspan gives is correct, and I have seen nothing to the contrary. It seems reasonable to say that he is merely formalising a process that could be already going on with all testing companies. He might also be offering the processing of samples other than their standard cheek swab - their standard customer DNA test requires a moderately large sample of DNA, which would probably fail on much of the crime scene evidence.
While I have no difficulty with what he is doing, where he seems to have made a complete mess is in being deceitful about it - it has been suggested elsewhere that he changed the T&C to reflect the new operation, but I have yet to receive any notification of this, unless it was snuck in around the time of the GDPR adjustments.