I'd like to take a test as my great-grandfather was an orphan, but the idea to voluntarily submit my genes to some corporations that may get me fake results mixed in just to shove some kind of internationalism down my throat doesn't really excite me that much
Family tree DNA is one of the better ones and more extensive.
Brayden Carter
>waking up as a nigger every day
This is worse than any insult anyone could ever think of.
Matthew King
Is a shit skin color insult really the one you want to go with against white people? You dumb illogical mother fucker
Oliver Taylor
Until these tests are well regulated it's going to be the wild-west for ancestry DNA.
Aiden King
>absolute state of Jow Forums stop being retarded, nobody cares about this stuff to the extent of faking DNA results but you with your repressed nigger cuck fantasies
23andme is great, just remember to use your promo code "EastAreaJoe"
Juan Anderson
Anne E. Wojcicki (/woʊˈdʒJski/ woh-JIS-kee;[1] born July 28, 1973) is an American entrepreneur and the co-founder and chief executive officer of the personal genomics company 23andMe
Wojcicki, the youngest of three daughters, was born in San Mateo County, California. Her parents are Esther Wojcicki (née Hochman), an educator, and Stanley Wojcicki, a physics professor emeritus at Stanford University. Her mother is Jewish American, and her father is Polish. Her two sisters are Susan Wojcicki, CEO of YouTube and a former executive at Google[2] and Janet Wojcicki, anthropologist and epidemiologist at the University of California, San Francisco
Wojcicki married Google co-founder Sergey Brin in May 2007.
>her father Wojcicki worked at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory and was a National Science Foundation fellow at (((CERN))) and the Collège de France. In 1966, he joined the Stanford University physics faculty where he headed the Department of Physics from 1982–85 and 2004-2007.
>mother
Wojcicki has taught at Palo Alto High School since 1984, where she currently teaches journalism and English. There she began the journalism program which has grown to become one of the largest in America.[8] She has worked as a professional journalist for multiple publications and blogs regularly for The Huffington Post.
If its at an exact percentage like 1.2 then its real. Probably some cross breeding has been going on. Its not ur fault anyways u just got the wrong end of ur countries genepool
Gavin Murphy
I went with 23andmeme before I had any clue that there were better alternatives. I now have my genome sequence, is there any other site I can input this to get more information?
Nathaniel Garcia
>faceberg face recognition on steroids Breadly reminder that 23andme legally helps the police by distributing dna, even if it's one of your relatives. Have fun seeing your dna 'found at a crime scene'.
You actually pay them to forever store your utmost personal thing. 23andme is another test to check how easily people will hand out the privacy away. >inb4 idiots who did it try to defend it
Angel Barnes
Myancestry helped me find out bout my german forefathers (wich was a mysteyr before) But im still waiting for my dna results.
They all give different results. I uploaded to three different sites and got three different results. Roughly the same for larger portions really different for smaller percentages. One site shows 8% to 15% Scandinavian another sites results show 0% Scandinavian. It is not a 100% correct yet, somebody has to be wrong.
Daniel Jenkins
I know a little bit about genetics so I understand why they come to different results. The bottom line is they all use different degrees of confidence. In fact, with 23andme you can choose anything between 50% confidence (the default level) and 100% confidence in steps of 10%. So at 50% confidence there are definitely some incorrect results, but at 100% they will almost certainly all completely agree.
Yes goy, its a good idea to submit your genes to a company so they can store the data so that in the future it will be easy find and control anyone related to you.
Juan Lewis
CIA database. Already in use.
Adam Rivera
They tracked him by his great-great grandparents because another member of his family used 23andme.
So even if you don't use 23andm, if someone else in your family used it, you're pretty much fucked anyway.
Christopher Lewis
I'm working on a genealogical tree and I've got as far back as 1700. Personally I wouldn't bother with this shit before collecting all the data I can on my own, from historical archives as well as information your family has passed over generations. I'd recommend to take the chance to strengthen the bonds with your family members.
Lucas Foster
The problem with this is that while I do believe doing your own family try is a valuable and worthwhile pursuit, you're completely dependent upon there being no adultery in your entire family tree which is a statistical impossibility if you go back far enough.