*Right, yet again:
The DNA profile contains only two useful pieces of information:
1) Your gender.
2) Whether you have one specific type of red hair (yes, really).
The rest consists of "junk DNA" (look up Short Tandem Repeats), with no genetically useful information. It is worthless to any insurance company etc.
M
Or it could be one of the countless cases of wrongful arrest in the UK, especially mistaken identity.

If that is the case, why have such a database at all? I realise that wasting money is part of the government's job, but that is ridiculous.
A person's sex will narrow it down to about 30 million people.Because that useless information , is unique and can identify you, it just couldn't say whether your at risk of heart deaseise.
If that is the case, why have such a database at all? I realise that wasting money is part of the government's job, but that is ridiculous.
it would be an IT disaster "
But that wouldn't do much, as with out other evidence, they couldn't track you down.
A person's sex will narrow it down to about 30 million people.
How does whether or not a person has one specific type of red hair uniquely identify each one of 30 million people? Surely it can only divide them into two groups - those who do and those who don't.
"If you've nothing to hide " is the stupid mantra of people with no ability to think for themselves or read history.

i have no issue with it at all, infact when my son was born, i questioned why DNA is not stored at that point.



Doubting, the missus fidelity eh
j/k please don't hurt me![]()
By the end of 2005, about 200,000 samples had been retained that would have been destroyed before the 2001 change in legislation. 8,000 of these samples matched with DNA taken from crime scenes, involving nearly 14,000 offences, including murders and rapes.