DNA companies should receive the death penalty for getting hacked | TechCrunch
DNA companies should receive the death penalty for getting hacked | TechCrunch

DNA companies should receive severe penalties for losing our data | TechCrunch

DNA companies should receive the death penalty for getting hacked | TechCrunch::Personal data is the new gold. The recent 23andMe data breach is a stark reminder of a chilling reality -- our most intimate, personal information might
Maybe you shouldn't use the same user+pass across dozens of different services then.
The data from 23 and Me was stolen using the legitimate login credentials of users acquired from an entirely different services data breach. Not via their own lax security policies.
You can't expect a corporation to protect you from yourself. And they certainly shouldn't be punished for your ineptitude.
Don't get me wrong, these corporations are not your friends, and shouldn't be trusted implicitly; but you have some responsibilities too.
/edit:
I completely disagree with this point. The service obviously has to provide you with access to your information/account. If you give out your login credentials for that access to a third party (another service), that third party loses your information, and it's then used to access stuff posing as you. That's your fault. You should not have shared (re-used) those same login credentials with others.
Well they should have 2fa, but yes, if that's the case I agree with you.
Use Bitwarden or KeePass
Unfortunately, even that's not enough. That's often a user choice to enable, and otp itself is a flawed system. (be that email, sms, or timed)
Really, services should be transitioning to Passkeys, however adoption of a new standard always takes time. There are not a huge number of services that have implemented them yet. Here's a list