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# agree
but, you get fingerprinted whether you have or have not broken the law - it is just to verify identity.
Currently in the UK it is possible that if you were questioned about or even witnessed a crime you could end up on a DNA database.
(, Thu 23 Nov 2006, 12:49, archived)
# personally i have problem with the DNA database
It proves all the crimes I haven't commited
and it's not like the police have access to it willy nily
(, Thu 23 Nov 2006, 12:52, archived)
# -10 points for having a different opinion to me
+10 for saying willy nilly.
(, Thu 23 Nov 2006, 12:53, archived)
# hurrah! :¬D
the database is just a bunch of graphs
nobody can do anything with it other than match a graph obtained from a sample from a crime scene
(, Thu 23 Nov 2006, 12:55, archived)
# Hmm
If the database was to be hacked, and I replace one set of graphs with another. Or, as happens once in a very little whie on databases an indexer gets corrupted. Then what?

(, Thu 23 Nov 2006, 13:24, archived)
# How long is it til we all get little identity chips
planted into our brains?

Maybe with little electro shock modules so they can zap us if we're naughty.
(, Thu 23 Nov 2006, 12:52, archived)
# a friends on mine helped set that up.

he was going to do our DNA as a christmas gift, but then i realised that he'd also put it on the database, so i never did it.
(, Thu 23 Nov 2006, 12:53, archived)
# The problem with compulsory DNA tests...
Is that it renders the resulting nation-wide database pointless - all a rapist would have to do is pick a random pube out of a hotel plughole and stuff it up their victim's minge to cause chaos.

DNA profiling can only work when it is used to back-up valid suspicions or circumstantial evidence.
(, Thu 23 Nov 2006, 13:22, archived)