Aggregated News

The Times newspaper has published a front-page story revealing that the Duke of Cambridge, Prince William, and his brother Prince Harry share some Indian ancestry via their mother, based on DNA analysis of distant cousins.

This in itself is not a particularly controversial revelation – if any individual went back to the level of their great-great-great-great-great-grandparents, it would not be a great surprise to find DNA sequences of different ethnic origin from that suggested by their own appearance. Moreover, to have a family member from another ethnic group or nationality is perfectly commonplace; the princes’ own paternal grandfather was born Prince Philip of Greece and Denmark.

What is noteworthy is the ethics of publishing details of this genetic analysis at all. One of the major ethical concerns about genetic information and privacy is that it can infer information about family members as well as the individual. Prince William’s cousins are perfectly entitled to pay for genealogical genetic analysis if that’s what interests them, but the decision to disclose information linked to a (presumably) non-consenting individual is highly questionable, as observed...