The PGP-10
Meet the ten volunteers for the Personal Genome Project, who are having all of their medical info and genome sequence published online. The PGP project aims to bring some of the thorny questions of personalized medicine — based on a person's DNA — out into the open.
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Article Links
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#10: James Sherley’s Public Profile
personalgenomes.org
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#9: Rosalynn Gill’s Public Profile
personalgenomes.org
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#8: Stanley Lapidus’ Public Profile
personalgenomes.org
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#7: Keith Batchelder’s Public Profile
personalgenomes.org
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#6: Steven Pinker’s Public Profile
personalgenomes.org
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#5: Kirk Maxey’s Public Profile
personalgenomes.org
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#4: Misha Angrist’s Public Profile
personalgenomes.org
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#3: Esther Dyson’s Public Profile
personalgenomes.org
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#2: John Halamka’s Public Profile
personalgenomes.org
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#1: George Church’s Public Profile
personalgenomes.org
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John Halamka’s Blog, Life as a Healthcare CIO
geekdoctor.blogspot.com
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Misha Angrist’s Blog, Genome Boy
genomeboy.com
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The Personal Genome Project
personalgenomes.org
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Once We’ve Sequenced Human Genomes, How Do We Understand Them?
technologyreview.com
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Gaze Upon the PGP-10
scienceblogs.com
Facebook Conversations
2 Responses So Far
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Won't that make it possible to illegally download and copy them?
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as opposed to the other PGP (Pretty Good Privacy), which couldn't be more opposite of this PGP.






















