Results for the tag, their dna.

Find the latest news and information on their dna from ComputerWeekly.com and the web.

All ResultsResults from Computer Weekly - THEIR DNA

...how to bring UK DNA database in line with European law. The commission has also called for an independent adjudicator to give innocent people a way of challenging the need to keep their DNA profile on record. GVL6-20090512.3 http://www.computerweekly.com/Articles/2009/09/16/237735/watchdog-slams-police-dna-database-guidelines.htm
... The Commission called for an independent adjudicator to give innocent people a way of challenging the need to keep their DNA profile on record. "We recognise that the DNA database is a vital tool in the fight against crime, but people have... http://www.computerweekly.com/Articles/2009/08/12/237291/dna-database-revision-still-breaks-law-says-watchdog.htm
...characteristics. And to achieve this, medical scientists will need to get permission from patients for access to their DNA records. But already there are signs of people’s readiness to participate. One of Breakthrough Breast Cancer... http://www.computerweekly.com/blogs/the-data-trust-blog/2009/02/coroners-justice---is-this-wha.html
...of those arrested, but not convicted, of a crime. The Home Office argues that it helps police convict people if their DNA is found, and can be identified, at the scene of a serious crime. The European Court of Human Rights ruled last... http://www.computerweekly.com/Articles/2009/05/07/235928/innocents-to-be-kept-for-12-years-on-dna-database.htm
... Youths with no criminal past are being arrested so their DNA can be stored on a database, according to theMetro. In the London borough of Camden, 386 under 18s had their DNA put on record in 2008 and 169 so far this year, a freedom... http://www.computerweekly.com/Articles/2009/06/05/236319/Police-deny-youths-arrested-to-get-DNA-samples.htm
...existing law will remain in place for the time being. The decision to uphold a complaint by two Sheffield men about their DNA being kept on the controversial DNA database, despite not being convicted of an offence, is a blow to the government... http://www.computerweekly.com/Articles/2008/12/05/233756/government-considers-next-move-on-dna-database.htm
...the government's response to this ruling will be to remove the profiles of people without convictions, but to keep their DNA on the database. Jeffreys said these reports left him "almost speechless". It was Jeffrey's work in the 1980s... http://www.computerweekly.com/Articles/2009/04/15/235638/dna-pioneer-innocents-should-be-removed-from-database.htm
...fine but we are one of the few countries in the Western world which allow people on arrest to have their fingerprints, their DNA, and their photograph taken, and after Soham [the murder by Ian Huntley of Holly Wells and Jessica Chapman], since... http://www.computerweekly.com/blogs/tony_collins/2007/05/former-head-of-police-it-on-id.html
...men from Sheffield, who were not convicted of crimes for which they were arrested, want their DNA profiles removed. If the court agrees holding their DNA is being held unlawfully, because of the individual's right to a private life, the controversial... http://www.computerweekly.com/Articles/2008/12/04/233718/judgement-due-on-dna-database.htm
...In its first annual report, The Ethics Group said there should be a straightforward system for innocent people to have their DNA records deleted. It also rejected police demands for a national DNA database. The government said it would respond... http://www.computerweekly.com/Articles/2008/07/22/231585/government-told-to-delete-dna-records-of-innocent-people.htm

All ResultsNews and blogs from the web - THEIR DNA

...Piccono said, condors are like vultures in that they don't need to learn to hunt: it's a skill that comes with their DNA. When they make it to adulthood, a wild California condor can live to be between 30 and 40 years old. In captivity... http://news.cnet.com/8301-13772_3-10295858-52.html

All ResultsOther content from the web - THEIR DNA

...ex-officer OUT-LAW News, 24/11/2009 Police are arresting people purely for the purpose of ensuring that their DNA is sampled and recorded on the police's national database, a report by Government advisory body the Human Genetics... http://www.out-law.com/default.aspx?page=10548
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