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comment by jadedog
jadedog  ·  2876 days ago  ·  link  ·    ·  parent  ·  post: Microsoft Finds Cancer Clues in Search Queries

That opens up a whole bucket of worms. Besides the privacy issues (which are huge), there's also the issue of alerting people for no reason. Imagine having a browser pop up a notice that you might have incurable pancreatic cancer. Browsing the internet is stressful enough without getting weird scare notices.

After all of that, for this one disease in particular, the early detection only increases the person's chance of survival by 1 or 2%.

This may be a case where the data in the aggregate may be useful to some extent, but the individual cases are more problematic.





joelthelion  ·  2876 days ago  ·  link  ·  

Maybe for more cureable diseases it would be justified, though?

jadedog  ·  2875 days ago  ·  link  ·  

I'm skeptical. In first world countries, if the disease were more curable, there are already medical test recommendations. For instance, people take routine breast cancer, testicular cancer and colonoscopy screenings. Even there, there has been some findings that the higher rate of testing can create more problems with false positives and the test itself than is really saving lives at the margins. In countries without a national health insurance, money can be an issue to get care as well.

In some parts of the world, even if you knew you had something, there's not much you can do about it. Money is often an issue as well as the availability of medical facilities.

There would have to be some kind of showing that alerting people would be doing more good than harm.