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Part of a series on 23andMe. [View Related Entries]


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Overview

23andMe Bankruptcy refers to the March 2025 bankruptcy announcement of the DNA testing firm 23andMe, which faced declining demand for its ancestry testing kits and a damaging data leak scandal in October 2023. The company filed a Chapter 11 bankruptcy on March 24th, 2025, which is a format that allows businesses to reorganize their finances and operations under court supervision, aiming to repay debts and continue operating rather than liquidating assets. The DNA testing company's bankruptcy spawned a series of memes, jokes and a data privacy debate regarding the destination of millions of customers' sensitive genetic data.

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Background

On March 24th, 2025, the Wall Street Journal[1] revealed that the DNA testing company 23andMe filed a Chapter 11 bankruptcy as CEO Anne Wojcicki (wife of Google co-founder Sergey Brin) resigned.

According to a Reuters[2] article, the business went bankrupt in the U.S. after "struggling with weak demand for its ancestry testing kits and a 2023 data breach that damaged its reputation."

On the same day, PopBase[3] shared the news on X, amassing over 1.9 million views and 43,000 likes in two days.



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Developments

Deleted DNA Data

The company's bankruptcy spawned a series of questions about what would happen to the genetic data collected, including some former clients facing website issues while trying to delete their 23andMe DNA data.

For example, on March 24th, 2025, X[4] user 5149jamesli posted a video and screenshot showing a technical error message on 23andMe website (seen below), which amassed over 84,000 views and 1,200 likes in two days.

On March 25th, 2025, CNN[5] posted an article claiming 23andMe "is looking to sell customers’ genetic data," writing that the company's "privacy policy states that if users’ data is sold as part of a bankruptcy or acquisition, the same provisions will apply to that personal information under the new entity. But the policy also states that it can be changed at any time."

Online Reactions

In the next few days after 23andMe announced bankruptcy, thousands of netizens shared their thoughts about data privacy and the risk of their DNA data being sold to a new company.

For instance, on March 25th, 2025, TikTok[6] user @johnridgeway uploaded a video explaining the 23andMe data controversy (seen below), which amassed over 534,000 plays and 101,000 likes in a day.

The topic also went viral on Reddit, as Redditor u/Kindly-Ad-9969[7] posted on the /r/nottheonion subreddit on March 24th, 2025, an image of the company's website, writing, "DNA of 15 Million People for Sale in 23andMe Bankruptcy." The post (seen below) received roughly 22,000 upvotes and 880 comments in two days.



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