I notice that they took these samples from cigarettes and chewing gum. Seems to me that if you leave something like that in a public space, there's no privacy concern.
Lifting off of a used glass/hair follicle/sweaty towel at the gym/etc. would be a bit more worrying.
But since a person's features are more than their base structure, it's probably not too big an issue anyway. It's highly unlikely that they'll be able to model exactly what a person looks like at their current age/health.
This method could definitely help with missing persons issues though, as an adult model could be created based on a child's DNA that would look "similar" to the actual person.
I'd be interested if two runs on DNA samples from the same person would turn out faces that look the same....
Source: http://rss.slashdot.org/~r/Slashdot/slashdotScience/~3/aerxZphl7lA/story01.htm
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