Pharmacists Convince Search Engines To Self-Censor 63
RogueShopper writes "The National Association of Boards of Pharmacists (NABP) has teamed up with Drugstore.com in a seemingly successful campaign to 'rid search engines of ads from rogue pharmacies.' Overture removed ranked ads at the request of MSN and Yahoo!, and AOL and Google complied, also. In an apparently selfless act Yahoo! also wiped out its entire directory tree for pharmacies. Meanwhile, anyone can cross the border, walk into a Mexican pharmacy and buy whatever they want. Big busines controlling content ... hmmm ... looks like it's getting closer to broadcast television. Thank god for DMOZ.org!" (Here's Google's cache of Yahoo!'s Pharmacies list).
More Article Trolling (Score:5, Insightful)
If you mean that illegal product advertising is being weeded out, then, yes, it's getting closer to broadcast television. The online pharmacies we're talking about often require nothing more than a credit card to order whatever drug a person wishes. Like it or not, that's not the way we've decided to do things in the USA because we've decided that there are too many dangerous drugs to let the public have them willy-nilly without a doctor's supervision.
As far as the snide comment about being able to cross the border to Mexico and buy whatever one eishes, that's exactly right. Of course, an American who does so can then be arrested for smuggling when re-crossing the border.
This is less about big business (which, frankly, profits when their drugs are bought legally with a prescription, or illegally via an online pharmacy with no prescription) and more about complying with existing laws.
Re:More Article Trolling (Score:5, Interesting)
This is less about big business (which, frankly, profits when their drugs are bought legally with a prescription, or illegally via an online pharmacy with no prescription) and more about complying with existing laws.
There's still a lot of legal-for-research drugs (triptomines) that are fairly easy to aquire (apply for a research permit, get accepted, then you're "in"). The reason no one cares is because we're too busy dealing with pot.
Dextromethorphan has recently gotten some news, but there are many others that aren't seeing much airtime. For those who don't know, DXM is an anticongestant agent in cough syrup that, when taken by itself, has extremely potent dissociative and hallucigenic results.
It is a lot scarier than pot or prescription painkillers, since a lot of kids are drinking cough syrup in order to get the effects (and thereby introducing insane levels of other chemicals in the syrup into their bodies).
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If it weren't about making money by shutting down competitors, the businesses wouldn't get involved. They'd just report it to the police and then forget about it.
But it is cutting into their profits, so it's a holy war with them.
Re:More Article Trolling (Score:2)
Inasmuch as they might be greedy cuthroats, they could also care about the Internet (their source of income), and not want to pollute it and turn off visitors. They also might be nice people.
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Robotrippin! (Score:2)
Nothing scary about DXM (Score:1)
I'm not afraid of DMX. I'm an adult. I know better than to take such stuff. Result: complete protection.
But what about the children? What we need are age limits, like we have with alcohol. When GreyWolf3000 says
the subtext is that we are so busy because we are trying to forbid cannabis to adults. He is admitting that current policies sacrifice child protect on the altar of adult prohibition.
Re:Nothing scary about DXM (Score:2)
To admit that "current policies sacrifice child protect on the altar of adult prohibition" one has to admit that the "current policies" are working. If they aren't protecting our children from using cannabis, we are sacrificing adult liberty in exchange for nothing.
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We decided no such thing. The people with money who bu
Re:More Article Trolling (Score:2)
If you mean that illegal product advertising is being weeded out, then, yes, it's getting closer to broadcast television.
But this isn't weeding out advertising. It's about weeding out web pages that appear in search results. Just because something is illegal (in the US, at the moment), should you be unable to find web pages about it? Should a search for "marihuana" come up empty?
Re:More Article Trolling (Score:2)
I am stupid as I did not read the article. Sorry. Move along.
Yes, weeding out actual advertisements as is being done here is entirely normal.
Re:More Article Trolling (Score:1)
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Like it or not, that's not the way we've decided to do things in the USA because we've decided that there are too many dangerous drugs to let the public have them willy-nilly without a doctor's supervision.
Au contrare. This is EXACTLY the way we've decided to do things in the US. By creating a black market for illegal drugs, we push dangerous drugs onto the street that, if they were regulated and distributed in a manner similar to other recreational substances (read: alcohol and tobacco) under a doctor
Changing markets, stale business (Score:4, Insightful)
What it's really about is protecting profit margins.
Sure, there are businesses out there selling questionable or illegal products, but the real concern is the cross-boarder drug purchases. Americans are increasingly re-importing perscription drugs from foreign countries (mostly Canada) where laws and market conditions keep the prices lower than in the United States. The popularity of re-imported drugs has started to impact the profits of the drug companies, and they're fighting back. They're doing everything the can to stop the flow of drugs from Canada. I wouldn't be surprised if they're pushing for the Medicare drug coverage, because once seniors aren't paying for their own drugs, they won't bother ordering them from Canada. (Obviously, the big market for Canadian drugs is uninsured seniors.)
A Canadian Drug alternative (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Changing markets, stale business (Score:1, Interesting)
Jesus Christ, read the paper or listen to the radio once in a while. OF COURSE they are pushing the medicare drug coverage, because part of that bill is a prohibition on Medicare from using it's collective buying power to bargin for better drug deals !
The Democrats can't evade blame for this one either, they all lined up to vote for it.
Bargaining for price is the basis of Capitalism. Banning it is called Communism in most pa
Re:Changing markets, stale business (Score:1)
Re:Changing markets, stale business (Score:3, Insightful)
Communism and fascism are equivalent. They are both diametrically opposed to capitalism.
Re:Changing markets, stale business (Score:1)
Fascism is corporate capitalism taken to its logical extreme. Why do you think that shining example of capitalism, Henry Ford, was an admirer of Adolph Hitler? Why do you think German corporations supported the Nazis?
Re:Changing markets, stale business (Score:4, Informative)
Don't believe me? The flu shot problem, which some people are predicting will turn into an epidemic, is directly caused by price controls of flu shots. None of the flu shot makers were making any money off their product, so they got out of the game. That left only a handful of makers of the vaccine, and they can't keep up with the demand (and they can't keep up with new research: at least one new strain of the flu isn't vaccinated against in this year's shots). So people go without and the vaccine quality gets lower, and next year the problem will only be worse.
Sorry to go off on a bit of a rant here, but this is one of those cases where it really is important (in a life-threatening way) to protect intellectual property rights. It's probably not the best way, but until we've got another system in place to protect the drug companies who do the research, we can't cheat.
Re:Changing markets, stale business (Score:3, Insightful)
Drug companies spend twice as much on marketing as on R & D. And they're making enourmous profits at it.
Wanna do away with government interference in drug prices? Fine - start by ceasing the issuance of patents.
No? Then let's admit that the industry needs government interference in drug prices to survive, and make that interference more equitable.
Re:Changing markets, stale business (Score:1, Flamebait)
You just want people to die from diseases that could be cured pharmacytically, don't you? If a drug company is going to invest tons of money to develop a drug that another companies are just going to sell to drive them out of business, do you think that they are going to invest that money?
No, they're just going to let you die. And you deserve it.
-BrentRe:Changing markets, stale business (Score:2)
How about the GWB Drug Bill that PROHIBITS the goverment from bargining for cheaper drug prices?
And shoudn't the rest of the world pay for the R&D (R&D that is about HALF of AD SPENDING) that goes into these drugs? Afterall the pharmcos do not pay back the taxpayer when they use taxpayer paid for r
Re:Changing markets, stale business (Score:1)
Supporting, and not liking something are 2 very different things. I might not like big government but this is a Republic, and some people demand big government. Ok, lot's a people demand big government.
As much as I'd like to do something to reduce government, say privatize education, I recognise that Bus
Re:Changing markets, stale business (Score:2)
"I'm unfamiliar with this bill. If you give me a bill number, I'd be glad to research it and write a JE."
You might have missed it but it was called the Medicare Prescription Drug, Improvement, and Modernization Act of 2003. It also makes it illegal for people to
Re:Changing markets, stale business (Score:1, Flamebait)
So, you think Medicare is fine the way it was?
Domestic spending is unfortunetly what "most" of the US wants right now. You might not realize it, but it's going to get a lot worse before it gets better. You make it sound like there's some "solution" out there tha
Re:Changing markets, stale business (Score:2)
We used to have a real nice Republic - the States had lots of power and could go in their own direction most of the time. That translated into 50 (ok, less at the time) concurrent experiments in whatever the problem domain was. (e.g. healthcare for old people) Some worked, some failed, and lessons were learned.
Then we got the 17th ammendment and the states lost all their power. The states used to have a say in the legisl
Re:Changing markets, stale business (Score:1)
Go take your medication (ah, irony), and reread what I wrote, mmkay?
I'll explain it again, a little slower this time.
Some people claim to be again any government interference in drug prices. However, they are for drug patents. Drug patents are a form of government interference in drug prices (in that in granting an artificial monopoly they act to push up drug prices). Therefore, being against government interfe
Re:Changing markets, stale business (Score:2)
I'll type a little slower this time.
I am for drug patents and against govermental price controls. I am for allowing pharmycetical companies to have control of the drugs they create, and this includes price, which should be what the market will bear, not an artificial government price designed to keep the company from making a profit.
-BrentRe:Changing markets, stale business (Score:2)
This is silly, and it's bad because it's oft-repeated.
First of all, the data [tilrc.org] that you refer to looks at expenses that include marketing/advertising AND administrative expenses, so it's disingenous to say what you're saying. Let's take Pfizer, for example. Look at the financial statements in their annual report [sec.gov].
On revenue of $32 billion in 2002, they spent $5 billion on R&D (about 16% of revenue) as opposed to $10.8 billion on SI&
Drug Companies, Cures or Treatments. (Score:2)
Plue, the drug companies spend 50-100% more each year for ads than R&D.
Lastly, the VA, US Military, and a few other branches of the goverment ARE ALLOWED to purchase drugs from Canada. But we, the people the goverment is susposed to represent, can not.
That is wrong.
And I do have to wonder why the drug companies don't CURE things much anymore, they just TREAT them for the rest
pharmaceutical companies spending (Score:2, Informative)
classic slashdot flamebait (Score:4, Insightful)
Umm, declining to accept purchased advertisements for illegal products is not exactly censorship.
- If Google removed the sites from their search index, that would be censorship.- If Google declined to accept ads for legal products that it didn't like, that might be questionable, but it wouldn't be censorship. cf. newspapers declining to accept advertisements for pornography.
- But Google declining to accept ads for illegal products? Wake me up when there's news.
Re:classic slashdot flamebait (Score:3, Insightful)
No, it wouldn't. That would be a corporate decision by Google.
If The Government forced google to remove them, THAT would be censorship.
Jason.
Re:classic slashdot flamebait (Score:2)
Refuses Business from Gun and Knife Advertisers(warning, site provides a very loaded point of view) and more power to them, if they don't want to do business with someone that's their business.
Slashdot editors fooled again! (Score:4, Interesting)
Oh yeah, and his "news article" is hosted on "www.rankforsales.com", a search engine positioning company.
Sounds like the poster is the same guy that's always e-mailing me trying to sell me Viagra on the cheap. No wonder he's disgruntled.
For Those Who Using Mozilla (Score:2)
Cross the border (Score:2)
Re:Cross the border (Score:2)
Re:Cross the border (Score:1, Funny)
Mexican Pharmacies don't require a recipe? (Score:4, Interesting)
If the article poster meant that Mexican pharmacists are more easily bribed, well, that's another matter, and depends entirely on the pharmacy. Both for the US and Mexico.
Anyway, I think this is a good thing. Americans are overmedicated. Between Prozac, Ritalin and Valium you guys will end up a bunch of happy zombies.
Re:Mexican Pharmacies don't require a recipe? (Score:1, Interesting)
Re:Mexican Pharmacies don't require a recipe? (Score:4, Interesting)
I was travelling around the Yucatan a few years ago when I got hit by a major case of Montezuma's revenge. Badly, as in memory leak on four major system interfaces. At the same time.
I walked into a pharmacy around Merida and asked them (rather, my girlfriend asked them, as I'd just spent a night on the can holding a trash bin) what they'd recommend, and the dude forked over some dubious-looking pillbox. Plugged it right up, *plop*, and got rid of the nauseaheadachedizzynessblurryvisionetcetera in one shot.
During the same vacation, I picked up a fairly major sunburn, and was sold some ointment that just made the pain and redness _disappear_. It was uncanny.
My roommate back home at the time was a Roche lab technician; he blanched when he saw what I'd bought. "They're allowed to sell this shit? Legally?" He never did tell me what was in it, but damn, it was sure effective.
So no, I guess Mexican pharmacies are probably not prescription free, but I assume they take a far more pragmatic approach to what requires a prescription, like a lot of the world (judging by my mom's nosedrops that she used to have when living in Europe--.05% cocaine
Re:Mexican Pharmacies don't require a recipe? (Score:2)
Pry my herbal viagra out of my cold dead hands! (Score:2)
Now if only the pharmacists association would go after phoney radio ads...
Radio Free Pharmacies... (Score:1)