The Impossibility Of Google Blocking All Pill Factories From Advertising
from the they-still-get-through dept
We've already noted just how ridiculous the US government's decision to take $500 million from Google is, because some Canadian pharmacies advertised on the site to Americans. It just doesn't make sense to blame the platform provider for the actions of its users. If Canadian pharmacies are violating US laws in shipping to Americans, then block the shipments. But don't just take money from Google. And, of course, the reality is that most of the Canadian pharmacies selling to Americans were selling legitimate products and were actually helping to keep people healthy by letting them purchase affordable meds.But the bigger issue is this idea that Google somehow has to magically block all pharmaceutical ads or face additional lawsuits. Already, it appears that Google is failing in this endeavor. John Nagle noticed some indications that ads for fake drugs were still getting through, and presented some evidence. In exploring the example he presented, I think he might have confused advertisements for (somewhat questionable, and probably useless) herbal supplements that are named like some prescription drugs, but that's not necessarily advertising fake pills. It's sketchy, but it's not clear that it completely violates the "no fake drugs" rule.
However, continuing to look through some similar examples suggests that other sellers of fake drugs are still very much advertising on Google. I'm not going to provide links here, but it didn't take long before I saw a series of Google AdSense ads, such as the following:
Furthermore, this seems to highlight the increased risk people are put at due to this effort by the Justice Department. The Canadian pharmacies that Google got in trouble for dealing with weren't selling fake pills. They were selling legitimate pills for re-importation into the US. On the other hand, it seems likely that what's left and getting through in the ads, such as the one in the screenshot above, is almost certainly fake... and potentially dangerous. Wouldn't people be better off getting ads from actual certified pharmacies, rather than from something like what you see above?
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Filed Under: advertising, liability, pharmacies
Companies: google
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Who is Eric Tile and why is he dissin' his function?
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Cock Blocking Ads
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The answer to your inquiry is "Yes."
Of course, but it's not as if Big Pharma cares who they kill for their profits.
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Big Search hates to pay the content creators
For instance, today's paper brings us the news that people keep sending false reports into Google Places about competitors closing down. Surprise! Everyone thought, "Let's just get rid of the journalists. Let's get the crowd to do the work." Then Google will keep the profits. But surprise! The crowd has better things to do than do Google's leg work for them.
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/09/06/technology/closed-in-error-on-google-places-merchants-seek-fix es.html?_r=1&scp=2&sq=google&st=cse
Big Search hates to pay the content creators and now it's coming back to bite them on the butt.
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Re: Cock Blocking Ads
Just be careful not to get them stuck in your throat, you could end up with a stiff neck.
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Re: Big Search hates to pay the content creators
I_see_what_you_did_there.jpg
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Re: Big Search hates to pay the content creators
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Re: Big Search hates to pay the content creators
Oh wait.
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Google had better make some efforts to police its ads.
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"NEED TO KNOW: TECHNOLOGY
Fair-Weather Friends
[Description: http://cdn-media.nationaljournal.com/?controllerName=image&action=get&id=11152&width=268 &height=]
20TH CENTURY FOX
The revolt: Avatar is the most pirated movie in the world.
Google and other Internet giants take a principled stand against new intellectual-property legislation. Can it last?
By Sara Jerome
Updated: September 2, 2011 | 6:56 a.m.
September 1, 2011 | 6:25 p.m.
When Congress returns next week, it will take up an ambitious intellectual-property bill that could overhaul how the government fights online theft and ease pressure on the Obama administration to live up to promises made before the 2008 election. Recording and movie studios couldn't be happier, but tech giants such as Google, in part citing a need to protect free speech, have pledged to fight the transformative measure.
Yet, in reality, the tech giants' objections are economic, not ideological. And if lawmakers can meliorate that business anxiety, they could cleave the corporations from their traditional allies at nonprofits and think tanks, straining a traditional Washington alliance.
The Protect IP Act aims to crack down on websites that facilitate online piracy-a drain on entertainment companies whose high-priced products bounce around the Internet for next to nothing, generating revenue for criminals (often based overseas) who sell counterfeit versions online. The legislation from Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., expands the Justice Department's power to take action against infringing websites. With an OK from the courts, law enforcement could instruct search engines and domain-name providers to make the infringing sites invisible to Internet users and redirect them to a page explaining why the content is inaccessible. Ad networks and payment processors would also be forced to stop supporting those sites.
Fighting piracy is a rare issue with bipartisan support on Capitol Hill; the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and the powerful recording and movie lobbies also back the bill. But the legislation is hardly a sure thing. A similar proposal failed to pass the last Congress, and a particularly effective coalition of opponents-Google and other major Internet interests allied with outspoken civil-libertarian groups-has emerged this year to stall the process.
NetCoalition, including Google and other technology corporations, opposes the Senate version for fear it could shift the cost of anti-piracy enforcement from the government to Internet companies. The behemoth with the most experience and influence in Washington, Google can leverage its powerful lobbying infrastructure-it added 10 firms just this year-to change minds on the Hill.
Meanwhile, Google has collected a vast network of allies among nonprofits and think tanks, to which it doles out thousands of dollars in donations every year to help push its agenda in Washington. They are joined by civil-liberties groups, such as the Electronic Frontier Foundation and Don't Censor the Net, that have helped to frame Google's vantage point as a First Amendment issue. Civil libertarians say that the bill could chill free speech by giving authorities power to remove websites without giving owners a chance to fight back.
Not surprisingly, the tech companies have borrowed the First Amendment rhetoric. Google Chairman Eric Schmidt warned in May that such laws could set a disastrous precedent not only for search engines but for freedom of speech in general. When Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., announced he would place a hold on the Senate bill, he also cited similar arguments. "I am not willing to muzzle speech and stifle innovation and economic growth to achieve this objective," Wyden said in a statement.
Given the strength of this pro-technology, anticensorship platform, the bill might seem dead on arrival in the House. But congressional aides speaking on condition of anonymity say they think House members can win over the tech companies by revising the bill to drive a wedge between the corporations and their libertarian allies. If Google switched sides, it would realign its powerful lobbying base behind the bill, leaving the principled opponents out in the cold.
This flip-flop wouldn't be hard to achieve; the corporate grievances are relatively narrow. For starters, tech firms say that the Senate draft could endanger the safe harbors they have in other copyright laws, which give businesses that fail to obey statutes legal impunity as long as they've made a good-faith effort to comply. Second, the legislation allows copyright holders to sue technology companies that link to pirated material. Internet companies assert that enforcement should come from the Justice Department, not copyright owners. And third, domain-name filtering-the act of redirecting users away from the infringing material-could be a major problem for the stability of the Web because the technology that enables redirection is incompatible with emerging security systems that prevent hacking.
Congressional aides say that when House Judiciary Committee Chairman Bob Goodlatte, R-Va., introduces his proposal this fall, tech-industry complaints could vanish. "If he can get that right and win the tech sector, it could move this year or next," a tech aide to a House Judiciary member said.
Tech allies agree that tweaks could make the legislation supportable. "The best solution to Protect IP's deficiencies would be for Congress to ignore the Senate bill altogether," Larry Downes, an industry consultant, wrote in a recent op-ed. "But as the House prepares its own version of the law, [pro-tech changes] would greatly reduce unnecessary risks to the Internet ecosystem."
If Google gets what it wants, don't expect it to hold out for the sake of its friends in the free-speech community. Markham Erickson, director of federal policy at NetCoalition, the advocacy group for Google and Yahoo, said he could imagine a situation in which his grievances are resolved but those of civil libertarians aren't. "The First Amendment questions aren't issues that affect us directly from a policy perspective," he said. "If we reach a point where our concerns are addressed but theirs aren't, so it goes.""
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Re:
HA, shows what you know. I am a Ask lover!
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The Streets Aren't Safe Anymore
When they succeed at stopping all crimes on all streets, that will prove to Google that it is possible to do such a thing, and Google can follow the shining example.
I suggest the gov't call it "THE WAR ON DRUGS", and that we always write it in all-caps to illustrate the magnanimity of it. It should be over in a few weeks, and then won't Google look so silly!!
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Re:
I don't think anyone has ever really believed otherwise. No one thinks that Google is in this just for the civil liberties questions. So what's your point?
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Google Hate
This is a direct threat to the quality of Google's search results. Google knows that. Google also knows that its prosperity is built on the quality of its search results. But if the perps can put enough pressure on Google, Google will cave.
This is how police states get built, folks.
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Re: Re: I'll try on AC's behalf to make you see the obvious, Mike:
B) Google is a soulless giant corporation that doesn't need you to defend it, yet you do defend it frequently.
C) Your own words from above: "it didn't take long before I saw a series of Google AdSense ads" show that these violations are easily found. Google clearly isn't doing much to stop it.
D) You use the technique of boldly stating the very problem as if it's dismissable. -- "No one thinks that Google is in this just for the civil liberties questions." -- THAT IS THE POINT. None of what Google does can be trusted to coincide with the interests of citizens, and in fact, I say that Google is /more/ suspect for all its show, when it's the perfect SPY AGENCY, a direct threat to all privacy.
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That is one reason I never allow ads anywhere.
This is not a problem just for Google this is a problem for everyone that wants to sell ads anywhere.
The funny part is that, newspapers, TV stations and radio will be on the scope if Google goes away, they all have huge interests and will be target to those things eventually.
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hijack accounts
I also wonder how some of the ads were approved. A simple filter would have stopped about half of them.
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If Google wants to take money, they need to spend the time to check these ads out. Google makes way too much of a profit on every click to be able to justify not checking, plain and simple.
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Re: Re: Re: I'll try on AC's behalf to make you see the obvious, Mike:
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Re: Re: Re: Re: I'll try on AC's behalf to make you see the obvious, Mike:
Ootb, or Buck?
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: I'll try on AC's behalf to make you see the obvious, Mike:
...Wow. My paradigm just got eaten by Cthulhu.
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Re: Google had better make some efforts to police its ads.
"Newspapers have always done so. (Non-tabloids.)"
You might want to do some research and find out the differences between Google and newspapers. You might learn something about the internet and the arguments actually being made.
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Re:
Oh, you don't have a software tool that can continually perform instant lookups like that, with a 100% success rate and no false-positives, for every ad-word purchased? Weird.. Well, you can at least give Google a list of every criminal in the world they should not accept ads from? No?
Weird, it is like you are just assuming that your wild claims are practical, workable and cost effective with no idea whether or not they are any good.
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Re: Re: Re: I'll try on AC's behalf to make you see the obvious, Mike:
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Meanwhile Google keeps getting raided repeatedly in South Korea.
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Re: Re:
With this much profit on the line, Google can step up and staff accordingly. The Mark One Eyeball and Brain combo does a much better job than most automation.
In business, if you can't be cost effective, don't get into that part of the business. If Google can't keep their Viagra ads legal, perhaps it is one of those areas they should just decline ads for.
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Re: Re: Re:
And if they did hire people, guess what would happen? You'd go from, say, 50-100 ads, to 50000-100000 ads as the spammers hope to get through the shields, the needed personnel would jump up greatly, and the overall ad quality would decline.
Just deny viagra ads? Well, several troubles with that. One, google gets sued for just about everything they do. At least one legit viagra company would sue google for denying viagra ads. How? I dunno, but I can guarantee it would happen.
Two, the viagra sellers would just call their product something other than 'viagra'. Lemme look at my spam box, and see what else it's called:
"Replica watch: make your timepiece stand erect"
"Cialis"
"Little blue pill"
"viagra"
"The men's pill"
"Unsheath your rapier after swallowing this"
Conclusion: If we follow your solutions, genuine viagra sellers will have complaints, which may be valid, false viagra sellers will still get through, google will spend a lot of money to hand-monitor ads, but will still be forced into inefficiency, and the ad quality will decrease.
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Are they actually Google ads?
http://choice.live.com/
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: I'll try on AC's behalf to make you see the obvious, Mike:
"The First Amendment questions aren't issues that affect us directly from a policy perspective," he said. "If we reach a point where our concerns are addressed but theirs aren't, so it goes."
It totally contradicts Google's public statements and position. If you don't think the other Google shills (EFF, CDT, PK) don't recognize this you're as willfully blind as they are.
Watch and see what happens when the House bill drops and Google gets a few issues addressed during markup. They're go from being an opponent to neutral or perhaps a proponent. And their dozen or more lobbying firms (not individuals, firms) will go to work getting Protect IP passed.
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Re:
Free trade is all very well when it's my job being exported, but it's a big no-no when it affects the rents I have to pay the healthcare industry to be granted permission to buy medications at ten or a hundred times the free market price. Don't let the scaremongering about "fake" drugs deceive you - this is not for your benefit, they don't give a shit about you, just about the money. All this censorship achieves is to drive the trade underground, where the dangers become real because there can be no enforcement. Not to mention the annoying spam.
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Re: Re: Re:
We don't tell the government that "If you can't keep the streets free from crime, then maybe you shouldn't be in the street business." Or that they should just keep hiring enough police until they are able to eliminate crime. Why should Google be held to a higher standard.
And to those who accuse Masnick of fighting Google's battles for them, get a clue. It's not for love of Google. Techdirt has very frequently and consistently fought for immunity for platforms. Section 230 is frequently supported here, and the same debate was made for Craigslist when Attorneys General tried to grandstand about removing crime (hookers) from CL.
We don't hold gun makers responsible for crimes done with guns, we don't hold car makers responsible for car accidents or deliberate collisions, we don't hold gov't responsible for crimes committed on public property, we don't hold banks responsible for robberies committed on their premises. A little consistency (and common sense) suggests that we should not hold web hosts responsible for content posted by others on their platforms.
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Re: Are they actually Google ads?
I completely missed the "AdChoices" at the bottom, and assumed due to style that is was AdSense.
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Making the distinction that legitimate, licensed Canadian pharmacies provide a valuable and safe service
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Re: Re: Re: Re:
Remember, all the spam terms mean nothing on Google if people aren't looking for them. They are bidding for viagra, not for v|ag4a. people don't search for "timepiece stand erect" when they want viagra, they search for viagra, or perhaps "boner medicine". There isn't an endless number of variants here that the public searches for in volume, and Google has the tools to spot all the volume searches.
If 50 - 100 people isn't enough, hire 1000, and charge an insertion premium to review. Google makes hundreds of millions a year, they can afford to do it right.
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Re: Re:
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Re: Re: Re:
You appear to be confused. If an Indian company makes a pill that looks like Viagra, is sold as Viagra, and carries Pfizer's trademark, that's a "fake". If Pfizer was granted a patent on the active ingredient in India, then generic pills made in India are "unauthorized". However, I'm pretty sure that's not the case (correct me, with citation, if I'm wrong), and since patent protection ends at national borders, the fact that US and European patents exist is completely irrelevant in India. Nice piece of trolling, though, since you know perfectly well that when imported meds are described as "fake" the implication is they don't contain the active ingredient.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re:
But let's look at the idea that they're looking for the keyword 'viagra'. I'm going to search up a few things in google, and see what comes up with 'viagra' or other questionable medicine results.
Viagra: no questionable ad results.
erection: Questionable seeming ad; But legitimate
building plans, truss design, architecture, nothing
Architectural rod: fake viagra
rod, sword, longsword, nothing
British literature: questionable medicine site.
Celtic, bodhran, drums, sex, rock 'n' roll, nothing
Conclusion: If they're all competing for the viagra keyword, they're showing it well. Looks like google might've already banned the viagra keyword, showing as there is no result for that.
Now, 'erectile dysfunction', OTOH, has plenty of bad-ads.
And hey, no one might look for 'erect timepieces', but if they happen to be looking for a bit of Lord Bryon, maybe some Shakespeare, they might just happen across an ad.
(If I had to wager, I'd say that the viagra sellers, or maybe it's one viagra seller behind multiple fronts, is putting up a lot of random adwords with a low daily budget on multiple adwords accounts. Just to be clear, both architecture and rod didn't show any ads, but architectural rod, and architectural did.)
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Re: Re: Re: Re:
Or that they do, but also contain other unsafe ingredients.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re:
Fake implies a lack of the active ingredient.
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