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Intellectual Property And The AIDS Crisis

Karl Chang writes: "The New York Times Magazine cover story on AIDS is basically an expose on how the drug companies are trying to keep their profits at the expense of the lives of those in the third-world. Some shocking statistics are included about the spread of the epidemic and the markup on the drugs. Interestingly enough, the claim of patents being needed to finance new research is rebutted with the statistic that two-thirds of the drug companies costs are in marketing and administration; the bulk of their costs aren't in R&D. Read the story."

361 comments

  1. Re:This is where the right to ip should end by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1
    I don't care how they try to justify the case for stoping others from having the medicine they to survive, there is simply no excuse for holding back medical aid to those in desperate need.

    And how dare you own a computer and a nice car while others are dying needlessly. Your paycheck will be garnished, your property taken and replaced with the minimum you *need*, and all that surplus will now go to help the poor get treatment they otherwise can't afford. You baby killing THIEF!

  2. Re:blame the people too by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    i wonder if posting this kind of drivel makes you feel as though you are more enlightened? or maybe even less bigoted than anyone else?

    the problem however is you, and people like you. those that continually can not forget the past and use it at every opportunity to justify today's actions are guilty of "not letting go". being able to let go of past atrocities is exactly what lets us really move on. you, and your kind, keep us from doing that.

    guilt for your forefather's action is highly overrated.

  3. Patents may not be enforceable - no incentive by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1
    The Constitution states that patents are granted "to promote the progress of science and the useful arts."

    If poor countries, in violation of international patent law, begin to manufacture drugs that they would otherwise be unable to afford, they are costing the drug companies nothing. They would not be able to purchase them and pay the patent royalties, so whether they make their own or not, the patent holder won't get paid.

    Therefore, the patent is not providing any incentive to "progress" for the drug companies.

    Therefore, enforcement of the patent is against the United States Constitution.

    But don't expect Little Bush to allow such exceptions.

  4. Re:What about Hepatitus B? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Perhaps not the same HIV rates as Vietnam or Thailand (yet), but hepatitus B (and hepatitus C) seem to be spreading unchecked throughout Taiwan.

    And the massive denial among Taiwanese (and its health officials) that "we're too clean - we're not like SouthEast Asia" will land it in the same situation as India, whose health minister allegedly stated something to the effect that Indians are too "clean" to be beset by HIV...

    Overconfidence and nationalistic pride can (and will) get you into trouble!

  5. HIV Meds are expensive as hell, but they work. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2

    My wife has been HIV positive for the last (at least) 10 years. She was infected (we think) by her ex-husband sometime before we met. I'm not HIV positive. I have seen what this POS virus can do, many of the people we met through our local AIDS support center have died, mostly of multiple opportunistic infections, some of full-blown AIDS, in the last several years. I am incredibly grateful that the Pharma-corps have been able to develop some of the newer meds (many of which my wife helped to test in human studies), but I can't help but hate them for the prices they charge. We currently spend around 5.000 DM (around $2500) a month for the regimen that my wife currently uses, all of which is reimbursed by our medical insurance. I am really grateful that we live in Germany, where we can take advantage of the socialized medical system that makes this possible. I have seen my wife go from T-Cell counts in that were almost normal, to down to double digits (around 25), and (thanks to the new protease inhibitors)back up to almost normal (500+). Her virus load also went from astronomic to undetectable (using the newer testing methods, which can detect under 50 viral-copies per mm^3).

    In response to the Duesburg-followers - high virus load correlated to very low t-cell count, and vice-versa - you do the math.

    In response to the "Gift from God" morons - my wife is a straight, caucasian, _married_, non-addicted, woman. She (we) has been living with HIV for at least 11 years. If this is your god's best shot at wiping people out, he sucks. In a word (or two), "fuck you."

    As far as Africa goes, I think they need to get the governments acts together, before distribution of meds will help. Another problem is attitude, as the meds are not a cure, but a therapy to extend life expectancy and increase quality of life. Once you are HIV+ you can infect others, no matter what drugs you take, and a properly informed populace is the best line of defense. Infected men running around rutting like bunnies without any sort of protection (condoms) is probably the biggest vector currently at work in Africa. Not to mention other things like poor sanitation/hygine in Hospitals, and some really wacked out traditions like female circumcision (which, when combined with bunny-rutting men, really can get the virus spread quickly.)

    At the bottom line, the Pharma-corps aren't helping matters much when they start focusing too much on the IP and bottom line issues, but I am glad they are doing the research and making the meds. There are systems that can make this work anyway (like socialized medicine) and still the most important factors are information, its distribution and action upon said information.

  6. what did you expect? by Nova · · Score: 1

    This is no surprise, anyone who thought that drug companies ever held themselves to some kind of higher ethical standard over making money was severely misguided. I'm of the belief that their drugs kill people off just as quickly as the actual disease does.

    I see this again and again, companies would rather push harmful ideas and products that generate profit, then educate the public. Examples of this are the milk industry, with the notion that milk is good for you and makes strong bones, companies that advertise their foods as healthy (yet they contain hydrogenated fats and oils) and many companies that cholesterol is always bad, or that fat is always bad.

    While people in Africa are getting ravaged from what the media terms the AIDS epidemic (and what I term the drug companies), people in more well-off areas of the world are suffering from diseases of plenty (i.e. diabetes, Crohn's, cancer, etc.) All the while the drug companies keep getting richer. The conventional medical establishment refuses to accept that disease is not the start of the problem, but actually the end point in a degenerative process that began long ago. The body naturally tends towards wellness, but one has to give it the components to sustain this state, which is something we, for the most part, totally overlook in society. Health isn't through drugs, and the only place that trying to out-think nature will get you is dead.

    There is a fringe theory that HIV is actually one of the 1,300 or so harmless retroviruses, and what doctors call AIDS is actually caused by all the drugs one is given to kill this virus (which aren't living in the first place, they're just pieces of genetic material) and the harmful lifestyle one engages in (drug use, etc.) This does not seem as far off if one considers that there are a good number of people that never progressed to AIDS after many years of testing HIV positive, and even some in which there is no trace of the virus in their system. Both of the above, from what I've heard, are usually done without the use of HIV drugs, such as AZT or protease inhibitors. Actually, I believe they've never isolated the virus, and the tests only look for the presence of antibodies in the blood. Take it for what you will...

    1. Re:what did you expect? by Nova · · Score: 1

      The original sufferers were largely homosexual males, many (most?) of whom engaged in recreational drug use and unhealthy lifestyles.

      AZT itself has a history of being a particulary harmful drug. Referencing the site for Dr. Duesberg, noted in a previous responce, seems to have a good piece on it:
      http://www.duesberg.com/jltrial.html

      That said, if you think like an executive, it becomes appearent that releasing a "cure" in not only AIDS treatment, but other diseases, would choke their stream of income. Getting people hooked on drugs is a great thing for the producer because they can then expect a perodic, constant source of money coming at them. Obviously, cures are not profitable, but "breakthroughs" have to be put out every few years, so the public doesn't get disenchanted. If you want to be really cynical, educating the public about such things as safe-sex, or healthy living is also a large kick to the pocketbook. Morality goes down the tubes when money is involved, and that is expectable with any human-run institution.

      Then again, I believe if people really care enough, they will get off their asses and educate themselves, but educating oneself I would think would be rather hard to do in a poverty-striken area such as most of Africa.

    2. Re:what did you expect? by HardFocus · · Score: 1

      While I'm no great fan of the drug companies (they are culpable in the over-medication of seniors, for example), it's exactly this sort of pseudo-scientific activist FUD that eventually leads to more deaths for those who contract the disease. The original sufferers weren't subject to these drugs (throughout most of the 80's) but shitloads of them died from this allegedly mystery virus. This is pseudo-science at its best, denial of scientific findings through innuendo and rumour.

      I have been taking an interest in HIV/AIDS issues for some years now and I am not convinced that all of it is FUD. Seriously, check out www.virusmyth.net and www.aids-statistics.com.

    3. Re:what did you expect? by mrfiddlehead · · Score: 1
      There is a fringe theory that HIV is actually one of the 1,300 or so harmless retroviruses, and what doctors call AIDS is actually caused by all the drugs one is given to kill this virus (which aren't living in the first place, they're just pieces of genetic material) and the harmful lifestyle one engages in (drug use, etc.)

      While I'm no great fan of the drug companies (they are culpable in the over-medication of seniors, for example), it's exactly this sort of pseudo-scientific activist FUD that eventually leads to more deaths for those who contract the disease. The original sufferers weren't subject to these drugs (throughout most of the 80's) but shitloads of them died from this allegedly mystery virus. This is pseudo-science at its best, denial of scientific findings through innuendo and rumour.

      --
      :wq
    4. Re:what did you expect? by dkma2 · · Score: 1

      You may want to look at the work of Duesburg, a noted researcher. It definitely is worth the look.

  7. Interesting, shocking, unsurprising, sickening by Chris+Johnson · · Score: 2
    This story throws a very interesting light on the usual perception of corporations from the perspective of libertarians and particularly Randites. It's said, over and over, that corporations cannot use force because only governments can use force because force comes from the barrel of a gun and it's governments which have the guns... right? (we'll leave Pinkertons out of this one for now...)

    Yet what do we have here but corporations, an artificial entity that lives by specific rules, presenting entire _continents_ with this dilemma: pay up, more money than you could _ever_ possibly pay- or die. Die, Africa- Die, India- no hard feelings, it's just a business matter, now DIE! because your continent cannot pay sixty, six hundred, times the cost of producing the medicines that might save it!

    Honestly, it is hard to see any way to justify this point of view. In a human, this personality would be seen as sociopathic, dangerous. I would question what _right_ does a corporation have to slay a _continent_ for non-payment of very arbitrary fees? To my mind there is a big difference between this and, say, Viagra. They are welcome (encouraged) to set whatever price they like for the latter, but with the survival of the human race at stake, the species that corporations are _made_ of, it is quite inappropriate to apply the same rules. It's a case of 'tough luck, Merck- we'll call the wonder drug Merck's Golden Savior if you like and you better make what you can from that name recognition, because we are _going_ to rescue as many people as we can from their medical problem, and you're gonna make it at cost, as will everybody else.' That would be social justice.

    Failing that, I can only see a prospect of war- like WWII, except that this time, us Americans, WE are the Nazis. WE are the ones sentencing entire continents to death... except that in a very real sense, we have no more power over our legal fictions, our corporations (multinationals all) than does a Brazilian. We cannot stop them by working within the system anymore. When a corporate scientist discovers a permanent cure for AIDS, that cure will be _thrown_ _away_ and covered up so effectively that nobody will ever know, because death is more profitable and cures, you only sell one of... and the decision will be made by various well-insulated corporate drones trained to think only of the corporate bottom line (or be fired for violation of fiduciary duty) who cannot be held personally responsible for their decisions- or so we currently believe.

    I daresay it will be a very nasty war, because with all other options lost, the people sentenced to this death may as well turn to terrorist acts- not against the US, but against the corporations which are mobilising governmental military and trade forces as weapons. And given that it will _be_ a war, peacetime law may no longer be adequate. What possible punishment would match up to the sentencing of entire continents to death?

    I know this much- I've served on a jury in the USA. Knowing what I know, if I was on a jury passing judgement on a terrorist who had premeditatedly killed a corporate executive who, beyond a reasonable doubt, had made the decision to deny AIDS drugs to a dying _continent_, entire _countries_... I would die myself before I brought a guilty verdict against the terrorist. I would call it self-defense.

    So would most of the world... we might begin thinking of them as 'the Allies', and our corporate entities as 'the Axis', to get some idea of how all this really looks to the outside world- whether that is in countries with HALF the population carrying AIDS, or the countries which aren't there yet. And we might begin thinking of our young wealthy libertarian corporate supporters as 'Quislings', while we're at it, for more of a perspective. And there isn't the figurehead there was in WWII, because history doesn't repeat _identically_... you can't show a picture of a corporation, the only thing that will be reviled by history are simple names. Merck. Monsanto. Possibly Microsoft- though it would have to pull off some monumental feats of global information control to rank anywhere near the agriculture and medicine entities currently putting the screws to the rest of the world.

    It looks very much like corporations are like a social cancer- legal fictions constructed specifically to bear no responsibility and produce uncontrolled growth with no bearing on the health of the organism. The full impact of this situation only becomes obvious when you look at these pharmaceutical corporations placing their profits ahead of, literally, _humanity_... sticking to the bottom line and rule #1 (get yours) even when faced with emergencies on the scale of _continents_. We lock up humans who react in that manner, but _all_ corporations are programmed to act that way by the laws that create them. It's not good enough. One way or another, the plug's gotta be pulled, and new programming written.

  8. Surprised? by Chris+Johnson · · Score: 2
    Maybe if you are so surprised at the New York Times running this information, you need to re-evaluate whether your own point of view is really defensible.

    Looks to me like the New York Times is doing a terrific job, in the tradition of the Post breaking the Watergate story and learning more and more about just how nasty that situation really was. In this case, the New York Times appears to be figuring out that US-based multinational corporations may be getting us into a full-scale war against the rest of the world- and that US-based multinational corporations are condemning entire continents to death for inability to pay First World, hugely inflated prices.

    Personally, I am proud of them for running this as a cover story- but I believe that, knowing what they know, they felt morally obliged, as I would, to get the word out. It is a desperate situation, and it's no longer acceptable to be disinterested- and taking up a collection to pay Merck $4.50 on 15 cents worth of medication is freaking missing the point! This expose does far more good- though it is only a band-aid.

  9. Yes- he is. by Chris+Johnson · · Score: 2
    Yes- I realise it's a bit hard to imagine, but there are people who are that inhuman and hostile to society and civilisation. You'll also find them believing lots of odd things to justify viewpoints like 'millions of people dying is good because it leaves more for the winners' and 'millions of Africans dying is good because without industrialised agriculture and first world charity they would all starve to death'.

    I would love to see some basic societal rules laid down and enforced. If you kill another person, you get put in jail as a menace to society. If you stubbornly assert that killing another person is good (even if you don't yourself do this) you might be committed to an institution, depending on who you choose to say it to, and how stubbornly you stick to the idea. I'd like to see similar consequences apply to those who stubbornly assert that killing millions of people is good- or, to be specific, that the prospering of an imaginary legal fiction is important enough to justify killing millions of people.

  10. Re:Human Life vs. Intellectual Property by Chris+Johnson · · Score: 2
    I'm just wondering one thing. You say, with every appearance of earnestness, "However, in a country without any means of protecting intellectual property, nobody would make the initial investment."

    Are you stating that a scientist with AIDS would not attempt to save his own life unless he stands to gain a monopoly on the intellectual property?

    Are you stating that a person with AIDS and enough money to fund such work would not spend the money that way unless they stood to make the money back with interest?

    Are you stating that a friend of these two people would not lift a finger to help them without standing to gain in either intellectual property or monetary wealth?

    ...

    Increasingly I suspect the best thing we could do is throw out _all_ IP and start over, even though this is hard to even imagine...

  11. Re:Let Us look at this an other way. by Chris+Johnson · · Score: 2
    A 'free market' is not a community. Chicago school free market thinking assumes a state of uniform self-interest that is all supposed to add up to... something. Whatever it is, it certainly is not a community, because it pointedly refuses any social responsibility, much less obligation. In a way this is a sub-human point of view, socially inferior and more primitive than even some types of animal...

    I suppose this can be chalked up to capitalist indoctrination, but don't overgeneralise- that is the same as saying that you are obviously a socialist and therefore support totalitarian states such as the Cold War USSR. The two aren't the same thing, and 'capitalist' is overgeneral for what you're reacting to. What the person is illustrating is Chicago School free market libertarian thinking, and that is not really capitalism- it's a sort of fascism, but a _non-specific_ fascism in which the ruler is not appointed or designated, but is simply the most ruthless competitor at any given time. Kind of like 'fascism without a plan'. Chile tried this out for a while (or had it tried on them) and was almost obliterated by it, but the crude simplicity of the concepts still appeal to some.

  12. Re:The holes by Chris+Johnson · · Score: 2
    You should read more carefully. I wasn't picking words at random, Greg. Look again. I specifically said, a corporate executive who, beyond a reasonable doubt, had made the decision to deny AIDS drugs to a dying continent. Note the 'beyond a reasonable doubt' (discovery would have to really rest accountability with this person), and note 'DENY'. Find where it says 'fail to give away drugs for free just to be nice', you'll be looking a long time.

    If there's a slippery slope it's you who's lost your footing. I'm seeing a situation where, far from simply not giving away loads of free medicine, some people (and I use the term loosely) at drug companies are on the one hand determining the cost of the medication based on rich US 'customers' (read: dying people) and on the other hand are willing to involve the US military and commerce department to _threaten_ poverty-stricken countries attempting to make the medicines _themselves_. We are not talking about failure to supply free medication here, we are talking about a concerted effort to condemn millions to death and _prohibit_ entire countries from saving their people through manufacturing the 'intellectual property' themselves.

    It would be so easy to go with compulsory licensing for the duration of the crisis, and that would entirely undercut my argument about the terrorist. If such a country could (even only in absolute crisis) make its own drugs, there's no excuse for violence on the person of corporate executives.

    It is only in the situation where countries are being prohibited through military and governmental force from making the medication to address their own intolerable crisis, and prohibited by the acts of a person making that decision, that I'd refuse to convict the terrorist. I feel that any person consciously making the decision to hold a continent at gunpoint, saying 'Drop everything, OFF with the drug production lines, call off your doctors! You get those drugs from US at first world prices or we send in the US army and impose trade sanctions destroying your country!'... given the situation, a person behaving like that is acting like a gangster and is abandoning the right to be treated like a human being. I think people like that should be locked up. If they can't be brought to justice, and someone is willing to sacrifice their own humanity to kill the person who's behaving like that and can't be brought to justice, I for one could not convict.

    Hell, we're (the USA) living with a President now who is heartily in favor of taking people who act like gangsters and sociopaths and killing them off. Sauce for the goose is sauce for the gander- if we're expected to swallow that, why the hell must we behave like gangster-like corporate execs have a right to live? If we're killing off the dangers to society, let's track down some of the corporate execs who decide things like this, and kill them. I'd like to see equal killings: for every black inner city gang lord, let a lawyer-wielding corporate exec behaving like I've described be killed. The latter kind does more damage...

    It is just as easy for either kind to be spared such harsh justice. For the gangster- duh, don't pull the trigger. For the exec- if your company appears to be obliging you to take such actions... freaking RESIGN! This is not rocket science, and the company is not God. Act AS IF you are responsible for your actions.

  13. Re:Let Us look at this an other way. by vldmr_krn · · Score: 1

    I think even the most strident freemarket supporter would say that to withhold medical care is wrong.

    Why is it wrong? I didn't spend 2 decades of my life in school and more in practice for the privilege of working for free every time some bozo claims a need. Feel free to morally condemn a doctor who refuses to help you in a life-or-death scenario, but the moment you put a gun to his head and demand to be treated, you've violated his rights and he has every right to kill you in self-defense. I don't expect you to exist for my sake. What gives you the moral right to demand that I exist for yours?

  14. Re:The holes by crayz · · Score: 1

    Yeah, and clearly if I see you about to be run over by a car, and I save you, you will still die someday. It's not like you're immortal. Still, I don't think anyone would say I only prolonged your life if I pushed you out of the way. They'd say I saved your life.

    Also, I believe some of these drugs actually may lower the transmission rate, as hinted at in the article.

  15. Re:What do we expect? by Phil-14 · · Score: 1

    This subject came up a while back on the usenet newsgroup rec.arts.sf.written. Someone eventually did the math and showed that for several African countries, if they could buy the drugs AT COST and devoted their whole medical services budget to doing so, they could treat only a small percentage of their AIDS patients with modern western anti-AIDS drugs.

    --
    (currently testing something about signatures here)
  16. Re:Drug Companies by Phil-14 · · Score: 1

    Oh, and the Challenger Disaster. And a fifty billion dollar trailer park in orbit that doesn't do anything or go anywhere.

    If that's where you want to see medical research go, look at NASA with your blinders off.

    --
    (currently testing something about signatures here)
  17. Re:Non-sequitur by Phil-14 · · Score: 1

    You know, I think that's the fourth time that I've read that particular little post, made word-for-word... egad.

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    (currently testing something about signatures here)
  18. Re:HIV/AIDS Research Money by Phil-14 · · Score: 1

    Actually I don't really have any idea about how much of that research is actually useful. I know that if some private company actually came up with a cheap way of getting to orbit, NASA would cite their research budget in an attempt to claim credit, but I doubt it would have really been a help. I suspect that the same is the case with a lot of NIH research.

    --
    (currently testing something about signatures here)
  19. Re:COMMUNISM WOULD SOLVE THIS!!! by Phil-14 · · Score: 1
    The transition between capitalism and communism is never going to be easy...


    I've heard that from people defending the forced famines and purges in 1920's Russia, and the forced famines of the Great Leap Forward...

    But, of course, you'll have lots of reasons as to why they were really Capitalism but you're the first true communist. Of course, it's what the communists said all the other times they killed people, so why should we believe you?

    --
    (currently testing something about signatures here)
  20. Re:Perhaps we need stronger regulation by sql*kitten · · Score: 2
    Drug companies are barely affected at all by recessions, because almost all drugs aren't a luxury, they're a necessity.

    Like Prozac and Viagra?

    Drug companies are no more "immune" to the economic cycle than anyone else.

  21. Re:'Hype and the AIDS crisis'- Flawed logic... by Jason+Earl · · Score: 2

    I can't speak for the situation in Africa, but I have actually lived in several Third World countries in South America, and I can tell you that the problems of corruption and lack of infrastructure are serious concerns when you are tackling a problem of this magnitude. Some of the nicest people I have ever met hailed from the Peruvian town of Huancayo, and yet it is safe to say that their political system is so corrupt, and their infrastructure so under-developed that for all intents and purposes they are living hundreds of years behind the times. Sending supplies to this area either required that you transport the goods yourself, or that you "pay off" any number of people so that they would not be stolen.

    I imagine that Africa is worse.

    For example, even if the required medicine were to magically appear off of the coast of Africa there is little guarantee that this medicine would be dispersed properly throughout the population, and there is even less chance that the medicine would be used correctly if the instructions were more complicated than "take two of these and call me in the morning." It is much more likely that these medical supplies would become one more pawn in the ever increasing war between the various competing countries and factions.

    Besides, no such super drug for AIDS exists. The best we can do now is either abstain from drugs and sex with multiple partners and/or to always use a condom and fresh needles. This is not rocket science. Unfortunately, there are too many people in the world who feel that they should be able to maintain a dangerous lifestyle without consequences. Of course, there are always plenty of truly innocent victims as well. People who either didn't know about how to avoid AIDS or who became infected from their parents or some other method. But that just underscores the importance of education. People should know the facts so that they can choose their lifestyle wisely.

    The US drug companies are businesses, and as businesses I would bet that any one of these organizations would love to come up with a cure for AIDS for the simple reason that it would be worth a lot of money. Blaming these companies for the AIDS epidemic in Africa is ridiculous. You might as well blame me for the AIDS epidemic in Africa. I haven't come up with a cure for AIDS either. Heck, I haven't even tried to come up with a cure for AIDS.

    Until there is a cure for AIDS the only tool available to us is education. If the individual African decides that his or her lifestyle choices are more important than avoiding the AIDS virus, then there is little that the rest of us can do other than pray for the other innocent victims of this persons choice.

  22. Re:Drug Companies by KnightStalker · · Score: 1

    If you think about it, most of the money to develop those drugs probably already comes from taxes, through Medicare. I'd rather take the companies out of the loop and have the government pay directly for the research. The government is then paying for a larger share of the research costs, but the marketing costs drop to zero, and the results are (hopefully) available, patent-free, to everyone.

    --
    * And remember, it's spelled N-e-t-s-c-a-p-e, but it's pronounced "Mozilla."
  23. Re:These are drug companies, not drug charities by Jeremy+Erwin · · Score: 1
    The pfizer article all but admits that in the absence of a patent system, drug prices are reduced. Pfizer claims that the reason behind the growth in pharmaceutical expenditures is the elective use of more pharmaceutical products, and not necessarily a growth in pharmaceutical prices. However, since nongeneric drugs are protected from external pricing pressure by patent systems, pharmaceutical corporations are under no obligation to control the prices of their basic product. Although drug companies may each deliver a drug to control "Disease X", the persons who prescribe these medications are often not aware of the drug's price, further insulating the drug companies from proper market regulation.

    Many of these patented prescription drugs are themselves based on Government or nonprofit research. Although some noncommercial institutions have secured patents on possible application of their research, the proliferation of patents, cross-licensing, and profit-driven economic departments, is probably, on the whole, not good for scientific progress. (Indeed, the economic barriers associated with the basic research contribute, in small, but appreciable amounts, to the costs inherent in drug design.)

    Although pfizer does comment on the cost of libaility lawsuits, they should also point out the legal infrastucture asociated with "intellectual property" defense and infringement. A half dozen interlocking patent disputes can prevent a firm from delivering a product to market in a timely fashion.

    The patent system ensures that the technology that remains affordable is 20 years old. Seldane, for instance, was pulled off the market, just as it's successor drug, Allegra entered the market. Now, sure, there were safety issues associated with terfenadine (the drug could interact with othe prescription drugs to cause heart problems), but this decision protected Hoechst Marion Russell from generic competition. Compared with the drugs of twenty years ago, the drugs of today are far safer and more effective. The're also a lot more expensive, mostly due to patent laws.

  24. Political Will. by Forge · · Score: 1

    once again the most important requierment for getting anything done is political will. If you have the kind of leadership that prefers to kick ass than kiss it then ANYTHING is posible.

    This has little to do with intalectual property and everything to do with Brazil's government being "manly" and daring the drug companies, uncle sam and anyone else who cares to stop them from pirating drugs and saving lives.

    They are winning because they are comited. Now if only we could get the same kind of comitment behind the "drug war". I.e. someone who will admit it's a waste and tacle drug abuse as a medical and social problem.

    --
    --= Isn't it surprising how badly I spell ?
  25. Yes, let's do so by ragnar · · Score: 2
    Let's say some poor business has some form of router failure on their internal network and you are in the area. It just so happens that you are a Cisco guru and you know how to get them back in order, but you will require $100 to do it. Unfortunately, they can't pay but their business depends on it.

    By your logic, the person's need means that you should give away the service.

    This is a parasitic ethic and it makes every competent or productive person a slave to anyone with a need. Granted, I don't like the idea of people dieing because they don't have the means to save themselves. Unfortunately we are talking about the oldest problem on earth. It could be the case that the drug companies are total jerks, but they did the research. I would really like it if they would give it away, but that is their perogative.

    Just a personal note, in case someone would think that I don't personally care about AIDS and those who suffer from it. I'm currently raising funds for AIDS research through the AIDS Ride. I think that private donations toward a cure is the way to go. If you feel strongly on the matter, I suggest you endorse and support organizations that are seeking a cure without a profit motive. Sorry for the personal plug, but I want to curtail the person who says that I don't give a damn... I actually do, but I don't expect drug companies to care in the same way I do.

    --
    -- Solaris Central - http://w
    1. Re:Yes, let's do so by nomadic · · Score: 1

      Let's say some poor business has some form of router failure on their internal network and you are in the area. It just so happens that you are a Cisco guru and you know how to get them back in order, but you will require $100 to do it. Unfortunately, they can't pay but their business depends on it. By your logic, the person's need means that you should give away the service.

      It's a faulty analogy; one case involves life and death, while the other involves profit. In the first case the needs of a patient is weighed against the costs of providing those needs. The costs to the hospital (a little time and money) aren't worth as much as the patients life.

      In the second case it's two commercial enterprises arrayed against each other. The company needs a router fixed in order to stay in business. You need to be paid for your work in order to stay in business. It's a case of your profits versus theirs; you could easily turn the argument around and say since you need a hundred bucks, the company should pay you to fix their routers, even if they're working fine.
      --

  26. Re:COMMUNISM WOULD SOLVE THIS!!! by Skip666Kent · · Score: 2

    To heck with what the State is "supposed" to be, according to Karl or anyone else. What does the communist state always become? Centralised and all powerful. Fascist. How else to you purport to 'deal' with those who are not 'intellectually mature' enough to agree with you?

    The absolute WORST thing about communism, though, is that it's boring. REALLY boring.

    --
    **>>BELCH
  27. Wrong by Skip666Kent · · Score: 2

    We're not undergoing a population crisis, or if we are, it's in the opposite direction of what you think. Most people who worry about overpopulation are really just daydreaming about having everyone disappear so you can run around, drive their cars on the left side of the road and drink their beer and stuff.

    Get over it, I say. You can do all that stuff right now!

    --
    **>>BELCH
  28. Re:Bill Gates as philanthropist by RelliK · · Score: 1

    Other people have already pointed out that Gates giving away $100000 is like me giving away $1. But there is more to this. A lot of this so-called "donation" is given away in the form of Microsoft's software. We all know how ridiculously it is priced. And by giving it away, Bill & Co get two things. First, a huge tax write off. Second, all the universities who are forced to install MS software, often replacing other software with it. All hail St. Bill I say!

    ___

    --
    ___
    If you think big enough, you'll never have to do it.
  29. Communism is dead by RelliK · · Score: 1
    If the constraints of turning a profit were removed (and the REAL form of Communism were implemented) then development and progress would explode....wealth would be produced on such a scale that it would lose relevance as a concept.

    I think you're missing the point here. I do not doubt this would happen *if* true communism were really implemented. But the problem is that true communism *cannot* be implement because of human limitations (like greed, corruption, etc.) Please reread the paragraph about always wanting a Porsche, bigger house, better food, etc. Under true communism you (and hence everyone) can have all that if and only if the resources are unlimited. But in that case communism becomes irrelevant. By definition, an economic system is a method of distributing *limited* resources among the people whose desires are unlimited.

    In summary, communism is a great idea in theory but it is impossible to implement in practice because of human limitations. In order to work, it requires either unlimited resources or perfect people who have no greed, selfishness, etc. Please read the post you replied to again. The guy had excellent points. Finally, I have had first-hand experience of living in a pseudo-communist country and I can tell you that it wasn't pretty.
    ___

    --
    ___
    If you think big enough, you'll never have to do it.
  30. Re:blame the people too by Nicolas+MONNET · · Score: 1

    Why should we try harder to stop something like this? they need to change their ways, we can't change them for them.

    How nice of you. They "just" have to change their ways. It's easy, really. Nevermind it goes against their culture, that it's not facilitated by their extreme poverty, nevermind that most of the people there aren't even litterate enough to even READ recommendations.

    Well, I think you're onto something. With your methods we could stop wars! Think about it, the beligerants just have to stop fighting! And poof, no more war! Wonderful!

    What, you're hungy? Why just go eat something!


    --

  31. Re:Poverty by Nicolas+MONNET · · Score: 1

    Poverty doesn't mean you can't stop having unprotected sex, or have multiple partners, or use IV drugs.

    So how do you educate them about it? Through television? They don't have any. Through radio? Barely more? At school? What school?


    --

  32. Re:More background on aids in africa by luge · · Score: 2

    This is a good point. However, the Post specifically notes (in one of the later articles- #6 or 7, IIRC) that this is an active choice on the part of the pharmaceutical companies- a choice driven by the marketing and sales people, not the engineers. And besides- manufacturing companies in 2nd/3rd world countries (India and Brazil) are doing just fine. If they can produce the necessary equipment and supplies, I'm sure that we can manage to find a way too.

    --

    IAAL,BIANLY

  33. More background on aids in africa by luge · · Score: 3

    If you have a lot of time to sink into the issue of AIDS in Africa, and you want it presented in a less judgemental tone, check out the soon-to-be-Pulitzer winning series from the Washington Post called AIDS in Africa. This series goes into a lot of detail (a lot of detail- read only if you have lots of time) about the history of the epidemic, the complicating factors (lack of education, communication, Christianity + tribal taboos, etc.) and about the role of the drug companies. Like I said, a lot less judgmental than this particular article- I highly recommend it to everyone.
    That said, even though the Post tries very hard not to have an anti-drug-company agenda, if you can walk away from reading all those articles without feeling that the drug companies are not culpable for the deaths of tens of millions of people... well, you are more of a cynic than I can imagine. What is happening in Africa is a terrifying combination of the Black Plague and the Holocaust, and after reading the Post series, there can be little doubt that our government and our medical industry is at the very least willing to stand by and watch millions die, and at worst directly responsible for those deaths. Yes, they need to do R&D, and yes, they should have the right to profit for their work. But when their stated policy is to profit via low-volume sales at high prices, instead of having the same ridiculous profits via high-volume sales at low prices, it is hard not to believe that the hands of their CEOs are not drenched in blood to an extent that makes tobacco CEOs look like saints.
    Anyway, enough of that rant- go read the Post articles, and make the judgement for yourself.
    ~luge

    --

    IAAL,BIANLY

    1. Re:More background on aids in africa by gimpboy · · Score: 2

      But when their stated policy is to profit via low-volume sales at high prices, instead of having the same ridiculous profits via high-volume sales at low prices, it is hard not to believe that the hands of their CEOs are not drenched in blood to an extent that makes tobacco CEOs look like saints.

      i hate to play the devils advocate here, but high volumes arent always possible. proteins and enzymes are good examples of this. while we can try to comeup with a strain of ecoli that will produce some protein with a high selectivity (read 2-5% of cell mass), its not always possible. when new therapeutics are found they are normally in small quantities: .00001% of the cell mass on a good day. this must then be purified (very expensive). it's easy to say they should crake up production, and that is easy when you are pumping oil through a distillation column. when your product is grown in a 5 liter reactor, scaleup can pretty much impossible. biological systems are very sensitive, and hard to scale.

      use LaTeX? want an online reference manager that

      --
      -- john
    2. Re:More background on aids in africa by Arkaein · · Score: 1

      Read the article. Brazil's example (as well as the companies in India)clearly illustrates that companies easily can produce these drugs cheaply and in high volume. If you're going to refute a point, make sure you're not shooting yourself in the foot.

  34. Re:AIDS is a FRAUD and is BAD SCIENCE by stevew · · Score: 2

    This post is bad science - how about some "observational science." A gay friend and I were brought together due to the un-timely death of a mutual friend. I mentioned that it had been a pretty bad year with this being the 5th funeral that year.... he mentioned that this was the 33rd funeral he'd been to in the last two years. Most all of these were due to AIDS....all these people had also had HIV...

    D'uh!

    As for the companies spending only one third of their capital on research. Maybe it would suprise some of you folks to know that the average High-Tech corporation only spends 10% to 15% on their R&D. So a 33% spending rate on R&D is amazingly high. It's truly astounding what you can do with just a little more information..

    Sheesh!

    (Now I'm going to go lite some candles before the lites go out do to lack of power around here...where is that Generator switch?)

    --
    Have you compiled your kernel today??
  35. Re:Bullshit. by TheSync · · Score: 2

    Don't take a moral stand; just decide whether you'd rather the continent of Africa to collapse into complete anarchy, and much of east Asia, and perhaps Latin America too (oh no! where will we get our cheap processors and jeans?).

    Communism, dictatorship, and despotism dominate Africa. That's why it remains such a poor continent. That's also why Africa doesn't have drug companies developing their own AIDS drugs.

    Latin America has finally rejected communism and despotism, and is improving rapidly (as long as spoiled american children don't protest away free trade). Dicussion of Catholocism's morals vs. scarcity of condoms aside, AIDS is no where as bad in Latin America compared to Africa.

  36. What to do: by KlomDark · · Score: 2
    These people are rotting in Africa because of a morass of elitish, selfish, wannabe dicktators.

    They are too concerned with making themselves look like a big man with their miserable little 'country' than to actually see that a leader of a country is no better than the least man in that country and no matter what else the stupid punk leader guy says or does, if he doesn't focus on improving the quality of life for the average human the leader is responsible, then the rest of the world will still regard the leader as a punk wannabe, or just not even know about them.

    These poor near-savages (Not because the are savages, but because the environment these little suck-dictators have created around them gives them nothing to build on or even realize that they should build on...) are stuck in stagnation do to the pointless greedyness of these weird-looking, bad-dressing, dumbshits.

    If we (or another country, or the UN) are really concern with the humanitarian utopia/propaganda that they are always spouting off, then the solution is to go kill/imprison/render-irrelevant (remove from 'power' somehow) these pockmarked shithead horrible 'leader' guys and put in the basis for a real system where everyone has a chance to better themselves. Create the infrastructure - communication, education, production, etc. Don't hand out any welfare type things, except maybe some healthcare for the first 3 to 5 years. Simply make it so they have a chance. If someone doesn't want to make the effort, don't make the mistakes that the US has made of creating a class of lazy do-nothings. If the lazy ones don't want to do anything, kick them out in the jungle with the zebras and hippos and see if they then learn the lesson of 'make an effort or die'. Survival of the fittest - if you don't wanna survive, you don't. Evolution in action.

    I feel sorry for the people locked into living nearly like animals because their leaders have sucked all the resources, money, knowledge, basic building blocks away from them and indirectly brainwashed them into being unable to realize that there is more to life than just eaking out an existence like an animal.

    But how to influence the do-haves on our side of the fence to do huge, controversial things like this for the common good of all?? That's where I feel locked into a similar non-knowledge situation of how to be a good, persuasive, charismatic 'do-er of good things'...

  37. Not the whole story by whig · · Score: 1

    The article states: "South Africa has done nothing to treat AIDS. The biggest obstacle is President Thabo Mbeki, in other ways a sane and responsible leader, who has inexplicably decided that he is not convinced H.I.V. causes AIDS. Absurdly, it has become politically incorrect to talk about treating AIDS in South Africa - because it would acknowledge that H.I.V. is the cause."

    What the article does not say is that thousands of people including Nobel Prizewinners and hundreds of Ph.D.'s and/or M.D.'s have called for a scientific reappraisal of the causes of AIDS. What President Mbeke dared to do was call for new studies to be done to confirm or deny the HIV hypothesis, and the effectiveness of "anti-AIDS" drugs like AZT (which, according to its manufacturers, creates side-effects largely indistinguishable from the symptoms of AIDS itself).

    Contrary to the article's claim, that it has become politically incorrect to talk about treating AIDS in South Africa, President Mbeki has been one of the few leaders in the world advocating a full dialogue on the subject. Here in America, for instance, scientists aren't supposed to talk about this, or they lose their funding if they do.

    --
    Peace and love, y'all
  38. Cluelessness by FallLine · · Score: 2

    The statement that, because they spend twice as much on marketing and administration as they do on R&D, they don't need patents is totally ridiculous. This is simply the way the economics of the biotech, medical devices, and drug industry work, both big companies and small companies alike. R&D is expensive and risky. In order to secure resources for R&D you need a large number of sales. Believe it or not, very few products sell themselves, even potentially life saving medicine. What's more, the medical industry is complex. Sales often involves going to the doctor's office, convincing them of the merits, educating them, etc. Administration will involve stuff, depending on the specific industry, like fighting with the HMOs. Anyways, to make a long story short, the way you generate those sales is with marketing and administration, which, of course, costs money.

    This is a well known truth in the industry, it's not as if the shareholders of all these companies woke up one day and said "gee, I want to reduce my earnings by 2/3rds by spending money needlessly". If you think you can do R&D and produce a product for less, do it. I dare you.

    1. Re:Cluelessness by FallLine · · Score: 2

      Whether intellectual property is pro or anti free market is largely a semantic argument. IP is simply necessary in order to secure future innovation. Without IP the innovator simply gains no advantage on his competitors for spending resources and incuring risk, hence progress halts. When the innovator can gain advantage (e.g., a monopoly on his or her invention) by innovating, then innovation has a chance.

      With the current IP system, we've made a great deal of progress and trillions of dollars have been spent towards R&D. Although you might argue, as ridiculous as that would be, that we would experience even more without it, there is NO significant evidence that points to this, quite the opposite in fact.

    2. Re:Cluelessness by FallLine · · Score: 2
      Where is your proof?
      From a debating stand point, the onus is not on me, it's on you coming from the lesser accepted point of view. However, there is all kinds of "proof": theories, empirical evidence, etc. They are certainly better than anything you can, or have, proffered.

      Its called catch up. The advantage is that your are ahead of the competition. This gives you advantage. What you are in effect saying is "With IP I could make a billion dollars, but without it, I can only make 1/4 billion. Its just not worth it"
      This catchup factor that you describe is rarely significant. If we're talking about software, that's about 5 seconds. Medicine, brazil managed to do it with next to nothing in the space of a month or two. A book can essentially be photocopied. An idea, simply passed around. Etc etc etc. What's more, if the innovator is small or has less resources, he could actually be at a disadvantage in terms of implimentation. If we're talking about a manufacturable product, there is a significant amount of resources and expertise involved. Knowing the ins and outs of the R&D on that particular product may pale in competitive comparison to owning 500 million dollars in manufacturing facilities, staff, cash, etc.

      Do you see how ridiculous that statement is?
      Even if we accept your position that the innovator will make 1/4 of what they would have made, who is to say that that is enough, let alone better than the full amount. For all you know, the full amount tends to be absolutely necessary. From a financial point of view, the correlation between risk and expected return is VERY sensitive. Cutting return by 10% can easily mean that the innovation will simply never happen. I have personally been involved with a number of such companies/innovators.

      That is exactly what I am arguing. Competition
      fosters progress. Look at any monopoly market and
      compare it to a highly competitive market and
      tell me which one is better. Where is _your_
      proof?
      There difference though is that the innovator only gets a monopoly on his innovation. If the competitors are copying the innovation, they're freeriding and not contributing to the advancement of technology. If the competitors wish to compete in the market place, they can do their OWN innovation. The difference is that with these market monopolies, we're talking about the ENDS, not the MEANS. You're mostly incorrectly assuming that there is only one means to an end. Even with the relatively strong IP of today, innovators often find tough competion on their product a mere year or two after they patent it, well before the patent actually expires.

      In fact, I dare you to quantify this and prove to me that patent expiration is more often the limiting factor, not alternative MEANS. I can speak with confidence for a number of well known industries and show you just how true this is.

    3. Re:Cluelessness by FallLine · · Score: 2

      It's also well excepted by most mainstream economists that intellectual property is absolutely necessary to innovation. You're simply overgeneralizing. If you wish to defer to the experts, you better know where they actually stand.

    4. Re:Cluelessness by FallLine · · Score: 2

      Maybe. However, I am backing it up with an argument (besides the fact that it's a well accepted fact). What's more, just because MS has used it doesn't mean it's worth any less.
      After all, criminals have used their rights to privacy to hide evidence of their crimes, but that doesn't mean the arguments for privacy are fundamentally less valid.

    5. Re:Cluelessness by FallLine · · Score: 2
      I majored in business at business school. As part of that major, one is required to take a number of courses in economics. Though there is debate as to how long a patent should last, and how much waste, if any, actually occurs, very few mainstream economists doubt the need for IP. Thus, I'm not "wrong". The possibility of waste and the necessity for patents are not mutually exclusive, even from a particular author.

      Even this introductory book of yours (btw, you go to drexel?), acknowledges that patents solve a real problem. It does not say that patents should not exist. Quite the contrary, because it suggests that there is an optimal length for patent life, it implies very strongly that patents are more optimal. For example,
      "The term should be long enough to make the design work to create the invention a profitable investment, and no longer. If the term is too short, then the invention will not be created, and the consumers will not have any benefit from it at all. On the other hand, if the term is too long, consumers will suffer high prices and monopoly waste just to provide a windfall profit to the monopolist. The patent should continue just long enough for the monopoly profits to repay the cost of development of the invention, and no longer."


      This book, however, being an introductory level book, oversimplifies the matter. The innovator must also be compensated for taking risk and for the lost opportunity cost/cost of capital. For instance, if I spend 20m dollars developing a product, a return of 20 million real dollars (accounting for inflation and like measures) is not enough. Because I could have plowed that money into a much less risky and low tech investment that yields 10% a year over the course of 10 years. The only way a rational and self-centered investor will invest, is if that risky investment offers a net present expected value significantly greater than the low tech investment. Hint: More than 51m dollars. Likewise, if a particular investment merely returns its cost of development in real dollars, when that particular class of innovation is highly risky, say 9 in 10 fail, the only way that you'll encourage investment is to offer expected returns well in excess of 10x the development costs.

    6. Re:Cluelessness by FallLine · · Score: 2

      I'm saying I'm not wrong in the assertion that main stream economists generally accept IP as necessary (though some may modify that, as a necessary evil) to modern innovation. [read the comment above mine]. It's not an appeal to authority, rather it's a matter of fact statement of what the vast majority of the "authority" advocates.

      That being said, I agree with you that appealing to authority can be dangerous when it leads to intellectual apathy. I really don't feel that I'm doing that though. I'm giving a relatively well reasoned argument for it [about as good as can be expected on this sort of forum], that explains why this person's over-simplified free market/libertarian view is dangerous.

    7. Re:Cluelessness by FallLine · · Score: 2

      I feel a distinction must be made between innovation and pure research. Research can, and often does, come for free because people simply like to know. However, I'd argue that the mere desire to know is not sufficient to power a product into viability. There's a world of difference between spending countless hours making a product viable and wondering about greater truths. Innovation generally requires resources, tremendous and focused effort, risk, etc; pure research often does not. Granted, you have some exceptions in both cases, but by and large there is a difference.

      Speaking of penicilin, there is A LOT more to the story. (It can even be used to help illustrate my point.) Contrary to popular belief, penicillin was not an instant cure. Flemming essentially published his discovery once to the academic community in 1929, but it hardly interested anyone. Flemming worked a little bit on it, and then basically abandoned it. It wasn't until 1938 (9 years later) that it was picked up again by a group of researchers in England. Over the period of a couple years, they reproduced Flemmings experiments, worked on it a little more, then began injecting it into mice, then humans. The results were good, but not so good that it was an instant success. It wasn't until 1941 when the ball really began to roll. It was still very difficult and expensive to produce. It took a couple years, millions of dollars, and the involvement of industry to actually make it viable.

      The point is that it is very rare for chance and mere curiosity to create usable innovation, there is generally a lot of work that happens in between. If you want to come up with a good counter-example, then show me where millions of dollars worth of resources, countless hours, risk, etc was incurred by individuals to produce a single product out of goodness of their hearts. There may be a few, but they are quite rare, especially in comparison. Can you honestly tell me who you expect to produce the next significantly faster CPU? Intel (or some other company in the semiconductor industry) or a bunch of volunteers? That may be a bit extreme of an example given the capital intensiveness, but think over all the industries and pursuits that directly effect your life. By and large, it's industry through IP, not the loaner individual (differs from an individual that starts a company, of course), a non-profit, etc.

    8. Re:Cluelessness by FallLine · · Score: 2

      I don't think your primary point was ever, merely, that "some" innovation will still occur. What we're all interested is what system will produce the most (or will even be remotely acceptable). It's quite clear to me at least, that IP is necessary for this level of innovation.

      Now perhaps it might still be arguable that "some" innovation can still occur without IP, but that depends on how "innovation" is defined and it's still rather nominal in any event. I regard it as largely extraneous to the underlying question. I may have stated my case a little too strongly, but, by and large, it's true.

      Later

    9. Re:Cluelessness by FallLine · · Score: 2
      This is largely incoherant and what little isn't, is incorrect. Patents on pharmaceuticals are no broader as a rule than microchips. In fact, empirically speaking, it's quite rare for any company to truely monopolize a market for an extended period. The combination of later emerging legal generics and superior alternatives means makes the patent much less valuable as time goes on. In fact, given the average useful length of the patent in the field, the company is obligated to charge a lot for it at the outset, because if they don't, the competitors will come along and steal their only chance.

      . No product Intel produces could save lives with minimum cost to the producer. The HIV drugs could save many people who would otherwise die pretty horribly. There's no risk to the company and they save thousands and gain great PR.
      It cost Brazil more than 440 million dollars just to rip off the drug companies in the year 2000. What's more, that figure doesn't even include the unquantifiable support from the community. Most places in the world where this is a problem have neither the training, the infrastructure, nor the resources that Brazil has. It may be a "poor" country, but it's not spineless like so many of these other countries.

      Furthermore, there is a risk. There was a popular bill just recently in the United States that proposed "reimporting" drugs that US drug companies make and export to Canada, Mexico, etc for significantly lower prices. What the proponents fail to realize is that the US is THE market that they depend on to make a profit; the drug companies sell to other nations just barely above cost because it can help _supplement_ their earnings. The problem is that people, like all too many on slashdot, will and have jumped to conclusions. (Hello, Al Gore? Nader?)

      Finally, many drug companies have offered free and/or greatly reduced price drugs to South Africa and others. But these nations have either rejected it, ignored it, tried and failed, etc. There is another side to this story...the NYT author doesn't tell you how many have failed. The countries that are most ravaged by diseases like AIDS are, almost by definition, ravaged by other problems as well. AIDS continues to spread in these countries, due to no fault of the drug companies. I'd argue at least that until a country can begin to stem infection (rather basic) they don't have a chance with these very expensive and complex treatments for existing patients.

      I'd also like to add that people can do just as much, if not more, than the drug companies can do. Can the drug companies do more to help? Sure, but it's hypocritical for 99% of the people on slashdot to complain about it when they themselves do next to nothing. Companies realistically can't do a great deal more until both people here agree to do more and the countries themselves (probably most importantly) get their acts together.
    10. Re:Cluelessness by FallLine · · Score: 2

      No, it's largely incoherant because your writing there literally didn't make much sense. Anyways, it's funny you mention Prozac. Eli Lilly lost a legal battle last year over their patent on Prozac, the end result is that generics are going to cut their price by 2/3rds. You ever heard of Zoloft? Well it's the competing medication now. As of March of last year it actually out sold Prozac in new prescriptions. The net result is a loss to Eli Lilly. I'd also like to remind you, that although Prozac was certainly a profitable project when taken on it's lonesome, for every popular drug like Prozac there are many many more that don't and cost just as much to develop.

      Although the drug industry certainly has returned some healthy profits, it's also had its share of failures. The bottom line is that if you were to map it out with all other investments and securities, its return is very much in line with its riskiness. This means that they really don't have fat that can be trimed that wouldn't result in an exodus of shareholders into less risky ventures and/or ventures of the same risk that simply return more. Translation: Cutting what you regard as excess profits in your casual examination can actually hurt the consumer.

      As for Intel's patents, they can be every bit as broad. You confuse the age of the semiconductor industry with a difference in patents. Intel has patents on any number of things, not just an exact design, but manufacturing technology, R&D, chemical compounds, chip design, etc.

      As for charity, I'm certain there is more you can do. How new is that computer of yours? Your car? Your apartment? Your stereo? I find it difficult to believe that you live a lifestyle below most Americans (which is well above the "average" world wide) Anyways, I'm sure you know the truth, even if you won't admit it at this moment.

    11. Re:Cluelessness by cynthetik · · Score: 1

      It may be a theory but not a fact - if that where the case there would have been no innovation or invention prior to IP laws. Also the soviet union using a completely different legal/govenmental structure would never have made any advances in medical fields. That is provably not the case. Don't mistake theory and fact. It is all too common in soft sciences like economics.

      --
      .sig .sig .sputnik
    12. Re:Cluelessness by cyber-vandal · · Score: 2

      Sure it is. That's why we pay the estate of Alan Turing a percentage when we use a computer, or Alexander Graham Bell's descendants own the IP on the telephone. Innovation comes from the most unlikely places, like a mouldy petri dish leading to penicillin. Drugs companies benefit from a huge amount of public domain research, they don't hold a monopoly on good ideas, only products. To say that research would grind to a halt obviously doesn't understand the human drive to know things.

    13. Re:Cluelessness by cyber-vandal · · Score: 2

      That's not quite right. The analogy to the pharmaceutical industry would be that Intel owned the rights to etching tiny transistors on silicon and anyone wanting to create a competing product would need to discover a completely new way of creating semiconductors. Anyone can make a silicon chip, but no two medicines can be the same, even if they treat the same illness.
      There is another side to this of course. No product Intel produces could save lives with minimum cost to the producer. The HIV drugs could save many people who would otherwise die pretty horribly. There's no risk to the company and they save thousands and gain great PR.

    14. Re:Cluelessness by cyber-vandal · · Score: 2

      So, because I disagree with you I'm incoherent. Can GlaxoWellcome sell fluoxetine (Prozac) even though Eli Lilly have the patent on it. No they can't, although they do make a competing anti-depressant based on a totally different formula. All Intel hold a patent on is their particular etching of a common chemical process. They cannot stop people making wafers from silicon dioxide and etching transistors on them, but Eli Lilly can stop any other company from making fluoxetine pills, even if a lot of the information required to make them is in the public domain.
      As for hypocrisy, well I do what I can in giving money to charity, but I'm not really in a position to give up my job and care for the sick in Africa. I haven't been a student for many, many years.

    15. Re:Cluelessness by partingshot · · Score: 1

      Right. The real reason they don't need
      patents is because they are anti free market.
      Which means anti-competition, which means
      anti-growth and anti-progress.

      --
      Anonymous posts are filtered.
    16. Re:Cluelessness by partingshot · · Score: 1

      >IP is simply necessary in order to secure future
      >innovation.

      Where is your proof?

      >Without IP the innovator simply gains no >advantage on his competitors for spending >resources and incuring risk,

      Its called catch up. The advantage is that
      your are ahead of the competition. This gives
      you advantage. What you are in effect saying
      is "With IP I could make a billion dollars,
      but without it, I can only make 1/4 billion.
      Its just not worth it"

      Do you see how ridiculous that statement is?

      > Although you might argue, as ridiculous as that
      > would be, that we would experience even more
      > without it, there is NO significant evidence
      > that points to this, quite the opposite in fact.

      That is exactly what I am arguing. Competition
      fosters progress. Look at any monopoly market and
      compare it to a highly competitive market and
      tell me which one is better. Where is _your_
      proof?

      --
      Anonymous posts are filtered.
    17. Re:Cluelessness by partingshot · · Score: 1

      Wow. Have you ever heard
      the story of unix->linux?

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    18. Re:Cluelessness by partingshot · · Score: 1

      We're not talking rules of debate here, we're
      talking truth. It is well accepted among
      economists that competition fosters growth
      and progress. It is well accepted that the
      profit motive leads to incentive. If you deny
      this, then there is not point in continuing any
      further. If you will deny the basic theories of
      economics, then we have no starting point at
      which to begin our discussion.

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    19. Re:Cluelessness by partingshot · · Score: 1

      >It's also well excepted by most mainstream
      >economists that intellectual property is
      >absolutely necessary to innovation

      Wrong. Economists will say that IP laws create
      monopolies and thus monopoly waste. Economists
      will say that incentive is the basis for
      innovation, and that incentive can take many
      forms. Some not even monetary!

      The problem I see with them is that they
      are a restriction on other's liberty.

      Where does your information come from?

      There is an online text at
      http://william-king.www.drexel.edu/top/prin/txt/ Ec oToC.html

      Believe me, I'm not making this shit up.

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    20. Re:Cluelessness by partingshot · · Score: 1

      In the earlier post you said IP was
      "absolutely necessary to innovation".

      I was trying to demonstrate that to be
      a false premise. Did I succeed?

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    21. Re:Cluelessness by george3 · · Score: 1

      "IP is simply necessary in order to secure future innovation"

      Isn't this the sort of argument Microsoft uses?

  39. Re:Non-sequitur by FallLine · · Score: 2

    We do. The NIH, NSF, various universities, etc routinely give out grants. Unfortunately, a great deal of it is wasted on academics and such that live off of grant money. The end result is a great deal of waste. It's been my experience that industry is far more productive and efficient than these grants are, even when you factor in these apparent "marketing and administration" costs.

    What you are in essence trying to create is a mini-planned economy. Unfortunately, government is no more capable of producing medical products than it is microchips.

  40. Re:Non-sequitur by FallLine · · Score: 2

    First off, you confuse "research" with practical research and development. It's very rare for an academic or non-profit instution to make a product that is ready for the prime time. If making that product is so easy, you can be sure that the universities themselves would manufacture it or at least license it for a lot more money (as it would have a much higher marketable value)

    Corporations do, as a matter of fact, focus on the long term quite often. The drug industry regularly makes investments that are 10, 20, 30+ years off. Perhaps you can argue that the nature of corporate management today, having to focus on short term excessively, is a force against long term development. However, it's simply not fundamental to the corporation. There is no rule in finance that says "the short term is all the matters". Rather, there are principles such as the time value of money, cost of capital, etc. These, however, don't say the long term is worth less, they simply discount future revenues based on how far out in the future they are. Put simply, this means that if a company has a choice between 20m today or 25m in 5 years, they'll most likely choose 20m. But if there is an AIDS vaccine that has an expected value of 1 billion dollars in 10 years versus other allocations that would net a mere 20m using the same amount of a capital, then you can be quite confident that the company will invest, if they have the resources.

  41. Re:Non-sequitur by FallLine · · Score: 2
    Does practical == Administration & Marketing?
    No, by practical I mean a product or idea that can actually be used by a real human being in a cost effective manner. The administration and marketing are simply necessary for sales, which are necessary to support on going development.

    Maybe I am mistaken. Please show me where
    research is being conducted by a corporation
    that has a 30+ year expected payoff time.
    Well it's a well known fact in the industry that the vast majority of new drugs take have a time horizon greater than 10 years. Long term in the drug industry is considered to be 20 and 30 years out and does happen at the larger drug companies like Merck, Glaxo, etc. Also there are other industries such as the rirline industry, logging, communication systems, etc where this takes place. Or here's one you should know, the wine industry. Where do you think those 40+ year old wine bottles come from? Or how about loans?

    I think you have a lot to learn about business.
  42. Re:Non-sequitur by FallLine · · Score: 2
    thats not research. the wine is collecting
    value. it is an asset.
    Huh, says who? Intellectual property is an asset, even if it's written off towards goodwill. Partially developed intectually property is often sold and can have tremendous value. I'm not sure if you can even say the value of wine is any more predictable. Wine can go bad. Wine, even from the finest vinyards, can have good years and bad years. Wine, like real estate, depends on the whims of consumers. [Speaking of which, there is a suprising amount of technology being used by modern day vintners].

    even microsoft's research
    only focuses a few years down
    the road.
    MS is a monopoly. They have little incentive to innovate, unless they can somehow expand their market. The software industry however has extremely short lifespans and is difficult to predict. It's a poor example.

    Can you provide
    me with specific examples of
    30+ years research payoffs?
    I already told you. Merck, Boeing, Lockheed Martin, AT&T (remember Bell Labs?), etc. I am not a walking bag of links. You can do your own research.

    Did Einstein ever turn a profit?
    No, but he also didn't ever make a practical invention that people could use. He consumed little capital and hence didn't incur risk. There is a world of difference between theoretical research for learning and applied research for the development of useful things. While it is certainly true that theoretical research has ultimately benefited today's innovations, this does not make the case for IP any weaker. The most you can say is that some things that have benefited us did not require IP. However, they also generally didn't require tremendous resources and IP is primarily about efficient allocation of resources.

  43. Re:The cluelessness is astronomical by FallLine · · Score: 2

    Yes, I made a goof/typo. I'm not appealing to authority, read the thread. He said that economists say that the free market is good, therefor patents must be bad because they're not purely "free market". I simply, matter of factly, pointed out that most economists agree with patents.

  44. Re:Non-sequitur by FallLine · · Score: 2
    Wine is a physical asset. It is not the
    same as research
    Which is totally irrelevant to the point of corporate investment horizons.

    And a patent grants a monopoly. Giving the
    drug company little incentive to innovate.
    So if I patent an automatic nose picking machine that does not work does that make me rich? No. The only way that happens is if my innovation is useful and productive. Merck's patent is only as good as what they innovate. If competitors work around their patents, as they often do, that patent then becomes a worthless monopoly.

    That is why it still costs Merck $10-15/k
    to produce the drugs and India can do it for
    $700.

    Where are you getting these numbers from? Anyways, India doesn't invent drugs, they copy them. If they are manufacturing their drugs for less (which you would have a hard time knowing), it could be for any number of reasons. Such as, cheap labor, lack of quality control, lack of regulation, etc. Anyways, the manufacturing costs tend to be a very small component of the sales cost from a legitimate manufacturer. An illegal generic, on the other hand, simply has manufacuring costs to worry about, so that's where they'll spend their money.

    He made it possible for people to make
    'practical' inventions though didn't he?
    Aren't all 'practical' inventions the result
    of what was once a fanciful theory?
    Maybe so, maybe not. But this doesn't mean IP isn't unnecessary for that final, most expensive, step or two.

    BTW, how do you explain the innovations of
    the open source community that have occured
    without the use of IP?
    I don't consider the vast majority of Open Source development to be innovation, but rather free loading. I don't have time to enumerate the typical stuff that is proffered, but perhaps if you offer what you consider to be significant innovation, i'll take them on individually when I get a chance.

  45. Re:that wasn't a libertarian view by FallLine · · Score: 2
    I agree that some sort of IP laws are necessary. however, I think that the current protection is too long. also, I think in a situation like this, where lives are at stake, and corporate profits aren't(even if they were I wouldn't care much), you have to make an exception. I realize that many people here value a corporation's right to make a profit over thousands or millions of human being's right to be alive, but I find that concept morally revolting.
    I don't care for the rest of the stuff, but allow me to make two points:

    First, it's not that most people care for the corporation itself. It's just that ignoring the corporation's legally established IP rights is short sighted and, in the long run, can hurt everyone.

    Second, the medicine simply would not exist without that corporation, let alone the western world. It's not as if the Brazillions would be better off if the corporation did not exist.

    Third, this experiment in Brazil is rare and noteworthy. If I remember correctly, it cost them 442 million to even RIP off the drug makers and provide these medications for ONE year. If the drug companies were to provide similar services to all in need, it'd be billions of dollars and it'd probably put them out of business. Even that alone is well beyond what most poor countries can raise. Not to mention the intangible good will of its citizens, which is often not found in others.

    Fourth, where were you when Brazil needed medicine? Just how much of your income have YOU sacrified for the good of the world? For all the ranting and raving about the "evil" corporation, the corporation is really just an agent that represents us as humans. If it suddenly becomes better than us, it's no longer an investment, it's a charity. So I reiterate, how much have you given to charity? Nothing? A few dollars? 5% of your income? 10%? I bet you still have plenty of excess material goods. Then don't act so high and mighty.

  46. Re: Lung Cancer and Emphysema Vaccine or cure? by FallLine · · Score: 2
    Then everyone could smoke cigarettes and not worry.

    Huh? I don't get where you're going with this.

    AIDS would not be an epidemic if people had self-control. Anyone who can see people dying around them and not take precautions, much less abstain, is going to die of something rather quickly. If not AIDS, then something else.

    If we had to subsidize the repair of every self-inflicted wound, the world would be bankrupt, at least the responsible and prudent portion would be bankrupted at the expense of the debauched.
    Are you being facetious or not? I don't disagree with much of this, though I'd take a different tone. i.e., if a country can't feed itself or do the relatively basic task of stopping mass infection then they're certainly not capable of the requirements of a massive AIDS medication program for existing victims. I'd argue that, given the kinds of resources Brazil had to spend (440m in one year) to even appropriate these patents, we'd be better spending that kind of money towards getting those governments and society's in order (if at all possible). Things like BASIC sanitation, transportation, medication, education, infrastructure, etc would do far more to improve their welfare than a failed medication program.

    OTOH, I think it would be an interesting experiment for some countries to reject the western idea of Patent protection. Remember that they were necessary to do trade (East India Co., South Seas).
    Uh, until most recently, only a few developed Western nations supported IP. While the West had experienced massive innovation, they stagnated. If they were lucky, they were able to copy us. Witness India, China, Russia, etc. [Hint: This is not for skilled or intelligent people.]. Meanwhile, in recent years, as IP is starting to gain international support, we are seeing actual spending towards legitimate R&D in those same countries for the first time ever. Witness India's generic drug companies of today and others. In other words, I'd argue that, this experiment has been done on both sides, in a thousands different ways, by hundreds of different countries.

    But before you get to easy with the idea, you end up with a might-makes-right in the IP world. Whoever can bribe or buy the largest DNS service could usurp slashdot.com or any other domain name. You could have a competing DNS server with duplicate entries, but there would be chaos.
    I'd argue it's the other way around. Except for in the case of outstanding trademarks, popular domains like slashdot have not been stolen. If this were true intellectual anarchy, assuming the internet infrastructure would even be a possibility, slashdot would be up for grabs to the strongest or wealthiest or dirtiest bidder.

    Conversely, if some drugs are that important, maybe Emminent domain should be used on IP (I wonder how many patents the NSA violates without compensation). Basically have government pay a one time fee based on the projected value of the patent to create a public-domain drug.
    This would have the effect of killing, or at least being a force against, research where ever the government might decide to appropriate the patent. By definition, if that one time fee is less than the earnings the innovator can make now, that is less incentive to take risk. Also, if that payment is just as great, the consumer pays just as much on the aggregate, only it'd show up in their taxes instead. If you truely believe the government is vastly superior at R&D, without being burdened by the likes of marketing and administration (heh), then certainly the two can operate side by side; government would presumably out innovate the commercial companies. [Though I don't believe this for a moment]

    They probably won't. I wonder how many slashdot readers approve of the "endangered species" act basically taking property WITHOUT compensation. This is convienient because the government kills any value of the land and it doesn't put a hole in the budget, Everyone is happy except the landowners and the endangered species that are burned out as people turn their plots into desert before anything is discovered.
    I do have concerns about this kind of regulation. Although I'm not sure about the endangered species act itself, the courts have historically awarded damages to the land owner in similar cases where it can be proven that government decisions/regulation hurt the value of the land after it was purchased, on the grounds that it constitutes a taking.
  47. gave away 25% of net worth by peter303 · · Score: 1

    Bill's net worth has fluctated between $28G and
    $104G the past 12 months. He gave away $22G the
    past two years, approximately a quarter of his net worth at the time.

    Have you all given away 25%?

  48. Re:blame the people too by Bongo · · Score: 1

    why should we try harder to stop something like this? they need to change their ways, we can't change them for them.

    Guess you'd better write to Bill and tell him not to bother: Gates Pledges $100M for AIDS Vaccine

  49. Re:blame the people too by Bongo · · Score: 1

    Nice words. But what are you DOING about it?

    I just knew someone would ask that. Does not having unsafe sex count? Does asking people not to get into a blaming match count? Does sending money to charity count? It's not much. It's a start. It's something. I'm not a president, or a doctor, or a tribal chief.

    Please make any suggestions. Preferably something you've also tried doing and can vouch for.

  50. Re:blame the people too by Bongo · · Score: 1

    Nice in theory, but if you're doing what you can do and others refuse to, then _they_ aren't looking to respond and it is a natural human reaction to throw your arms up in despair and say "I can't do anything because I can't get cooperation from the necessary parties, who themselves need to take responsibility and take action". See "blame" is just a negative facet of responsibility./I>

    You taking responsability has nothing to do with whether others take responsability.

    If you give up, you are NOT taking responsability.

    I get the feeling that you are twisting your words to make it ok to "blame" while claiming to "take responsability".

    All you are saying is "oh well, yes, I'll try to take responsability, but if they don't, then what's the use... blah blah

    Of course they have to as well, but then, maybe I should just shut up and not try recommending to anyone to take responsability, I mean, why bother trying if nobody is listening????

  51. Re:It take two hands to strangle by Bongo · · Score: 1

    A call to take responsibility is a call to say this part is mine to control. You may want to call on others to do their part, as well, but your actions are what you control directly.

    Wonderfully clear wording.

  52. Re:Good post-modernists by Bongo · · Score: 2

    As a good post-modernist...

    If I may be slightly off-topic, it's interestng that you state where you are coming from. I've recently been reading about a system called Spiral Dynamics, that sets out different cultural world views or vMemes. There are about 8 of them, each colour coded, so as not to imply that any one is 'better' than any other.

    Individual people are at a particular vMeme, which forms their basic value system.

    I'd say that most people arguing here are really showing us mainly an Orange vMeme vs. Green vMeme argument (with a sprinkling of Blue). Actually the argument cannot be resolved, because the basic value system used by each is just so different.

    The Orange is about competition, winners and losers, and individual pursuit of achievement. The Green is about degrees of sensitivity and caring, relating and listening. Orange: the more you achieve, the better you are. Green: the more you are sensitive, the better you are.

    I'm probably mis-representing the idea, but I get the feeling that the Orange's are the ones saying, "hey, it's business, and besides, those Africans are way too backward to even know what to DO with this stuff". Meanwhile the Greens are shouting, "Man, it's our one World, one planet. Those are human beings, just like you and me. We are killers and murderers if we don't help them!"

    Needless to say, because the two sides, oh, not to mention the Blues, "they deserve it for their voodoo witch belief" (you know who you are), so yes, the two or three factions are just in totally different value systems. The gulf between them is wider than they think, because their own values are so obviously 'right', how could anyone think differently?

    But to get back to the parent post, PoMo is pretty Green.

  53. Re:blame the people too by Bongo · · Score: 5

    This isn't a case of "capitalists and the corporate republic and patents are killing millions in Africa". This is a case of Africans and African beliefs killing themselves through denial and stigmatizations.

    The article is about one problem. And you're talking about another. The article is talking about the physical needs (drugs and money). You're talking about the cultural problem (awareness, education, stigma, rejection).

    This is fine. But I take issue with your use of the word 'blame'. You see, by introducing this word, you're creating a third problem. Because when you blame someone, there's a subtle implication:
    "Its' their own fucking fault and they deserve all they fucking get for their own fucking stupid idocy and don't come fucking pleading to us for fucking help."

    Blame doesn't get you anywhere. Actually it just gets in the way. Because there's a difference between action/consequences and blame.

    When I blame somebody, I'm avoiding looking at my own respons-ability. That's the ability to respond. If we start blaming companies or witch doctors, we're forgetting our ability to respond to the situation.

    Otherwise, drug companies will just blame the witch doctors, while the third world governments blame capitalist greed. While actually a concerted effort by all parties will get everybody a lot further more quickly.

    I'm sure cootch knows this anyway -- I'm just saying that blame is not going to help.

    When I'm looking to blame, I'm looking for how, "it's nothing to do with me." But when I'm looking for how I'm responsable, I'm looking for what I can do. How can the drug companies respond. How can the governments respond. How can the village witch doctors respond. How can South African citizens respond. How can Kenyan teachers respond. How can American citizens respond. But don't blame.

  54. Re:What do we expect? by sethr · · Score: 1

    Bad example: I'm a white guy that finds himself in the middle of harlem late at night. I'm about to get mugged. Does a taxi cab driver have a responsibility to pick me up and drive me out of their for free?

    Very bad example. You assume that just because you're white you're going to get mugged in Harlem. That's not just a bad example, it's stupid, ignorant, and maybe racist.

    since when do drug campanies have a responsibility to short-change themselves (and thereby their investors) in order to save people that are sometimes too stupid to save themselves?

    No one, least of all Tina Rosenberg in her article, is suggesting that drug companies ought not make money. She suggested that, perhaps, given the amazing amount of money those companies spend on advertising, and given the fact that some of the drugs they market were pretty much given them, that their excuse that the high cost of research is to blame for the high cost of the drugs they sell may not be on the up and up.

    Seth

  55. Re:blame the people too by drac · · Score: 1

    I agree with most of what you are saying; however, it has NOTHING to do with the points made in the N.Y. Times article.

    The article details the problems with current bureaucratic responses to the AIDS problem, and notes that Brazil turns upside down many previously held ideas about the range of possibilities available to developing countries.

    The article has little to say about blaming capitalism or drug companies.

    Read before you post.

  56. Re:Let Us look at this an other way. by NMerriam · · Score: 2

    If someone needs more expensive treatment, a hostpital isn't obligated, nor should it be, to pay to save someone's life

    This is very much incorrect. if you walk into an emergency room and say "I need to see a doctor" it doesn't matter how much money it costs to treat you, there in no hospital in the US that can legally turn you away. Doctors and hospitals can and will be fucked to all hell by the DA (and lawsuits from surviving relatives) if they refuse treatment to anyone.

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  57. Re:Let Us look at this an other way. by NMerriam · · Score: 4

    We don't blame restaurants for not giving free food to the starving masses, why do you blame drug companies for not giving free medicine to the diseased masses

    because restaurants don't have legally enforced monopolies on food.

    If you could buy AIDS medicines for $2 at Wendy's, I doubt people would be getting upset at the drug companies. They'd be raising money to buy it from Wendy's at wholesale...

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  58. Re:What do we expect? by sethg · · Score: 2
    Assume, for the purpose of argument, that the only way to have anti-AIDS drugs is allow private companies to sell patented drugs at huge markups.

    Fine. So let those companies sell those drugs at huge markups -- in countries that can afford to pay for them. An American insurance company, or a Canadian provincial health authority, could pay $20,000/year (or whatever) to supply one person with anti-AIDS drugs. But 99% of people with AIDS in the Third World don't have access to that kind of money. If they die slow painful deaths, the drug companies still don't get anything.

    The drug companies may not care about this: perhaps they're afraid of cheap anti-AIDS drugs being smuggled back into the First World, or perhaps they're trying to set Third World prices to maximize profit rather than to maximize the number of people cured. But governments, which are supposed to consider the welfare of their population as a whole, certainly should.
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  59. Re:These are drug companies, not drug charities by The+Cunctator · · Score: 2

    An interesting link.
    I like how Pfizer sidesteps the entire issue of life-saving drugs. The article celebrates the salutory effects of generics but Pfizer of course continues to lobby for the extension and strengthening of patent laws and against generic drugs.
    As the NYT article points out, drug companies will use any patent they can to prevent the genericizing of drugs (the example given was that one company got a patent on the coating drug for the pill of an AIDS drug that wasn't protected by patent in Thailand). And generic drugs, which as the Pfizer article effectively admits are the only downward price pressure on drugs, are prevented from entering the US marketplace for at least 20 years, which can mean a lot of lives.

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  60. Re:Human Life vs. Intellectual Property by The+Cunctator · · Score: 3

    First off, you should probably say "socialist" instead of "communist".

    A good response, but if you read the article, you'd see that there are mechanisms by which the government can "buy out" a company's IP rights. In fact, there are multiple mechanisms, including compulsory licensing or the more drastic seizing of the rights (for a price, of course).

    The law actually has the flexibility. The fault lies in the execution of it; for a time the Clinton administration was guilty of pandering only to the pharma industry's interests, but they did slowly and halfheartedly.

    Misapplication and misuse of IP laws is certainly not new; there have been patent lawyers and companies working to exploit the law for profit rather than for societal benefit since the laws began. But as the US laws become the world laws, the exploitation is spreading across the globe.

    You can bet what tack the Bush administration will take. Hooray for pharma stock!

    Of the 1st-world countries, it is the US that by far needs to take responsibility on this issue.

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  61. Bullshit. by The+Cunctator · · Score: 5

    That argument is simply bullshit. Most AIDS research is funded in whole or in part by governmental (aka OUR) money. The only reason these companies can charge that much for drugs is because governments act as their muscle.

    The thrust of the article wasn't that companies shouldn't be allowed to turn a profit; it was that they shouldn't be allowed to turn an obscene profit. As people have repeatedly pointed out, drug companies are not charging high prices just to cover R&D. Most of their profits go into advertising and paying their executives.

    As a good post-modernist, I try to avoid taking moral stands; neither the article nor most of the Slashdot readership has called the companies 'evil'. However, it's difficult not to find something wrong with people, governments, and companies placing a higher priority on milking profit than saving millions upon millions of lives.

    In a purely free market, there wouldn't be any IP protection; it's an artificial governmental restraint. Intellectual property law is supposed to be in service of society; and I hope that most of society doesn't believe that allowing companies to charge $21000 a year for drugs that cost $700, drugs which mean the difference between a slow, painful, debilitating death, and a healthy, productive life, is in the service of society.

    Don't take a moral stand; just decide whether you'd rather the continent of Africa to collapse into complete anarchy, and much of east Asia, and perhaps Latin America too (oh no! where will we get our cheap processors and jeans?).

    There are many other entities at fault in this equation. India, for example, is the number one producer of generic copycat drugs, but refuses to provide free AIDS treatment to its teeming masses. The only reason that I am attacking the drug companies so vociferously is that fools like you defend them.

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    1. Re:Bullshit. by fiore42 · · Score: 1

      That argument is simply bullshit. Most AIDS research is funded in whole or in part by governmental (aka OUR) money. The only reason these companies can charge that much for drugs is because governments act as their muscle. So basically what you're saying is that, by recieving essentially what amounts to free money from the government, corporations are thus able to charge more? That's simply a bizarre idea. they shouldn't be allowed to turn an obscene profit. By whose standards? Who has the right to wave a gun in the direction of the individuals that make up said company, and say, "Sorry, I've decided your profits are obscene, and I'm going to fix that."? Don't take a moral stand; just decide whether you'd rather the continent of Africa to collapse into complete anarchy, and much of east Asia, and perhaps Latin America too (oh no! where will we get our cheap processors and jeans?). How exactly do you plan on deciding anything without a moral stand? Rolling dice, maybe? "Would it be a bad thing for Africa to be in anarchy?" is just as much a moral question as, "Is murder wrong?" or "Is Capitalism evil?" Or is your attempt to avoid taking a moral stand simply so you can decide on whatever course of action fits your momentary whims? . The only reason that I am attacking the drug companies so vociferously is that fools like you defend them. "I attack X because you like X?" -Fiore

    2. Re:Bullshit. by elfkicker · · Score: 1

      I won't get into the word "most", or guess at the percentages, but let's go back to the article:

      The drug companies' actions are particularly distasteful because neither Bristol nor Glaxo invented these drugs or discovered their use in AIDS therapy. Glaxo's 3TC was discovered and patented for AIDS use by BioChem Pharma, a Canadian company, which licensed the drug to Glaxo. d4T was synthesized by the Michigan Cancer Foundation in 1966, using public funds. Its application for AIDS was discovered at Yale University, which holds the patent, using grants from the federal government and Bristol. In the United States, Bristol's Zerit sells for $4.50 for 40 milligrams. Pharmaceutical manufacturers never disclose their costs, but one indication of Bristol's markup is that Pinheiro can sell her version for 30 cents - and it is possible her costs are higher than Bristol's, since the multinationals have access to cheaper raw materials. The National Institutes of Health discovered ddI's use as an AIDS therapy. The N.I.H. then licensed the drug to Bristol for a 5 percent royalty, with the stipulation that Bristol's pricing take into account the health and safety needs of the public. But Bristol sells Videx for $1.80 in the United States for a 100-milligram tablet, while Far-Manguinhos in Brazil can sell the generic equivalent for 50 cents. The contract has a fair-pricing clause, but it has never been enforced.

      These are the major drugs for treating AIDS, so where are all those billions of dollars that people ASSUME for R&D going? Apparently not to the development of effective treatments. Perhaps to one of the 20 new drugs for insomnia or depression. Maybe that fancy new toothbrush I just got.

      I'm surprised I haven't seen it in previous posts, but the is a great controversy going on right now about the link between HIV and AIDS. I won't advocate either side, but it's intresting stuff to read about if you find this whole situation stinks. Check it at Alive&Well's web site

    3. Re:Bullshit. by Lord+Vipor+Scorpion · · Score: 1
      Well, I'm guessing you posted AC so you could avoid revealing what a dumbshit you are, but here's an article from the NYTimes about how most pharmaceutical research is done by university researchers (and how these researchers are funded by the government).

      MEDICINE MERCHANTS: Birth of a Blockbuster; Drug Makers Reap Profits On Tax-Backed Research
      By JEFF GERTH and SHERYL GAY STOLBERG
      On Jan. 7, 1982, in a laboratory at Columbia University, a little-known science professor, Laszlo Z. Bito, finished a nine-month experiment on the eyes of cats. In his handwritten data, carefully charted in gray hardcover notebooks, lay the origins o ...
      April 23, 2000, Sunday
      National Desk , 6382 words

      You'll have to pay to read it online, but you could always go to your local public library & get it for free. Oh, but you probably don't believe in public libraries, either.

  62. Re:blame the people too by Petrus · · Score: 1

    Blame the educators, first.

    Has anyone ever heard, that if a virgin marries a guy that also never had sex before, and they stay out of drugs, that their practical chance of getting AIDS is NIL?

    If you have, I'll be sursprised, but all I ever heard is just references to condoms - ad nausea. No wonder that such education philosophy fails even in "developed" countries.

    Now just watch the rating of this unique idea.

  63. Re:COMMUNISM WOULD SOLVE THIS??? by Petrus · · Score: 1

    Off topic by a mile, but:

    Your Previous posts refers to the true Communism as per K. Marx. However, that was not stateless at all. K. Marx would never agree.

    Definition of state according K.Marx:
    "State is an organized form of violence of the governing class against the governed class"
    adding that, in case of Communism the governing class is the worker's class.

    That's all. No service to the nation, no responisble stewardship over subjects/citizens, no ideals. Just violence. That's what the communism really was, is and will be - sorry, but just as projected by K. Marx.

    The planned bloodshed and other "difficulties", that's all right, that is as per both Marx and Lenin. Not Hitler - he was bad, all right, but was prommising world domination without bloodshed.

    The other subject on Capitalism wining over reactionary royalty and feudalism by progrssive arguments is not quite right either.
    Depending on the monarch, some monarchies were worse and some were rather better - like Austria/Germany. And if not for the World War I. "argument", the people could not be really persueaded that capitalism of even democracy was better. Actually, Germany was much worse off and in crisis between wars in deep democratic capitalism, and the same democracy brought Hitler as a "solution" in fair elections.

  64. Not all bad . . . by Tam-Lin · · Score: 1

    I feel bad saying this, sorta, but . . . the world has too many people in it, yes? When populations get to big, something usually comes along to, well, cull the herd. Maybe AIDS is just what we need right now. Almost all of our really big problems would be solved if there were fewer people in the world.

    --

    Silly signature limit . . .
  65. Re:Bill Gates as philanthropist by Black+Parrot · · Score: 1

    > Stock that you do not sell is money that you do not have.

    FWIW, the FSF accepts donations in the form of stocks. If by chance BG doesn't see the FSF as a worthy cause, perhaps other charities would be equally willing to accept a pile of MSFT.

    --

    --
    Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
  66. Re:Bill Gates as philanthropist by Black+Parrot · · Score: 1

    > Apparently we can't give credit where it's due.

    Sure we can. Some of us just don't happen to think Gates is due any.

    If he dies tomorrow and we discover that he's been giving till it hurts -- or at least inconveniences -- and hasn't been bragging off about it, call it to my attention and I'll applaud him for it.

    --

    --
    Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
  67. Re:Bill Gates as philanthropist by Black+Parrot · · Score: 1

    > but to see you bag him because of the amount of money he's contributed?

    You mistake me. Personally, I don't care if he keeps every penny for himself and wastes it on bubblegum. What sets me off isn't him personally, nor the the greatness or smallness of his charity, but rather seeing people try to whitewash him into a saint just because he has lots of ill-gotten gain to throw around, and actually does throw a rather small portion of it around.

    Thank all the gods, I'm neither his judge nor his counsellor. But I'm not going to sit back and let a lot of bullshit propaganda go down without pointing it out for what it is.

    > Fuck you. Really. Fuck you.

    Now that your dander is up, you know exactly how I feel about all the twisty spin control the rich and powerful subject us to day in and day out. "Gates isn't a villian, he's a philanthropist!" "The California utilities are getting screwed!" "Vote for me and I'll give everyone everything they want, and lower your taxes too."

    It just goes on and on and on, and more of us ought to be pointing out what a crock it is.

    --

    --
    Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
  68. Re:Let Us look at this an other way. by Black+Parrot · · Score: 2

    > I think even the most strident freemarket supporter would say that to withhold medical care is wrong.

    Half the voices here seem to be saying otherwise.

    In the modern political dialog, "free market" is just a politically correct code phrase for "look out for #1, fuck everybody else". If you die because you lost the economic game, well, that's what you get for losing. Don't ask me for help; I'll never make it to the top of the heap if I stop to help you up instead of stepping on you.

    I mean, seriously... are we going to sit back and let millions of people die miserable deaths just so we can get that 43 profit on our stocks this quarter?

    No wonder you have riots every time the WTO holds a conference.

    --

    --
    Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
  69. Re:Profiteering? by Black+Parrot · · Score: 2

    > Heck, even Bill Gates has recently donated 100 million dollars to aids research. The obvious arguement is that we should not criticise them for the good they do.

    For more details on the magnitude of Bill Gates' magnanimity, see my other post on the topic.

    And yes, I detect the sarcasm. Please see the other post anyway.

    --

    --
    Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
  70. Re:Bill Gates as philanthropist by Black+Parrot · · Score: 3

    > And say what you will about Bill Gates, but at least he isn't hoarding all his wealth.

    Hmmm. He's worth $72,273,900,000 right now, and his $100,000,000 is spread out over the next five years, so his yearly donation of $20,000,000 is worth a whopping 0.02767% of his net worth.

    An ordinary millionaire would have to give a budget-busting $276.73 per year to keep pace. Someone worth $100,000 would have to hurt themselves to the tune of $27.67 per year -- that's a decent steak dinner, I'm telling you. A working highschooler could keep up by throwing a quarter in the hat once a year.

    "Capitalism overcoming the shortcomings of capitalism", indeed!

    All hail to Saint Bill of Borg! He steals from the rich -- or at least limits himself to the working class and above -- and throws pocket change to the poor -- at least when the media are watching.

    Sorry, Bill, but this is only going to buy the love of people without a pocket calculator.

    --

    --
    Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
  71. Re:Bill Gates as philanthropist by Black+Parrot · · Score: 3

    > Bill Gates has donated in excess of $10 billion to charity. In both relative and absolute terms, that's extremely generous.

    I know I should let this ride, but I just can't resist...

    Let's see. He's worth $72G now, and if you add back the $10G that he has reportedly given away, you get $82G, of which that $10G is... 12%. Your family doctor probably gives away a bigger share. Lots of middle class families give away a tithe just on general principles. If you compare on the basis of disposable fortune rather than gross, the attempts to portray Gates as a philanthropist look absolutely ridiculous.

    This is not an impressive sum for the world's richest man.

    And then you look at the $10G. How much is still sitting in the coffers of his self-aggrandizing Gates Foundation? How much was given away with strings attached? How much was given away as software, and reckoned at the sticker price rather than the almost-nothing that it actually costs him personally?

    How much was given away before he started having legal and PR problems? How much did he give away without a press release to tell the world about it? How often do his disciples invoke his donations as proof that he's a nice guy, never mind whatever he did to get the money in the first place?

    > You are a jealous hypocrite.

    Jealous? No. (See below.)

    Hypocite? You're making a lot of assumptions about what I'm worth and where it goes.

    > Be honest and admit you hate Bill Gates because he's more successful than you.

    Actually, I don't consider him successful at all, because I'm one of those freaks who doesn't believe that you "win" by dying with the most toys. Sure, he's got piles of cash and herds of brown-nosers, but I don't happen to want either one. I've got enough to eat and live under a roof and drive a car that doesn't break down too often, and enough left over for a few toys. Whenever I discover that I've got much more than that, I figure I've been spending too much time making a living and not enough time living a life, so I switch gears for a while. What makes you suppose everyone wants to be like him?

    Is he handsome? Has he got a winning personality? Lots of friends? Do girls fawn on him? Has he got musical talent? Does he speak lots of languages? Does he write novels or poetry? Paint? Hack on a project for fun? Does he do lots of cool stuff that other people don't?

    Sorry, but I'll save my jealousy for more deserving guys.

    > Short of donating his entire fortune to charity, there's nothing he could possibly do to make you like him.

    I probably wouldn't like him even then, though I would probably respect him for that particular act. Maybe even be jealous, if I found that I couldn't do the same thing.

    > Here's my response: learn basic economics. The economy is not a zero-sum game.

    Was that supposed to be relevant to some point you were trying to make?

    --

    --
    Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
  72. Brazil Poor? by the+eric+conspiracy · · Score: 2

    It seems to me that the author makes a big deal about Brazil being such a poor nation.

    Utter Hogwash.

    Brazil, on an international scale is a RICH country. It has the eighth largest economy in the world, just behind Mainland China and just ahead of Canada.

    The rest of the article is equally distorted - for example the claims that the pharmaceutical industry spends little on R&D at 33% of sales. THAT IS FIFTEEN TIMES THE AVERAGE IN US INDUSTRIES. The fact is that no other industry spends more on R&D than Pharma.

    Then it goes on to talk about the AIDS epidemic in Africa as if it were the fault of the US Pharmaceutical companies. Baloney. If you examine the various causes of AIDS in Africa one rapidly is forced to the conclusion that they failures to control the epidemic in some areas (but not others) have nothing to do with the availability of treatments. Treatments have NOTHING to do with the spread of the disease, only how long it takes for those infected to die. It has been long known to epidemiologists that the problems with AIDS in Africa are mostly of a cultural nature. This is why AIDS is a minor problem in poor Islamic nations in the north, and a major problem in richer southern nations.

    The is the worst kind of distorted journalism one can imagine because it twists the facts to the prejudices of the author. It is sickening to me to see a publication like the NYT print such a piece. It is even more sickening to me to see the readers of slashdot swallow this hook, line and sinker.

  73. Re:Capatalism by the+eric+conspiracy · · Score: 2

    Another reason extreme uncontrolled capatalism is actually very wastefull. Do we really need palm pushers and paid liars? What value are they really adding to society?

    Administration and marketting for a pharmaceutical company includes such activities as financial management, manufacturing operations and supplying technical information to the doctors whom you are selling you product to.

    Feel free to eliminate it, and see what you get.

  74. Re:not so high profit margin but by the+eric+conspiracy · · Score: 2

    Any Fool knows that means the customer is going to get ripped off with unfair prices. And that is exactly what is happening.

    Given the fact that the profit margin is no higher than that of a washing machine, how can you say that these are unfair prices?

  75. Re:Perhaps we need stronger regulation by the+eric+conspiracy · · Score: 3

    They have a profit margin of 16.9%.

    That is not at all a high profit margin.

    Coca-Cola's is around 28%; Microsoft's is 38.9%. Intel is 24.5%. General Electric, an old line commodity product company is 16.5%.

    Investment analysts like the Motley Fool recommend that you do not invest in a company unless their margin is at least 10% as otherwise they will not have the ability to fund future expansion, or weather an economic recession.

  76. Re:Drug Companies by DoorFrame · · Score: 2

    So let the governments try. Let them spend their money and resources on creating drugs and if they can do it better and faster than the companies, so be it. I think that they can't and it's misguided to try, but I'll give them a shot. But you can't blame the drug companies for wanting to make money. They're corporations. And that whole line about half the money not going to R and D is ridiculous, it doesn't matter where their money goes, it still goes somewhere and needs to be earned through profits on new drugs.

    Eh, this is a stinky subject for debate.

  77. Drug Companies by DoorFrame · · Score: 4

    Drug Companies spend their money developing these product which save lives, of course they are going to charge money for them. Of course. By the logic of the poster, the companies should be expected to give thier product away for free because, well hey, the drugs save lives? If they don't have the ability to make money on the drugs that they invent and develop themselves they will never develop any new drugs and we'll be in a lot bigger trouble in the long run. I'd rather have AIDS drugs expensive today and have a cure for that plague that's coming tomorrow, than have them free today and nothing in the future.

    Think ahead people, you're living in today and it's going to destroy your future.

    1. Re:Drug Companies by Tony-A · · Score: 1

      Public roads, streets, and sidewalks.
      Official weights and measures.

    2. Re:Drug Companies by Znork · · Score: 2

      Id rather have free drugs today and free drugs tomorrow, government funded and research grant funded, than rampant greed, lifetime drugs and no real cure.

      Face it, the drug companies arent needed. Get rid of them all and we'll still have the research. We'll just have a lot of unemployed IP lawyers, administrators and marketing people.

    3. Re:Drug Companies by Znork · · Score: 2

      Government does some things good and others not as good. But government funded research does a good job in many cases, because government doesnt do much more than pay for it; the scientists do the job. The same ones who do the research for the pharmaceutical industry.

      Add to that the slight difference in motivations; pharmaceutical companies do not want a cure, they want something they can sell again and again. While the government motivation is to find a cure so they dont have to pay for it again and again.

    4. Re:Drug Companies by Another+MacHack · · Score: 1

      All right, but apart from the sanitation, the medicine, education, wine, public order, irrigation, roads, a fresh water system, and public health, what have the Romans ever done for us?

    5. Re:Drug Companies by radja · · Score: 2

      Another option would be to produce the drugs locally, and bring it on the market at cost-price. All that's needed is a suspension of of the patent, which is feasible since a patent is a government granted monopoly. Also, patents can be suspended for reasons of national security (I guess a few million countrymen dying of a disease is an important national disaster, which could warrant this). This suggestion by african leaders was met with threats of trade embargoes. No company needs to give away anything.

      //rdj

      --

      No one can understand the truth until he drinks of coffee's frothy goodness.
      --Sheikh Abd-Al-Kadir, 1587
    6. Re:Drug Companies by nomadic · · Score: 2

      Oh, and the Challenger Disaster. And a fifty billion dollar trailer park in orbit that doesn't do anything or go anywhere. If that's where you want to see medical research go, look at NASA with your blinders off.
      OK, let's take a look here...

      THEY WENT TO THE FREAKING -MOON-!!!!!!!!
      WHAT THE HELL DO YOU WANT FROM THEM?


      --

    7. Re:Drug Companies by partingshot · · Score: 1

      No. He didn't say that the drugs should be
      given away for free. They should, in the
      name of justice, but he didn't say that.
      What he was saying is that the patent destroys
      the free market and the associated competition,
      growth, progress, etc. that a free market brings.

      --
      Anonymous posts are filtered.
    8. Re:Drug Companies by The+Gline · · Score: 2

      >>Yes, let's have the government take care of us some more. They've done such a wonderful job with all their other programs.

      Rural electrification, the FDIC, the postal service (bitch all you want, they're still pretty cheap), the GI Bill, the WPA... all abject failures, of course!

      --
      Honorary Member of Jackie Chan's Kung Fu Process Servers
    9. Re:Drug Companies by tswinzig · · Score: 2

      Id rather have free drugs today and free drugs tomorrow, government funded

      Yes, let's have the government take care of us some more. They've done such a wonderful job with all their other programs.

      --

      "And like that ... he's gone."
  78. Re:Why third-world drugs are expensive now. by marxmarv · · Score: 2
    Re-writing the laws now to allow anyone to take the drug companies' intelectual property is just going to make expensive experimental research much more risky for businesses
    "Intellectual", and not at all. What we're noticing here is that the cost of drugs could be cut in half if marketeers and executives (who are undeniably useless to the final product) were fired. Remember, when you buy Viagra, you also buy Viagra candy jars for doctors and "retreats" and/or campaign contributions for receptive government officials. The "product" is becoming less the end and more the means to the end -- what exactly is one buying anyway?
    Of course the 'payout' has to be a good amount if the chances of getting anything back at all are so low.
    What you are describing is not running a business. What you are describing is called "speculation" to be kind, or "gambling" to be honest. Economies based on speculation crash. Look at 1929. Look at 2001. Crashes hurt people. In whose interests are economies based on speculation?
    Sure both sides sent people to space and built sizable armies, which side benefited their common-man the most? The west had microwaves, TV's, cars, houses, ready amounts of food & goods, and appliances. The east had almost no non-military innovation (that they didn't steal from the west); the people lived with constant shortages, small cramped apartments with the minimum of comforts, and poor working conditions.
    This isn't as cut-and-dried as you think it is. If you ask whether the distribution of wealth, workplace safety, freedom from undue regulation, freedom from government propaganda, or the political power of an average citizen have gotten better in the West, the answer would be a resounding "no". I'd wager that Russia proper has seen improvement in most if not all of these factors.

    Of course, if you're not a consumer sheep, or you happen to live in the SF Bay Area, most of the hush-puppies you erroneously perceive as HolyManna from The Gh0d of KapitalOnHigh don't do you much good because you're paying a fortune for a cramped apartment and probably don't see much of it anyway.

    I think I'll choose capitalism over socialism any day.
    Are you sure? You haven't seen a pure application of either one, and you probably won't. Why? Remember, the Cold War was primarily about economic protectionism. If we had any number of socialist countries selling into the export market on a cost-recovery basis, with shorter workweeks and better wages, the fat cat industrialists would have seen Daddy's fortunes disappear overnight or seen risks to their lives. Contrary to what you may have read, this is the real "Domino Effect" that scared an entire generation of the elite. This is why this country has spent trillions of dollars of what is rightfully your money to fight this "scourge" in order to preserve useless moneyed middlemen (see also the DeCSS decision).

    Maybe you're happy being a tool. I'm not.

    -jhp

    --
    /. -- the Free Republic of technology.
  79. Re:These are drug companies, not drug charities by Flower · · Score: 1
    Millions in Brazil are dying of AIDS now. What did you expect their government to do? Throw up their hands and say "Well, we just don't have the money to pay the 1st World companies. Sorry but you're just going to have to die."?

    Brazil did exactly what they needed to. The cost to their society not to treat victims of AIDS is too high. But the cost to get treatment from the multi-nationals was prohibitive. So they cut the proverbial Gordian Knot and started up an industry to make generic drugs they could afford. So yes, in this case, it was the best thing for the government to say how much of a profit is enough.

    And if the drug companies don't like it then tough. If they had done the human thing and sold the drugs to the 3rd World for minimal or no profit they could have advertised that and bought my goodwill. They would have proven themselves to be good stewards of the IP given to them by the government. I would want them to have more. There is a business term for this but I forget it atm. Quite honestly, they can spend billions in ads now and it will never erase this one NYT piece.

    --
    I don't want knowledge. I want certainty. - Law, David Bowie
  80. Re:YES YOU FUCKING SICKO by Flower · · Score: 1
    Your analogy is flawed at a fundamental level because you are focused on one industry (the taxi driver) instead of focusing on society. To put it in perspective:

    Say, the taxi driver is altruistic and gives our would-be victim a ride out of Harlem. The cabbie spends 50 cents in gas, does not have to stop giving people rides and develops a goodwill relationship with the person he helps. While this goodwill is intangible, it is worth more than the 50 cents the cabbie spent. Our victim now becomes a source of free advertising and will recommend our company and more than likely the cabbie. In the end, this act of goodwill makes money.

    On the flip side, when the cabbie does not save our mugging victim. Multiple industries and people unrelated to the incident at hand pay the price for the cabbie's greed and indifference. To put it in the context of what is happening in Africa, the victim is severely beaten and hospitalized. The victim's place of work loses his productivity for months as he rehabilitates and the insurance company pays so much in medical bills that they must raise rates for everyone. The cabbie could have spent 50 cents once. Now 2000 people must pay 50 cents a month.

    And let's not forget that cabbie. People now don't feel the route he drives is safe anymore. He gets fewer fares. The bars there see a dip in profit for months while people get over the shock of such a brutal mugging. Some people actually know he did jack and despise him and his company for being so cold and not being a good neighbor. The cabbie and the company never do get those customers back. Everybody loses because a cabbie couldn't make a profit on 50 cents of gas he was burning up anyway.

    This is just the merest tip of the iceburg on why maintaining that someone's right to a profit is as valuable as someone's right to live is obscene. I'll drink that koolaid. It's far better than that short-sighted, immoral urine you seem to be consuming.

    --
    I don't want knowledge. I want certainty. - Law, David Bowie
  81. Re:YES YOU FUCKING SICKO by Flower · · Score: 1
    1st link is bad.

    2nd link is bad..

    3rd link is bad...

    I fixed them and read them. They have nothing to do with the hypothetical you originally proposed. Nor do they have anything to do with your original proposition that and I quote:

    Someone's right to make money is just as important as someone's right to live. Someone doesn't have the right to profit from another person's death, but if they weren't responsible for the person getting in that position in the first place, then by all means they can do what they want.


    I took your hypothetical and showed, in a capitalist framework, that intervening for the benefit of the individual was worth more than the cost of doing nothing because there was no immediate profit in it.

    Now, to refute me, you post links to three stories about murdered cabbies. They are tragic stories. It is not right that any of them had to die and that their loved ones have to suffer with a violent loss.

    That said, please inform me upon how they apply to the things you originally posted. As somebody else has posted, your hypothetical was bullshit to begin with. Now you want to tear down my argument by posting three links which are only connected because they are about cabbies. May I remind you that you brought up the "dream world" situation to begin with.

    I don't need to defend my arguement. It extrapolates on your scenerio and shows why it would behoove drug companies to send the needed drugs to combat AIDS in Africa instead of withholding them due to lack of profit. You have done nothing to refute it except try some bait and switch tactic to get off the topic at hand.

    --
    I don't want knowledge. I want certainty. - Law, David Bowie
  82. Let Us look at this an other way. by cpuffer_hammer · · Score: 4

    You are bleading in your car after a crash. The paramedic looks in the window and asks if you have $100 before he will help you.

    He has the IP in that he knows how to help you.
    He has the PP in his kit.
    He has a right to charge what he wants for his these things.

    I think even the most strident freemarket supporter would say that to withhold medical care is wrong. Is it realy so different when the IP is a drug and the crash victom is from the third world?

    1. Re:Let Us look at this an other way. by greenrd · · Score: 1
      Ok then. I've written some papers on this, and, as you might expect, it gets more complicated. More complicated than I was able to cover in this paper, in fact.

      http://www.lancs.ac.uk/socs/lumss/nephridium/essay -pool/essay_storage/essay20.doc

      Don't worry I'm not a "libertarian"!

    2. Re:Let Us look at this an other way. by Coward,+Anonymous · · Score: 2

      I think even the most strident freemarket supporter would say that to withhold medical care is wrong.

      It depends. If someone is going to die unless they get a bandaid, then a hospital should bite the bullet and give them a free bandaid. If someone needs more expensive treatment, a hostpital isn't obligated, nor should it be, to pay to save someone's life. Many people get medical treatment that they can't afford because they either have medical insurance, or their government provides a similar service. If the third world governments are unwilling to pay for the medical procedures of their citizens, why is it up to a first world corporation to do so? We don't blame restaurants for not giving free food to the starving masses, why do you blame drug companies for not giving free medicine to the diseased masses?

    3. Re:Let Us look at this an other way. by Coward,+Anonymous · · Score: 2

      If that's true, why do people have medical insurance? Why do I hear stories about people who are going to die because their insurance won't cover organ transplants if they can just go into a hostpital and say "I need an organ transplant and I'm not paying for it."

    4. Re:Let Us look at this an other way. by waynem77 · · Score: 2
      Isn't anyone going to comment on this, the ethical case for extreme obligation to help all those that need help, no matter who far away they are?

      I'd love to, but I'd have a difficult time coming up with something better than John Donne.

      Any man's death diminishes me, because I am involved in mankind, and therefore never send to know for whom the bell tolls; it tolls for thee.

      Web searches will come up with the complete text, for those who are interested.

    5. Re:Let Us look at this an other way. by partingshot · · Score: 1

      Good point. Who wins win Justice is placed
      at odds with Capitalism?
      BTW: we don't have a free market system in
      the United States. We have government
      sponsored capitalism. There is a difference.

      --
      Anonymous posts are filtered.
    6. Re:Let Us look at this an other way. by SubtleNuance · · Score: 1

      Free market is a great thing- it's the best system around for getting jsut about any efficient standard of living for everybody (though not at equal rates)

      That fucking bullshit! Did you read the part of the article that says "2/3rd of revenue goes to marketing and admin"? In a Planned Economy where the workers are autonomous to run their Enterprise to become successful (like the feeling of knowing you contribute to the _best_ XYZ facility in the world ... etc) helps to provide the SAME level of efficiencies with none of the Capatalist overhead crap (ala lawyers, IP, Marketing, Advertising etc etc). 63% of the American Economy does not contribute to the production of anything (as this article shows). These people are self-justifiying (sp?) cogs in a inefficient capatalist economy.

    7. Re:Let Us look at this an other way. by SubtleNuance · · Score: 2

      If someone needs more expensive treatment, a hostpital isn't obligated, nor should it be, to pay to save someone's life

      That statment makes me sick. Fucking selfish, myopic prick - what would you like me to do if someday YOU were in a position where you were unable to pay? If I was given the 'ability' to define the how/what/where a person recieves medial help - would you like for me to say " Pay or die"?

      You have been so blinded by capatalist indoctrination that you've lost touch with any real priorities - did you forget you live amoungst people? in a community?????

    8. Re:Let Us look at this an other way. by Cyclopatra · · Score: 3
      If that's true, why do people have medical insurance? Why do I hear stories about people who are going to die because their insurance won't cover organ transplants if they can just go into a hostpital and say "I need an organ transplant and I'm not paying for it."

      Because that only works when you are in immediate danger. If someone walked into an emergency room while dying of kidney failure, the doctors would be obligated to do what they could to save them (which doesn't, at that juncture, include a kidney transplant; there isn't time to find a donor, etc).

      For that matter, there usually is some sort of state hospital where you can go in and get medical care without paying for it - or, at least, where they give you a payment plan (give us $20 a month for the next 25 years) and you ignore the bills - at least, no state hospital I've heard of is ever going to go to a collection agency to make you pay them.

      Cyclopatra
      "We can't all, and some of us don't." -- Eeyore

      --
      "We can't all, and some of us don't." -- Eeyore
    9. Re:Let Us look at this an other way. by junkgrep · · Score: 1

      Free market is a great thing- it's the best system around for getting jsut about any efficient standard of living for everybody (though not at equal rates).

      But that doesn't relieve individuals of the onus of being ethical. If murder were legal, then companies, by the logic of the free market, would be perfectly justified in murdering their competitors. Yet that would not suddenly remove the moral onus from those corporate executives who sign the death warrants. Their ethical selves are still just as much at stake.

    10. Re:Let Us look at this an other way. by junkgrep · · Score: 1

      Isn't anyone going to comment on this, the ethical case for extreme obligation to help all those that need help, no matter who far away they are?

    11. Re:Let Us look at this an other way. by junkgrep · · Score: 2

      Well, Peter Singer makes a pretty convincing case that not only is it unethical to deny treatment in such an imeediate crisis situation, but that buying a luxury car when you could send the cost of it to UNICEF and save hundreds of starving children is no different.

      His point is not that we MUST give most of our wealth to (good and working) charity- but rather that we cannot fault someone for, say, crashing into and killing a child to avoid swerving and wrecking his car, when we refuse to fault him for doing the moral equivalent (not selling his car to save the lives of children just as much in jeopardy).

  83. Re:Think about long-term implications by Znork · · Score: 2

    Well, frankly, in my opinion the abuse that drug companies and other IP industries have done to the IP system has terminated their right to exist. We do not need intellectual property any more, because it does no longer serve society.

    The consistent abuse done to patents and copyright will guarantee that that is the eventual outcome. Tension will build up as society sees no legitimacy in the existence anymore, and revokes most if not all forms of IP, with the result that the rampant greed shown in the abuse will destroy even the useful and semi-legitimate forms of IP.

    Research will continue, but government funded. The good scientists arent in it for the money, but rather the prestige and enjoyment of research.

  84. This missed the real story... by john187 · · Score: 1

    Of course, and as always, the nytimes missed the real story. Obviously, there are economic realities concerning medicines in the third world. This is not a new story at all. Many of these countries can not even obtain 'relatively' in-expensive medicines, such as Polio vaccine.

    The real story is that HIV is not just a single viral strain. It takes many forms. Each of the drug cocktails and treatments currently only has the ability to treat a single strain or a narrow range of the viral incarnations, and in fact, often the individual undergoing treatment must switch from drug to drug, or continue adding drugs to their therapy regime over time, just to keep up with mutations of the virus.

    The point? Almost all of the research going on with AIDS/HIV is taking place in the western world to the benefit of western patients. Even if most of the current AIDS/HIV drugs could be sent to every suffering patient in the third world, many of them would be ineffective, or useless because the third world has different strains of the virus then we have in the western world.

    Why is no research money spent on formulating drugs for the third world? Easy, drug companies don't stand to make money on the third world. And money to pay for AIDS/HIV research is all coming from western society to pay to help western patients.

    Ironically, hundreds of people have posted messages espousing the virtue of capitalism, and how violating IP law is some slight against the American "free market" and capitalistic society.

    It's irrelavent. The question is the same as "Why do people drive excessively large vehicles?" We would rather waste fuel, or have drugs here, then have it for the third world. Simple old world selfishness, I guess.

  85. Blame and Smallpox by joshamania · · Score: 2

    Wow, are all of you a bunch of idiots. At least the several of you that are tossing the word blame around. If you want to blame someone or something for this crisis, blame yourselves.

    What ever happened to the altruistic UN organization that wiped smallpox off of the face of the planet? What happened to that kind of worldwide effort to eliminate a killer disease and embetter all of humanity? What happened to us?

    This AIDS/HIV thing is out of hand. It must be stopped like smallpox was stopped. Granted, the solution is more expensive, but it must be done anyway.

    And you types with the blame game, drop it. That is like blaming Jews for living in Germany in 1939. That is like blaming the Chinese for living in China in 1932.

    1. Re:Blame and Smallpox by joshamania · · Score: 2

      Seeing as how my limited resources will help few, I have not bought my plane tickets to South Africa. I could not afford the drugs for one individual. I have written my Senator and Congressman on this though, and I feel that is a lot more that most people will have done, yourself included. So why don't you go moralize to someone else now.

    2. Re:Blame and Smallpox by clink · · Score: 1
      Sounds like you're the one blaming people pal. The U.N., "Us", whatever. What the hell are YOU doing about it? Looks to me like you're nice and comfy in your house posting to Slashdot. Why don't you hop a flight to Zimbabwe and lend a hand?

      Come on bud. Stop your hand wringing and moralizing and start helping! This shit isn't gonna fix itself! There are people DYING in Africa right now from AIDS related complications! You need to get a suitcase full of meds and go help somebody.

      Or are you all talk and no game?

  86. SmarterTimes by rm3friskerFTN · · Score: 1
    Founded in June 2000, Smartertimes.com is dedicated to the proposition that New York's dominant daily has grown complacent, slow and inaccurate. Even an ordinary semi-intelligent guy in Brooklyn who reads the newspaper carefully early each morning can regularly notice errors of fact and of logic. Smartertimes.com is dedicated to assembling a community of readers to support a new newspaper that would offer an alternative to the dominant daily.

    Smartertimes.com -- "Smarter than the Times, and almost as arrogant, but with only a tiny fraction of the circulation."

    Please vist the SmarterTimes ARCHIVES

    Maintain a questioning attitude

    --

    I believe Juanita

  87. Re:Non-sequitur by gimpboy · · Score: 1

    if we can spend a trillion dollars for a missile defense system, can't we sponsor a little research?

    like nsf?

    use LaTeX? want an online reference manager that

    --
    -- john
  88. bringing drugs to the market. by gimpboy · · Score: 2

    i dont know where they got the 2/3 number for marketing and admin-it sounds a bitt off to me. in reality it takes about 10 years for a drug to go from conception to market, and they have about a 20% success rate.

    so say in 1991 research began on 10 drugs. at best only two of them exsist right now. i'm sure that pharmaceutical companies to spend a bit on administration. this would be because of all the regulatory loops they have to jump through.

    research isn't just a monkey with a labcoat, some flasks and some chemicals. the capital investment required is enormous, this doesnt even include clinical trials, dealing with the fda, etc.

    to tell people (or orgainizaions representing people like mutual funds), you have to give us all of your money for the good of the world is rediculous. especially considering the governments of these countries are corrupted past the point of caring for their own people.

    hell if research is so cheap, why dont all of the third world countries scrape together $50 or however much it takes to do aids research, setup a lab, and start doing research on their own? because in reality it isnt that cheap.

    third world countries are poor, i will not deny that. on many levels the united states is pretty pathetic (we consume 90% of the worlds resources and have less than 10% of its population) i will agree with that also. some people here work very hard though, and they invest their money so they can retire when they are too old to work. to tell them that they have to give up their life saveings for the good of humanity is a streach for me.

    use LaTeX? want an online reference manager that

    --
    -- john
    1. Re:bringing drugs to the market. by elegant7x · · Score: 2

      we consume 90% of the worlds resources and have less than 10% of its population

      Yeh, right. The United States has ~4% of the worlds population 6*10^9/2.8*10^5. If you could be that far off on the population count, you're numbers for consumption are probably just as whacked.

      Amber Yuan 2k A.D

      --

      "and dear god does this website suck now." -- CmdrTaco
    2. Re:bringing drugs to the market. by Arkaein · · Score: 1

      Rather than trying to cast doubt on the article, you could try to at least find alternative evidence. I would like to see supplementle evidence too (in either direction), but casting doubt on a well established news source in what appears to be a well researched effort is just spreading FUD.

  89. Re:Bill Gates as philanthropist by tbo · · Score: 3

    Hmmm. He's worth $72,273,900,000 right now, and his $100,000,000 is spread out over the next five years, so his yearly donation of $20,000,000 is worth a whopping 0.02767% of his net worth.

    Bill Gates has donated in excess of $10 billion to charity. In both relative and absolute terms, that's extremely generous. Have you donated more than 10% of your net worth to charity? I doubt it. Have you donated more than $10,000,000,000 to charity? Not a chance. You are a jealous hypocrite. Bill Gates is not.

    Be honest and admit you hate Bill Gates because he's more successful than you. Short of donating his entire fortune to charity, there's nothing he could possibly do to make you like him.

    The same goes for all those people out there for bashing pharmaceutical companies for being greedy and spending only 33% of their income on R&D (a far greater percentage than any other industry).

    What really pisses me off is all you people who scream about others being greedy when you haven't done anything to help others.

    I know what you're going to say... Here's my response: learn basic economics. The economy is not a zero-sum game.

  90. Re:Non-sequitur by werdna · · Score: 2

    Further, the behavior of spending so much more on marketing and admin does not cohere well with saying that R&D will suffer if they are not allowed to make ample profits.

    Repeating the argument in different words doesn't improve it. This is still a non-sequitur. There is simply no linkage between the two.

    So what if it costs $1B to perform R&D for product A, and it costs $2B to manufacture and sell it. Does this mean that the incentive of a patent monopoly was diminished therefor? Would it cost any less to manufacture and sell it if there were no monopoly? Would the R&D funds still be there because it were so expensive to make?

    Does the fact that $1B is less than $2B sufficient to assure that the $1B would be there anyway to support the research if no one could "own it?" If no one could own it, would the economics for the $2B manufacture and sale be unaffected?

    Come on. One thing has nothing to do with the other.

  91. Re:Non-sequitur by werdna · · Score: 2

    How about another line of reasoning? Say that the IP rights are suspended (which sounded perfectly legal in view of the emergency). Say research does suffer a bit in the future. Hell, say entire corporations fall apart, and the vaulted "progress" is stiffled for decades. How is that worse than people suffering and dieing? Corporations are not alive nor is the second derivitive of human understanding. Why value abstractions over one's genetic kin?

    This is an age-old argument, and a difficult one that should not be made qualitatively -- because this cuts both ways. Health care costs money, and some people can't afford it. So nationalize it, what the heck? But if we nationalize health care, perhaps folks will go to law school instead of medical school, and health care will suffer. Will more people or fewer people die because of the change? Would more people benefit from the advances in health care in the former scenario, or more people benefit from the advances in availability in health care in the latter? Will there, in fact be advances in the former case, and increased availability in the latter.

    These are all hard questions, and ones we shouldn't screw around about with back of the envelope guesses. If that Pharms go belly-up because we took away their property without compensation, would more people die for the lack of the drugs yet to come? I don't know the answer to this question -- I do agree, however, that it is an important one to ask.

  92. Non-sequitur by werdna · · Score: 3

    Interestingly enough, the claim of patents being needed to finance new research is rebutted with the statistic that two-thirds of the drug companies costs are in marketing and administration; the bulk of their costs aren't in R&D.

    However good this may sound, this "argument" is a non-sequitur. What has one (cost of R&D/marketing) thing to do with the other (benefits of the patent system)? Who has ever claimed that a monopoly on the use, sale or marketing of a product would somehow impact upon the costs of manufacturing, advertising and distribution of the same? Still further, the study hardly segregated marketing of patent-related goods against costs of marketing of non-patent-related goods, so the result is itself unuseful.

    But for the R&D, there would be no drugs. But for the drugs, there would be nothing to market. No incentive to R&D, no drugs.

    If there were drugs, by luck or otherwise, the lack of a monopoly would not justify the investment in marketing, for a generic free-rider would simply sell and distribute their goods at much reduced costs and therefore, for greater margins. No sales, no incentive to R&D or marketing, no drugs.

    Unsurprisingly, margins on patented products *ARE* higher than margins on unpatented products. Valuations of pharmaceudical companies and price/equity *ARE* higher for those holding patent technologies than for those who are not.

    There may well be argument to be made to support the conclusion, but this one certainly is not. The relative expenses of a company's marketing verses R&D hardly neither supports nor defeats arguments about the virtue of the patent system.

    This is not to say unconcionable things have not happened in this business -- only that the argument singled out here isn't part of the best case against either the patent system or that business.

    1. Re:Non-sequitur by AdrianG · · Score: 1
      These scientists you are talking about are probably not working for free and buying all their own equipment. The companies are betting expensive resources (including these scientists' salaries) on finding useful drugs. They will not make these bets (in the face of very long odds, since most of the substances they test don't turn out to be useful) without the promise of a big payoff in those cases where they win.

      I'd like to see more of our tax dollars going to medical reesearch, but this notion that the scientists are the ones who should be getting rich simply makes no sense.

      Adrian

    2. Re:Non-sequitur by Kaki+Nix+Sain · · Score: 1
      I understand the point that the statistic doesn't prove all that much. However, hiding behind lack of full proof while people suffer and die doesn't seem a very nice thing to do.

      Further, the behavior of spending so much more on marketing and admin does not cohere well with saying that R&D will suffer if they are not allowed to make ample profits. Until the marketing and admin are running on a shoestring in a streamlined, super-efficient manner, then it would seem that any profits lost (in the effort to help entities that are actually alive, remember what is at stake when doing your cost-benefit calculus) can come out of the non-R&D section of the budget.

      I have previously defended the big drug companies, even as I learned more of the unhappy situation that they have helped bring about in the realm of getting federal approval for new products. The cost of getting approval is far too high, which works against simple (read: non-super-profitable) lines of research from being pursued. However, now that I see the decoherence of their "we need the money" argument, and hear of their morally untenable actions to forestall efforts to help living, sentient creatures in poorer countries... well, they have lost my defence. Several of them, like some other companies, deserve to be striped of the rights we have granted them, that they have abused.

      --

      (C) Kaki Sain, 2011. By reading this, you have illegally copied my property to your brain.

    3. Re:Non-sequitur by Kaki+Nix+Sain · · Score: 1
      Actually, I was weakening the argument in an attempt to find common ground, not repeating it. I'm sorry I didn't make that clear enough. You say that the distribution of monies in the company doesn't prove anything. I agree (in something of a qualified manner). However, just because statement A (when added to background premises) doesn't prove B, doesn't mean that A cannot imply that notB needs more firm grounding. Which is to say that the statement about how they distribute their money is a prima facie defeater of the claim that they must charge such high prices to continue finding new goodies.

      And I don't remember the statement in question mentioning manufacturing cost. Only R&D, marketing, and administration. You are quite right to bring it up. As I said before, a better breakdown would be nice.

      How about another line of reasoning? Say that the IP rights are suspended (which sounded perfectly legal in view of the emergency). Say research does suffer a bit in the future. Hell, say entire corporations fall apart, and the vaulted "progress" is stiffled for decades. How is that worse than people suffering and dieing? Corporations are not alive nor is the second derivitive of human understanding. Why value abstractions over one's genetic kin?

      --

      (C) Kaki Sain, 2011. By reading this, you have illegally copied my property to your brain.

    4. Re:Non-sequitur by Kaki+Nix+Sain · · Score: 1
      Talk about unrelated things... nationalized health care? huh. ... Just playing. On that topic I've heard a couple of good rumors about "friendly societies" of the past. But I haven't tried to follow up on them. And I have no idea how well the idea would scale, or even what the particulars of their setup were. Sounded like a more personable form of insurance. Letting communities handle it, instead of companies.

      Back to the hard questions we've raised: Personally, I'm a quite leary of justifing IP rights that block immediate good of people with the "future benefit" of continued progress. The question that comes to my mind is, "why did we labor to make the progress we have made to be able to help these people that need it now, if not to actually use that ability to help?" This might reveal more of my psychology than anything (but that can be said of most all of communication).

      Seems to me that if research stalls while the system recovers from our playing the "greater immediate good of society" trump card, that would be acceptable. Might possibliy result in a boom/bust cycle between periods of [lots of research but very unequal distibution of benefits] and periods of [little research but equalization of benefits]. If that lead to less death/suffering on average, so much the better and fuck the unliving, abstractions of corporations. If they hand out checks for a while, help knowledge forward a bit, and then disolve... then in my mind they have served their purpose. It is ones that survive a long time that scare me anyway.

      We might even learn to control the boom/bust cycle (in a few hundred years) like we sometimes seem to be getting closer to doing with economic markets. But if we don't play with the variables some (drop IP rights here, hold onto them on sheer principle there) we won't be able to learn the system. And when there are lives at stake, I guess I'm more easily convinced that we should be sure to err on the side that can be seen most clearly to save people. In my eyes, saving people here and now is more clear than gambling that we will need the abstract "progress" in the future.

      Sorry to go off there down the perfect dreamworld path. I suppose we all have our pet abstractions.

      --

      (C) Kaki Sain, 2011. By reading this, you have illegally copied my property to your brain.

    5. Re:Non-sequitur by partingshot · · Score: 1

      > No incentive to R&D, no drugs

      You miss the point that the people that
      do all of this R&D are not the ones that
      get rich off of the patents. Scientists
      usually have motives other than money.
      If we can spend a trillion dollars for a
      missile defense system, can't we sponsor
      a little research?

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      Anonymous posts are filtered.
    6. Re:Non-sequitur by partingshot · · Score: 1

      Most research is done at universities.
      Corporations will never focus on long term
      research. It doesn't make sense for the bottom
      line.

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      Anonymous posts are filtered.
    7. Re:Non-sequitur by partingshot · · Score: 1

      Corporations can't do long term planning
      like the government can. They must
      focus on the bottom line. They have shareholders
      that expect results. Not results for their
      grandchildren, results for them.

      I never said scientists should be the
      ones 'getting rich'

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      Anonymous posts are filtered.
    8. Re:Non-sequitur by partingshot · · Score: 1

      >First off, you confuse "research" with practical
      >research and development

      Does practical == Administration & Marketing?

      >The drug industry regularly makes investments
      >that are 10, 20, 30+ years off

      Maybe I am mistaken. Please show me where
      research is being conducted by a corporation
      that has a 30+ year expected payoff time.

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      Anonymous posts are filtered.
    9. Re:Non-sequitur by partingshot · · Score: 1

      Bullshit right back atcha.
      1 to 5 years is not long term.
      Thanks for making my point.

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      Anonymous posts are filtered.
    10. Re:Non-sequitur by partingshot · · Score: 1

      >Or here's one you should know, the wine industry

      thats not research. the wine is collecting
      value. it is an asset.

      even microsoft's research
      only focuses a few years down
      the road. Can you provide
      me with specific examples of
      30+ years research payoffs?

      is 30 years long term?

      Did Einstein ever turn a profit?

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      Anonymous posts are filtered.
    11. Re:Non-sequitur by partingshot · · Score: 1

      Wine is a physical asset. It is not the
      same as research.

      > MS is a monopoly. They have little incentive to
      > innovate

      And a patent grants a monopoly. Giving the
      drug company little incentive to innovate.
      That is why it still costs Merck $10-15/k
      to produce the drugs and India can do it for
      $700.

      >The software industry however has extremely
      >short lifespans and is difficult to predict.
      >It's a poor example

      If something doesn't fit within your framework,
      then it is time to change your framework.
      There are no poor examples, only poor theories.

      >You can do your own research.

      I did just a little and couldn't find anything.
      I was hoping that since you made the assertion
      that you could provide me with the examples.

      >No, but he also didn't ever make a practical
      >invention that people could use

      He made it possible for people to make
      'practical' inventions though didn't he?
      Aren't all 'practical' inventions the result
      of what was once a fanciful theory?

      BTW, how do you explain the innovations of
      the open source community that have occured
      without the use of IP?

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      Anonymous posts are filtered.
  93. Re:Why third-world drugs are expensive now. by Greg@RageNet · · Score: 2

    Remember Spitnik?

    Sure do. The space race was all about military power. Build a rocket that can put a marble into orbit and you've built a rocket that can put a nuclear device on washington.

    Cuba has many benefits, and it has prospered since the 1950's

    Yeah, thats why all the cars there are from the 1950's and why so many of it's citizens risk their lives clinging to flotsam to cross the florida straits bound for Miami.

    --
    Slashdot, would a spell-checker for posting be too much to ask? It's not rocket science!
  94. The holes by Greg@RageNet · · Score: 2

    The holes in your argument:

    1) The corporations are killing the continent of africa.

    The corporations gave AIDS to the population of africa? nope. Africans get AIDS from eachother because of risky behavior; behavior that might be curtailed by education. There are still no drugs to prevent AIDS therefore the corporations even through inaction are not killing anyone.

    2) By withholding AIDS drugs they are killing people.

    AIDS is a terminal desease. AIDS drugs only prolong the inevitable. The end result regardless of what drugs are administered is the same.

    This is the lamest argument. ugh. Clearly lack of any drug does not cause AIDS. If anything is peripherally related to the spread of AIDS to epidemic proportion it's lack of education. AIDS is still incurable therefore no amount of 'free drugs' is going to solve the problem. It could even be argued that availability of AIDS drugs in uneducated populations increases the spread of the AIDS epidemic as those infected live longer and therefore have more opprotunity to spread the desease to others.

    If it's okay for a terrorist to kill an executive because that executive chose not to give away drugs is a very slippery slope. That argument taken far enough and a homeless person who killed you for your food home or car would be 'in the right' because you were 'too greedy' to give it to him. When you've got some one/thing making arbitrary desisions on who should be forced to give to who then you end up with a totalitarian society where you may be stripped of your property by some arbitrary decision that it be for the 'greater good of society'.

    -- Greg

    --
    Slashdot, would a spell-checker for posting be too much to ask? It's not rocket science!
    1. Re:The holes by Greg@RageNet · · Score: 2

      If you are minding your own business and happen to see me hit by a car and turned into a vegetable does that somehow now obligate you to pay for my life support and hospital room for the rest of my life? People with AIDS have already been run over by the proverbial car.

      --
      Slashdot, would a spell-checker for posting be too much to ask? It's not rocket science!
  95. Re:Why third-world drugs are expensive now. by Greg@RageNet · · Score: 2

    Do you think that it's pure coincidence that all the communist governments are authoritarian while the capitalist governments are (representative) democracies?

    The most important tenant of capitalism is property rights (the right to own or create property, do with it as you like, and dispose or trade it as you like); the most important tenant of communism is the complete lack of property rights (anything you own or create is the property of the state and you are allowed to use it only by the grace of the state). Of course in a society where there are no property rights it's dubious if there will be any other rights. After all if the state has absolute authority over all property they have absolute authority over all the people who produce or use that property as well.

    Of course communist governments have to be authoritarian, no one in their right mind would surrender their property and slave away at state-run businesses they used to own without being threatened with violence or death!

    I saw the link to castro's speech. Cuba is such a workers' paradise that it's population regularly risks their lives clinging to flotsam to cross the florida straits for Miami. Cuba used to be a well-off country with a booming tourist trade; castro managed to drive the whole country into poverty with his communist government. That's communism in action!

    Of course every comparison I've seen of communism/socialism vs. capitalism is unfair because inevitably socialism 'in theory' is compared to capitalism 'in practice'. If you compared both of them 'in theory' capitalism wins, both 'in practice' capitalism wins again.

    -- Greg

    --
    Slashdot, would a spell-checker for posting be too much to ask? It's not rocket science!
  96. Re:Why third-world drugs are expensive now. by Greg@RageNet · · Score: 2

    That's all very horrible and nasty if the state is some big bad entity, if the state is democratic then it's a whole different kettle of fish to what you envisage.

    If the government came in and killed you then seized your property and redistributed it to your neighbors would it 'make it better' if it was because your neighbors voted to have it done because they were jealous of your possesions? A 'democracy' can be as tirranical as any other form of government if there are no provisions for immutable individual rights. Right of property is one of these rights, after all if you can't own food shelter or water you cannot even provide for your own survival.

    capitalism shifts wealth to the wealthy

    In a capitalist society each person is free to exchange the goods they own with another person for the goods that person owns. Each pary is doing it of his own free will. The reason you consistantly see the rich get richer and the poor get poorer is because some people value items they can use to create other items of more value (i.e. production machinery, computers, stocks/bonds ) while most other people trade their possesions for items that do little to create further value (i.e. beers, big-screen TV sets, cocane, lottery tickets).

    I had the same benefit of the majority of other americans; I left high school with a diploma and literally nothing else. After highschool my money and went into computers, oreilly books, and keeping up with the computer/networking industry. Now I'm pretty well off, better off then a large number of americans.. But those americans chose to put their money into bars, TV's, new cars, and shopping sprees. So in a capitalist society that is why you see an 'inequality of wealth', the ultimate freedom is the freedom of stupidity, and it's the one that carries the most conequences.

    All rights are tied directly to responsibilities, the more free a society the larger the responsibility each member shoulders. Not responsibility to others or society as a whole, but the responsiblity of accepting the concequences of your actions. Any form of society that removes responsibility (i.e. responsiblity to make a living for yourself in a free market) also removes rights (i.e. right to own and control property), it's inevitable! To guarantee a living for those who cannot find one on their own you must seize property from those who have sucessfully earned a living.

    The problem you are alluding to is imperialism, the exploitation of a weak country by a strong country through use of force, rather than capitalism, which is the free exchange of property by willing property owners. Any government is capable of imperialism regardless of their economic system; IMHO a perfect example is Russia annexing eastern europe after WWII.

    -- Greg

    --
    Slashdot, would a spell-checker for posting be too much to ask? It's not rocket science!
  97. Re:Why third-world drugs are expensive now. by Greg@RageNet · · Score: 3

    What we're noticing here is that the cost of drugs could be cut in half if marketeers and executives (who are undeniably useless to the final product) were fired.

    After this comment and re-reading the slashdot article by michael I figured I'd go and look into this allegation that 66% of drug companies' money goes to sales and administrative. For Meric (NYSE:MRK) the majority of their money goes into materials and production; about three times what goes into sales & administration, and nearly as much as S&A goes into R&D. Pfizer (NYSE:PFE) spends 37% on sales and administrative (still less than half) and spends as much on R&D and manufacturing combined. These are large companies with already developed product lines (i.e. they've done the research now they are in sales mode to recoup earlier R&D costs).

    Smaller companies without established product lines, such as Biogen (NASDAQ:BGEN) spend close to 66% on R&D.

    'Sales & Administrative' is sort of a catch-all category anyway. Most people are familiar with what their workplace does.. How many people actually make the product the business sells. How many people at a software company are programmers? The programmers need a support staff of HR people, administative assistants, an IS department, some executives, a few marketing guys, someone to manage facilitites, a receptionist... point is that at any given business the majority of the people don't contribute directly to the product but are important nonetheless. All these people show up as 'sales and administrative' on an income statement.

    Finally saying that cost would be cut in half if 'executives ... were fired' is like saying the human body would be 50% more efficient if it didn't have to also provide for it's brain. The trick is that without it's brain the human body is completely useless.

    But of course when we're talking about an idealogical concept such as socialism who want's to really go into details.. The devil is always in the details.

    What you are describing is called "speculation" to be kind, or "gambling" to be honest.

    All technological advancement is based on risk (or call it speculation or gambling). You invest a billion dollars to find a cure for AIDS. After that billion is gone you may have a cure or you may not. There's no such thing as 'sure thing' research.

    If we had any number of socialist countries selling into the export market on a cost-recovery basis, with shorter workweeks and better wages, the fat cat industrialists would have seen Daddy's fortunes disappear overnight or seen risks to their lives.

    The socialist countries had shorter work weeks and better wages? It comes as a suprise to me that people in soviet-russia and china make more than americans. In fact this is just plain untrue. I do believe we've all but completely opened our market to communist china and it's billions of workers. I thank them for their cheap trinkets, but I've yet to see China turn into a luxurious worker's paradise or seen the downfall of the american capitalist.

    -- Greg

    --
    Slashdot, would a spell-checker for posting be too much to ask? It's not rocket science!
  98. Why third-world drugs are expensive now. by Greg@RageNet · · Score: 4

    The drug companies used to sell drugs to the third world countries at the cost-of-manufacture. Know why they don't anymore? Because americans were angry that they had to pay more for drugs than third world countries. The drug companies used american revinues to offset R&D and administrative costs (enabling new research into newer drugs).

    Americans were unhappy about this situation; they went so far as to get congress ready to pass laws encouraging re-importation of drugs allowing americans to buy drugs at third-world prices.

    This is why the prices for drugs have gone up in the third world; Even when the drug companies were trying to be charitable to the less fortunate all they got was a PITA from americans who wanted something for nothing too.

    Re-writing the laws now to allow anyone to take the drug companies' intelectual property is just going to make expensive experimental research much more risky for businesses, and therefore that sort of research that might cure AIDS or cancer will be curtailed drastically. No business in their right mind is going to spend billions to research a cure only to have somebody down the street copy it a week within it's invention and sell it at cost-of-manufacture while the first drug company cannot charge enough to recoup their R&D costs.

    Next usual argument against drug companies is that they return so much back to their investors in profit and thats why the price of drugs is so high. Let me dispel that one this way. For every company that spends billions and ends up with a hard-on or bald-spot pill resulting in big profits for stockholders there are ten companies who each spent billions and ended up with zilch. Of course the 'payout' has to be a good amount if the chances of getting anything back at all are so low.

    Any of you arguing the merits of socialism vs. capitalism just need to look at the achevements of the west vs. the east over the 50 years of the cold war. Sure both sides sent people to space and built sizable armies, which side benefited their common-man the most? The west had microwaves, TV's, cars, houses, ready amounts of food & goods, and appliances. The east had almost no non-military innovation (that they didn't steal from the west); the people lived with constant shortages, small cramped apartments with the minimum of comforts, and poor working conditions. I think I'll choose capitalism over socialism any day.

    -- Greg

    --
    Slashdot, would a spell-checker for posting be too much to ask? It's not rocket science!
    1. Re:Why third-world drugs are expensive now. by Steve+B · · Score: 1
      Cuba has survived four decades of economic blocade

      Pah-leeze. I favor ending the embargo for the simple reason that it would deny Castro and his apologists this stupid excuse. Blaming the systemic problems which have cropped up in every communist nation on the embargo (not a "blockade" -- Cuba can trade with every other nation in the world) is ludicrous on the "frog with no legs is deaf" level.

      you complain that its luxuary imports like cars are ageing

      Reasonably recent and functional cars are routinely available in countries with (partially) free markets.
      /.

      --
      /. If the government wants us to respect the law, it should set a better example.
    2. Re:Why third-world drugs are expensive now. by mother_superius · · Score: 1

      Remember Sputnik? I don't think that was stolen from the west. And just because the Soviets failed does not mean communism did. Don't get me wrong, the CCCP (or USSR) certainly had many faults and corruptness. The Soviet Union fell behind the US, but Russia has got horrible conditions now too. Just because Bolshevism failed does not mean so for Menshevism and other socialisms. Cuba has many benefits, and it has prospered since the 1950's, when it was run by American corperate dicatorship.

    3. Re:Why third-world drugs are expensive now. by The+NT+Christ · · Score: 1
      (microwaves, TVs, cars, houses, food, goods, appliances)

      Of course, anyone as obsessed with consumption as this is *bound* to choose capitalism over socialism. Come on, the microwave makes capitalism better than socialism???

      --

      I didn't pay for my operating system either

  99. Re:Stop domestic knock offs? by Malcontent · · Score: 1

    "I did not miss you point it's invalid, trading humanity's advancement in medical science to save a few lives, or a million or ten million is a pretty high price to pay"

    Invention occured before the advent of IP and it would occur afterwards too. You present a false dichotomy. You have absolutely zero proof that if IP was ended today no new drugs would be invented. All you have is some conjecture.

    So tell me how many people would have to die in your book before what the drugs companies are doing can be judged evil? If ten million people dying is just fine by you how about 100 million or a billion. How much does an epidemic have to escalate before you intervene?

    My guess is that it depends on the proximity and the race of the people effected. 10 million blacks over there in africa don't count but 10 million americans or europians and it would be a different story altogether.

    --

    War is necrophilia.

  100. Re:Stop domestic knock offs? by Malcontent · · Score: 1

    "Invention did occur before the advent of IP law but at the speed of a glacier. The breakneck pace of human advancement that has been occuring since the industrial revoloution has a great deal to do with the protection of intellectual property law"

    Once again you have no proof of this. This is simply conjecture. I can also point out that the pace of innovation can be tied to
    1) Faster and more pervasive transportation
    2) faster and more pervasive communication
    3) More leisure time (due to higher food productions).
    4) more educated populus
    5) simply more people in the world.

    All of these are plausable reasons for accelarated innovation and in fact are probably all factors in it.

    As long as mankind has been around there have been poverty. Saying that we ought to stop charity because the poor still exist is the same as saying that we ought to get rid of the police because crime still exists (despite the billions spent of crime prevention) or that we ought to get rid of the fire stations because fires still exist.

    --

    War is necrophilia.

  101. Re:Stop domestic knock offs? by Malcontent · · Score: 1

    Once again you offer no proof and only deal with conjecture. Maybe I am being unfair because there is no way to prove that IP did jack squat for innovation. The world is a complex place with complex interactions and you can not point to one thing and say "here is the reson for innovation and if you take this away innovation will go away".

    I say let's take it away for 20 years and see what happens. I debug my code by testing it let's debug IP law by testing. Lets debug it by throwing unexpected input and seeing what comes out. Right now there seems to a lot evidence that it's buggy as hell and not working like it was designed.

    --

    War is necrophilia.

  102. Re:Perhaps we need stronger regulation by prizog · · Score: 2

    "Investment analysts like the Motley Fool recommend that you do not invest in a company unless their margin is at least 10% as otherwise they will not have the ability to fund future expansion, or weather an economic recession. "

    Drug companies are barely affected at all by recessions, because almost all drugs aren't a luxury, they're a necessity.

  103. Re:I see by Steve+B · · Score: 2
    So the corner stone of your argument is to institutionalise anybody who's opinions offend you

    That does seem to be one of the basic tenets of Communism.
    /.

    --
    /. If the government wants us to respect the law, it should set a better example.
  104. Re:blame the people too by thogard · · Score: 1

    You should read a bit more before you make such interesting claims.

    I have two distant relatives that owned slaves. One had a huge plantation in VA and had both black slaves (the kind you hear about) and white salves (endentured). They were both treated the same. The owner felt he had a moral obligation as a master to keep the workers healthy and happy. Most of the black slaves he released (after 10 years or so) ended up working for him as he expaned west. Remember that 200 years ago there was a strict class system and there wasn't any way to change class levels. The concept of ownership in christian homes was offen much like the relationship of a servent. The owners had strict moral obligations that are even listed in the bible.

    Of course the other distant relative was the other exterme and there a number of newpaper reports where troublesome slaves ended up dead on or near his property. He was run out of town at least 4 different times for his actions to his slaves.

    Black africia has been exporting large numbers of slaves for at least 5000 years. Thats where the Egypteans got the idea, as well as the Greeks. Rome even learned a lot from slave traders in africa. There seems to be some evidence of well organized slave trade going back at least 10,000 years near the gold coat region.

    Back on topic....
    At the recent AIDS conference (the one that the US had to bribe leaders to even attend) the common way to control AIDS is to ignore it. according to some of the leaders, more deaths from aids mean fewer people to feed and they see that as a solution, not a problem. One other nice twist is that there is that there are stories floating arou nd the northern parts of South Africa that calim the cure for aids is to have unprotected sex with a virgin (either male or female) which is of course is spreading to younger and younger children. You know things are fucked up when parents are having sex with their 5 yr old children to make sure they aren't virgins. Top it up with female circumcision which kills 1/4 of the young girls and you have to wonder how things got so messed up in the first place.

  105. Re:What do we expect? by thogard · · Score: 2

    Its like a cure for the common cold. Its only worth a few billion dollars to wipe out the cold virus forever. Right now American drug compaines rake in 6 billion dollars a year profit on cold products a year.

    This is why we need things like the "Kings Ransom" that lead to decent modern clocks. Have the goverment pay an insane amount of cash to the person who finds a cure. That would make sure that a cure didn't stay hidden for long. I would propse an inital billion dollar prize for a cure for aids, cure for the common cold, and other things like low cost solar cells.

  106. Re:YES YOU FUCKING SICKO by greenrd · · Score: 1
    I agree - and what's more, libertarian ideas are just completely ridiculous. Under libertarianism basic things like the right to a fair trial would cease to exist because it's not "use of force" to keep someone locked up forever. There is more to morality than use of force, for goodness sake.

    He has obviously either never read the Good Samaritan, or never understood it. (Not that I'm a Christian, but it's a good parable nevertheless.)

  107. Perhaps we need stronger regulation by soldack · · Score: 2

    I was taking a look at Merck's financial info at Yahoo and I just thought about that $6.7 billion in pure profit. They have a profit margin of 16.9%. I have been to their head quarters in New Jersey (a friend of mine works there) and I just couldn't believe how opulent it was. I imagined just what a fraction of their profits could have done for the world. They are just one example of how profitable it has become to treat the sick. Somehow that just sounds wrong.
    I understand the need for everyone to make a living and I don't believe is government run medical programs. I do believe in capitilism but with carefull regulation, especially of necessities. Those include energy, water, food, education, communications, insurence, and medical science (drugs, healthcare, etc.). There are certain things people must purchase. This demand pushes prices up. Competition keeps them down. In the case of drugs, patents block competition and give the patent holder incredible price control. They can charge immense amounts pointing to development costs and marketing. They point to the insurence companies to eat the cost.
    They of course, claim that new drugs are still experimentle and not worthy of coverage. My uncle pays thousands of dollars a month for multiple sclerosis treatments not covered by insurence. These are not fantasy miracle cure drugs; they are drugs with proven effectivness that have been approved by the FDA. He is a medical doctor and knows first hand how the combination of high drug costs and uncontrolled insurence companies causes his patients to die of very treatable ailments. He is fighting to avoid the very same thing himself and knows that if he was not wealthy he would be in much worse shape, perhaps not even alive.
    What can be done? I believe that patents on treatments for life threatening diseases should be shortened. Allowing generic versions of these drugs to come into existance would lower prices. I believe that medical insurence companies should be forced to pay for more treatments prescribed by doctors. An insurence adjuster should not be able to determine how long I stay in the hospital if I get sick; only a doctory should. Goverments at the local, national, and international level have the power to make things right but have stood idly by while millions die. Something must be done about it. They must protect their own people.

    --
    -- soldack
    1. Re:Perhaps we need stronger regulation by FarHat · · Score: 1

      Prozac/antidepressants are a fucking necessity. Talk to those who pay the obscene price of it and cut out expenditure from food and rent to pay for it.

      --
      At the intersection of computation and biology.
  108. capitalists,corporate republic, and patents ... by soldack · · Score: 2

    ...ARE killing millions in Africa and in many other countries including USA. You blame the people but ignore the fact that many are uneducated in how this disease really works. What if it comes out that cell phones really do cause cancer? Is it the people's fault for not knowing?
    You speak of people refusing to get treatment. How can they get treatment they can't afford? Drug companies make billions of dollars in profit; don't cry for them. They should have much tighter regulation, especially for treatments of life threatening diseases. What about AIDS transmitted through blood transfusion? From mother to baby? From cheating husband or wife to an innocent spouse? Is it their fault as well?
    You seem to have no idea how lucky you are to healthy and well off in this world. Much of this work can not afford so many of the things we take for granted. How can you sit and type at your expensive computer through your expensive internet access and think that it is their fault? Do you really think that all the things you take for granted are there through your hard work? If you had been born in certain parts of the world like Africa and India, you would have a high chance of being born with AIDS and into poverty. You were lucky, damn lucky as are all of use who live in rich countries. We need to be thankful and understand that we have a responsiblity to help those that have not been as fortunate as us.

    --
    -- soldack
    1. Re:capitalists,corporate republic, and patents ... by Twylite · · Score: 1

      Stigmatized? Yes ... I would be sure to shut up about having a nasty disease if I was going to be "stigmatized" ... considering that in this case stigmatism translated to "will be dragged out of your home in the middle of the night and beaten to death".

      The infirm seldom make good martyrs.

      --
      i-name =twylite [http://public.xdi.org/=twylite], see idcommons.net
    2. Re:capitalists,corporate republic, and patents ... by junkgrep · · Score: 1

      So isn't the stigma the problem? Individuals, like women who get raped by AIDS infected men, aren't able to resist, and if they talk, they'll be killed. So, under such extreme duress, how can you fault them for keeping silent? Yep- the culture is awful- but that still doesn't explain this "fuck them" attitude.

  109. Re:your links by soldack · · Score: 2

    Yes, I did read your links. The UN is often soft on international businesses for various reasons. For one, it has little power over them. So they focus where they can do the best work. Spreading information has always been something that the UN is good at. I am not knocking it either; it is a very important thing to do and needs to be done.
    Even if it was done, you would still have the problem of how expensive treatment is. Once educated about the disease and how it works and how not to spread it, why should an HIV positive person care? They are going to die because they can't get the treatment they need. Their behavior isn't right, but a hopeless person sometimes loses some of their humanity.
    I agree with you that the people have some bad attitudes with respect to AIDS but the US has had those too. In the US there is still a stigma attached to AIDS, still an association with promiscuous homosexual men, and it is still a problem. This doesn't explain your "blame the people" rant. Because they have silly ideas about condoms does not mean they deserve to die. Sure, they contracted a disease they could have prevented. They are still human; they just made a mistake. They still deserve medicine at a fair price. Have you ever had unproteced sex when you shouldn't have? Better yet, have you ever stayed out in the sun too long? Do you smoke or know someone who does? Do these people deserve to die? Should we stop treating lung cancer because smokers didn't read the warning? I think that you didn't read one part of your links:
    "They are human beings like you and me...", Deputy President Thabo Mbeki from "South African government urges nation to fight AIDS pandemic" at CNN. It isn't anti-capitalistic to want fair prices for necessities. I guess you feel that $10,000-$15,000 per year is a fair amount to pay for medicine that you need to survive. Is it more important for drug companies to make billions than for people to have access to the medicine they need to live?
    So education is needed. But we must treat those that have the disease as well. No matter how much education you have some people are going to get the disease and they need to be treated. I also feel that these survivors will help make AIDS and HIV less of a stigma. Today HIV means AIDS which means death. It could be a treatable illness. The treatability of AIDs told but survivors as done more to erase the stigma of AIDS than almost anything else.
    The poor are all too often pushed out of getting proper health care, in the states and abroad. You can judge a society by how it handles the less fortunate members of it. Look at the poor and look at the sick and you can find a measure of the compassion of the society. We must do what we can to help those that can't help themselves. In this case, this means getting affordable AIDS treatments to places being ravaged by it.

    --
    -- soldack
  110. not so high profit margin but by soldack · · Score: 2

    It is still pretty darn good. Just a small drop in that percentage through decreased prices would mean millions of people would have access to medicine that they couldn't previously afford. These companies have no competition and little prices controls. Any Fool knows that means the customer is going to get ripped off with unfair prices. And that is exactly what is happening.

    --
    -- soldack
  111. spelling by Hard_Code · · Score: 1

    doh
    outways=outweighs

    --

    It's 10 PM. Do you know if you're un-American?
  112. Re:blame the people too by Hard_Code · · Score: 2

    that's anti-capitalist

    Um, no, IP is specifically anti-capitalist. Having the government enforce and artifical "ownership" on ideas is anti-capitalist. We tolerate it, ostensibly only for the "incentive" to create it provides. However, I think millions of dying AIDs victims far, far, far outways any ridiculous incentive to create we might be affording the drug companies. Sure, African traditions may be helping the spread of the disease, but I, myself, am not so entirely insensitive and self-serving as to think that because this is the case we should not help at all. The chickens come home to roost eventually.

    --

    It's 10 PM. Do you know if you're un-American?
  113. Re:blame the people too by Hard_Code · · Score: 2

    But for TOTALLY SELFISH reasons

    I would also like to think that for one fucking second we might actually care about the wellfare of fellow human beings (whatever their skin color, or language, or "crazy" custom), because they are simply human also. It always has to be about preventing something bad from happening to ourselves. I'll tell you something bad that is happening: millions of people are dying. Is that not enough? It should be.

    --

    It's 10 PM. Do you know if you're un-American?
  114. Microsoft stock by cameldrv · · Score: 1

    Well, he managed to sell over ten billion of it when he started his foundation, as the foundation was not legally allowed to have that much of its holdings in the stock of one company. The stock was gradually liquidated and had little to no impact on Microsoft's stock price. I would imagine he could sell another ten billion with about the same effect.

  115. Re:Poverty by ErikZ · · Score: 1

    At a dollar a condom, and not much else to do besides have sex, yeah, I think it does mean you stop having protected sex.

    Later
    ErikZ

    --
    Democrats or Republicans. They are both taking us to the same place and they are not afraid of us anymore.
  116. Re:This is where the right to ip should end by GavK · · Score: 1
    I've worked for a few drug companies in my time (As a sysadmin), and the most memorable thing is something said by my boss when we were having a beer.

    "Any time you think you're working for a company that saves lives, have a look and see how many treatments this company has made, and then at how many cures. For the cures, see when the treatment went out of patent"

    Gravity's a myth - The world sucks.

    --

    Gav

    "There's no such thing as data that can't be manipulated"

  117. What goes around comes around... n/t by ikekrull · · Score: 2



    n/t

    --
    I gots ta ding a ding dang my dang a long ling long
  118. AIDS, fscking around, and research $$ by baitisj · · Score: 1

    According to the World Health Organization, over 95% of all HIV/AIDS cases and death occur in the developing world. (see the WHO website). Over 2.2 million deaths were reported in 1998 due to AIDS.

    Most people are not aware that AIDS receives more money for pharmacutical research per death than any other disease likely to affect a person living in the US, including cancer, heart disease, and other diseases that cause more death in the US. This is unfortunate considering Malaria used to cause more damage on a worldwide basis (and probably continues to do so) than has AIDS (however, the AIDS epidemic is quickly growing). You might ask why pharmacutical companies didn't spend more money earlier on Malaria.

    Malaria doesn't really affect people in the United States. But I wonder why more money isn't spent on cancer, heart disease, etc, especially considering that it is rather simple to stop the spread of HIV by not f%@#ing around with other people.

    Obviously, drug companies invest money in hopes of making a profit.

    Malaria kills at on average one child every thirty seconds, and according to the World Health Organization, Malaria kills about 2.5 million people annually. Malaria used to be by far the leading cause of infectious disease deaths, but AIDS is a fierce competitor at this time.

    http://www.ent.orst.edu/burgettm/
    http://www.odci.gov/cia/publications/nie/report/ ni e99-17d.html
    http://www.the-scientist.com/yr1999/jan/opin_990 10 4.html

    --
    Learn from your parents' mistakes: use birth control.
  119. Re:Nope, HIV is a *RETRO* virus. by cabinboy · · Score: 1

    Ya that sould have said flu is an RNA virus like HIV, you're right there is a subtle difference between "RNA virus" and "Retrovirus"
    It was a while since I took that virology course.

    Point is RNA viruses such as HIV do mutate much faster than others and can cause harm in people.

    These alternative views should indeed be explored, and have been to the satisfaction of the majority of researchers
    That is why the majority of AIDS research is done on HIV, it is the best theory so far.

    If a new plausible and logical theory arises you can bet funding would go to that as well.

    From what I've seen the lifestyle/drug use theories don't satisfy either condition, and so I dont believe in them. That simple.

  120. Re:Nope, HIV is a *RETRO* virus. by cabinboy · · Score: 2

    So much mis-information.. where to begin..

    1) First off Chicken pox and the Flu are retroviruses, hopefully you agree they do harm. The are many others.

    2) Killing your host is suicide only if you don't find a new one first. From an evolutionary point of view its in HIV's best interest to maintain a high viral load to ensure it can be transmitted.
    This has the side effect of being lethal to the host, but by that time its already been passed on so it doesn't matter.

    In populations with many sexual partners HIV will evolve to become more lethal, not less.
    (Luckily the converse is also true)

    3) The virus is never really latent, most people just manage to keep it in check for 5 - 10 years. Since its a retrovirus HIV evolves very quickly in each and every host, The immune system eventually can't keep up.

    If you ever wanted proof of evolution in action, HIV over the course of a single infection is it.

  121. Re:look at Peoples Republic of California by plague3106 · · Score: 2

    Not only that, but even though in a few countries the spread of AIDS forced them to declare a state of emergency (and thus allow reseach into drugs that would help against it, reguardless of any patents), but the WTO said 'No, you can't ignore patents b/c AIDS is killing your entire nation.' That, and many other 'great' things the WTO has done for us can be found here:

    http://www.ifg.org/aboutwto.html

    http://www.ifg.org/forestreport.html

    http://www.ifg.org/bgsummary.html

  122. Re:Drug companies Bad? by Kupek · · Score: 1
    It seems funny to me that people sit arong and whine cause someone isnt sacrificing there life to provide them with free drugs. I say shut up and make you own damn drug.

    Make their own drugs? Some have tried, some have succeeded:

    The drug industry's dominance over American trade policy on pharmaceuticals finally crashed over South Africa. In 1997, South Africa, which does respect pharmaceutical patents, amended its laws to allow compulsory licensing of essential medicines, including AIDS drugs. Pharmaceutical companies sued. The suit is still going on.
    In case you didn't read the article, compulsory licensing is when a government takes over a patent, and makes the drug themselves, then sells it at a heavily discounted (i.e. affordable and reosonable) price.

    Doing this will save lives, and save the governments money in the future, because it costs more money to let it go unchecked than it does to treat it.

    But American drug companies don't like this because they lose profits. Well boohoo.

    Few people are doing research for free.

    Read the freaking article. The people who actually do the research aren't the ones that make the profit from the drug; some drug company gets a hold of the patent and profit off of something they never did research for. And often, the money that funded the research in the first place was federal money, i.e. our money. And keep in mind that...

    The manufacturers generally spend twice as much on marketing and administration as they do on research and development.
    We're talking about people's lives here. Wake up. Third world countries need to be able to stop AIDS from spreading, and this means treating those who are already infected. If this means that they have to violate patents that American drug companies hold, so freaking be it. Saving people's lives--and quite literaly, these nations--is much more important than some corporations keeping high profits.
  123. Re:Hype and the AIDS crisis by Kupek · · Score: 1
    Read the freaking article. Those in Brazil who take the drug follow the guidlines with the same success rate as those who do it in America.

    And see, this article used sources and such to back up its claims. Might want to try that when you directly contradict an article that has been published by a major newspaper.

  124. Re:Drug companies Bad? by Kupek · · Score: 1
    when did the big bad drug companies make a drug that stops the spread of hiv/aids? last i herd they only made drugs that keep the infected helthy looking and alive longer so that they can spred hiv/aids to more people!

    Read the freaking article before ranting, because you just said some very ignorant things.

    The triad of drugs reduce the prevealence of the virus in the body. If you reduce how much of the virus there is in the patients body, not only does the person live longer and have a better quality of life, the virus is less likely to be passed on. It makes sense: The less of the virus there is, the less likely it is to be transmitted.

    To reiterate, these drugs help slow the rate of infection, quite the opposite of what you're claiming.

    so let the infected live(DIE) with their choices.

    This disease could devastate the entire continent of Africa. It has gotten to the point that it's not about individual people but entire nations. This is an epidemic, like the bubonic plague, and it needs to be controlled.

  125. Re:Drug companies Bad? by Kupek · · Score: 1
    Since you're obviously not going to read the article on your own, here are the parts that you're contradicting:
    The programs have paid off. In 1994, the World Bank estimated that by 2000 Brazil would have 1.2 million H.I.V.-positive people. In fact it had half that many. The epidemic has stabilized, with some 20,000 new cases each year for the last three years. The treatment program has cut the AIDS death rate nationally by about 50 percent so far, and each AIDS patient is only a quarter as likely to be hospitalized as before.
    So treating the disease helps stop the spread, not help the spread, like you want to believe. But wait, there's more...
    Treating AIDS also fights other diseases. The incidence of tuberculosis in H.I.V.-positive patients has dropped by half. AIDS has also helped to mobilize people to fight for better health care. "In 1999, the Health Ministry had problems getting its budget passed for AIDS, TB and other diseases," says Pedro Chequer, Teixeira's predecessor as head of the AIDS program and now the Unaids director for the southern part of South America.
    Let's see, this person has been to Brazil and talked to people in all levels of the treatment programs, and is a reporter for an internationally respected newspaper. Who to believe, who to believe.

    But wait, you say, you don't care about all of this, you still don't want to be "held respsonsible" for other people's problems. Well hmmm...

    Ah, but treating AIDS is too expensive! In fact, Brazil's program almost certainly pays for itself. It has halved the death rate from AIDS, prevented hundreds of thousands of new hospitalizations, cut the transmission rate, helped to stabilize the epidemic and improved the overall state of public health in Brazil.
    Get your head out of the sand.
  126. Re:What do we expect? by kootch · · Score: 1

    since when do drug campanies have a responsibility to short-change themselves (and thereby their investors) in order to save people that are sometimes too stupid to save themselves?

    drug companies research and create drugs in order to sell those drugs. they aren't non-profit organizations whose goal is to save the world. their goal is to create cures that sell.

    Someone's right to make money is just as important as someone's right to live. Someone doesn't have the right to profit from another person's death, but if they weren't responsible for the person getting in that position in the first place, then by all means they can do what they want.

    Bad example: I'm a white guy that finds himself in the middle of harlem late at night. I'm about to get mugged. Does a taxi cab driver have a responsibility to pick me up and drive me out of their for free?

    if you say yes, you're drinking too much of your own koolaid

  127. Re:blame the people too by kootch · · Score: 1

    why should we try harder to stop something like this? they need to change their ways, we can't change them for them.

    everyone always bitches that the US should but out of everyone else's business and stop making everyone's business our own, well, practice what you preach.

    African countries need to take steps to fix the problem before we should start giving away freebies. If starving people dying, are we just going to throw free food their way and yell about our farmer's policy of getting paid for unharvested land? Before we change our policies, the African Nations need to change the root of the problem which is the way sex, AIDS, and birth control are perceived.

  128. Re:blame the people too by kootch · · Score: 1

    "they" are africans (or all humans) that through unprotected behavior and beliefs that prevent help, expose themselves to the disease.

  129. Re:YES YOU FUCKING SICKO by kootch · · Score: 1

    i think the key word in what I said was "for free"

    if he's going to save you (being the good samaritan), can't he still expect to be paid for his services which are to drive people from one location to another?

    by picking the person up and driving them, he's doing his job and should expect to be paid whether or not it was a "good deed"

    in the same way, shouldn't the drug companies expect to be compensated for providing the drugs (or service)? yes, they're bound to provide them, and perhaps lower the prices (out of kindness), but it's still their job and they should expect to get compensated.

  130. Re:YES YOU FUCKING SICKO by kootch · · Score: 1

    you must not live in NYC
    <P>
    <a href="http://www.apbonline.com/newscenter/breaking news/2000/04/28/cabbies0428_01.html">cabbie getting killed in the city</a>
    <P>
    <a href="http://www.abcnews.go.com/sections/us/DailyN ews/liverymurders000428.html">another story from ABCNews</a>
    <P>
    <a href="http://www.indiainnewyork.com/iny2k1006/Chro nicle/17YearOld.html">even 17 yr olds</a><P>
    nice theory. must have been written from a dream world.

  131. blame the people too by kootch · · Score: 4
    fine. blame the drug companies for trying to ask too much money for their drugs and for getting governments to frown on the cheap reproduction of their drug by chinese companies. fine. that's anti-capitalist, but whatever.

    but do not just blame the drug companies for the extent that AIDS is attacking Africa. Blame their governments for not spending money on AIDS awareness. Blame the tribal leaders and hell, the men of the cities and tribes for not wearing a condom because they feel strongly that it makes them less of a man. And blame the communities that stigmatize the people that have AIDS and are so afraid to get treatment, let alone let anyone else know, that is causing a greater spread of the disease.

    This isn't a case of "capitalists and the corporate republic and patents are killing millions in Africa". This is a case of Africans and African beliefs killing themselves through denial and stigmatizations. It's just that the drug companies aren't helping the matter all that much. But I don't see this as a huge problems since the majority of the people in Africa that have contracted the disease refuse to admit it and refuse to get treatment.

    here's some links:
    link 1
    link 2
    link 3

    1. Re:blame the people too by Fnkmaster · · Score: 3

      Nice in theory, but if you're doing what you can do and others refuse to, then _they_ aren't looking to respond and it is a natural human reaction to throw your arms up in despair and say "I can't do anything because I can't get cooperation from the necessary parties, who themselves need to take responsibility and take action". See "blame" is just a negative facet of responsibility. I don't _blame_ Africans for their own condition because I don't feel any guilt over what people do to themselves, at least by your definition of the word blame (which is to deflect responsibility onto others). I rationally can state that the people need to take responsibility and the governments need to take responsibility. I can also rationally state that I should help to whatever extent possible to support those efforts by giving money, by lobbying our own government to help make sure necessary supplies (including drugs) will be available at low cost to those people, etc.

    2. Re:blame the people too by Stephen+Samuel · · Score: 2
      The African tribal leaders had been selling slaves (prisioners of tribal warfare) among themselves for centuries before the white man came. We simply acted as a market for the slave trade. Now it seems reprehensible, yes, but it was not our idea.
      Tribes may have taken slaves, but not on the scale, or in the form, that white slave traders called for. Also: The treatment of 'slaves' within the tribal system was probably quite different than the treatment that they were afforded -- either on the trip to the Americas, or upon their arrival.

      Something to note here is that the western concept of 'ownership' is the right to destroy, and anything lesser. There is almost no responsibility associated with ownership (other than responsibility for the destruction of somebody else's property). This is at odds with most non-western ownership protocols which often include responsibility -- either towards the 'owned' object/land or to future owners/generations.

      When a slave came into western 'ownership' they essentially became entirely disposable. Any rights they had ceased to exist and their treatment was entirely at the whim of the combined drive for profits and any personal morals (or lack thereof) of their new owner.

      Also: those Africans who engaged in the slave trade were often the worst of their societies. What the white 'market' provided them was a legitimacy and resources that they would not have otherwise had access to. The western slave trade turned what was otherwise a background activity into a mass-market process. The people who suffered as a result of the slave trade are not people who whould have otherwise certainly died, or recieved similar treatment.
      `ø,,ø!

      --
      Free Software: Like love, it grows best when given away.
    3. Re:blame the people too by Mr_Perl · · Score: 1
      We the people, who have benefited directly from the colonization, enslavement and exploitation of the African people DO owe them a great deal.

      I, a white U.S. citizen, have benefitted directly from the slave trade in that my nation was built on the backs of black slaves. Our economic prosperity today can be directly linked to the plundering of the continent of Africa.

      When drug companies benefit from our government's research (they don't even have to pay for it, we the taxpayers take up to 100% of the cost!) and then proceed to patent and market the drugs that their dirty money in D.C. got them for practically nothing, they are screwing everybody but their shareholders.

      It's a crying shame that we send 5 billion dollars to Isreal every year to torture and commit genocide against Palestinians. This money should go to Africa, who our fathers raped and pillaged, and we have benefitted.

      --

      My poetry site welcomes the unusual.
    4. Re:blame the people too by Mr_Perl · · Score: 1
      I do contribute to charities doing great work in Africa. My goal in life is to make a great deal of money and leave it, in the form of a foundation, to those who need it. This would satisfy me as being a well-lived life.

      So, my skills do indeed directly impact my potential to do good.

      --

      My poetry site welcomes the unusual.
    5. Re:blame the people too by clink · · Score: 1
      Mr_Perl, I have to ask what you are doing to help the poor Africans? You said that you and your nation have benefitted directly from their exploitation and that you owe them a great deal.

      Well sir, I have to tell you that your being a Perl afficiando is not helping these poor souls. You could do much more by actually going to Africa and volunteering to help these people. They really could get much more help from you if you were emptying bedpans in Mogadishu than say creating web scripts for some company. Won't you please stop thinking of yourself for a moment and consider helping these people?

    6. Re:blame the people too by partingshot · · Score: 1

      > fine. that's anti-capitalist, but whatever

      Yeah, but patents are anti free market.

      --
      Anonymous posts are filtered.
    7. Re:blame the people too by partingshot · · Score: 1

      I didn't make those comments.
      Pay attention when you hit 'reply to this'
      that you actually are replying to
      the article you intended.

      p.s. you said "You don't seem to understand that all publically funded research in the U.S. must be pretectivly patented "

      If you're not going to state _why_, then don't
      state it. I may say the moon is made out of
      cheese but that don't make it so.

      --
      Anonymous posts are filtered.
    8. Re:blame the people too by partingshot · · Score: 1

      My bad. I'll take my own medicine.

      --
      Anonymous posts are filtered.
    9. Re:blame the people too by SueZVudu · · Score: 1

      First of all, don't get me wrong. I'm all for personal responsibility. However, I find this comment to be insensitive and offensive. It seems to be the trend these days for Westerners to blame Africa for all of Africa's problems. Genocide in Rwanda? Oh, that's just some tribes killing each other like they've always done; there's nothing we can do to stop it (nevermind the fact that there were no problems between Hutus and Tutsis until 1959.) Corruption in government? Oh, that's just the way Africans are (nevermind the fact that Western governments set up the dictators.) You want the truth? Don't listen to the AP or Reuters, or even the UN. Read the book We Wish to Inform You that Tomorrow We Will Be Killed with Our Families for an example of just how wrong the West is about Africa. If Africa is as corrupt, backwards, and uncivilized as you think it is, how on earth could you possibly know for sure that the "majority of people in Africa" with AIDS refuse treatment? Do you think they conduct organized, scientific surveys there? It's time we in the West took some responsibility of our own for what we've done to Africa, and put humanitarian needs before financial ones.

    10. Re:blame the people too by 1337d00d · · Score: 1

      plundering of the continent of Africa.
      And your ignorance is amazing. The African tribal leaders had been selling slaves (prisioners of tribal warfare) among themselves for centuries before the white man came. We simply acted as a market for the slave trade. Now it seems reprehensible, yes, but it was not our idea. Nor did we 'plunder' them, only engaged in trade that was at that time perfectly acceptable.

      to patent and market the drugs
      Although the generic 'Patents-R-Bad' stand appears to be the case here, patents protect innovation. If patents didn't exist, there would be no competition, because companies would just wait around for eachother to create something, and then steal it. These are corporations, damn it, they work so that they can get more research money. If they can just steal eachothers' ideas, there's no incentive for progress, and we end up with deadlock.

      send 5 billion dollars to Isreal every year to torture and commit genocide against Palestinians
      Ah, instead we should stand back and let the Palestinians commit torture and genocide against the Israelites. Having a total war in the Middle East is just the kind of world stability that this country is interested in. NOT. We are interested in a stable world situation, and that means NO World War IIIs going on in the Middle East. That's just the kind of area where something like that could go on, and we are walking the fine line of maintaining stability in that region.

      who our fathers raped and pillaged, and we have benefitted.
      That's crap. First of all, most Americans aren't descendants of slaveholders. Even those few who had ancestors who lived in America back in the 1800s, before the mass immigrations from Europe, very few people actually owned slaves. So don't send our money to get a clear conscience for what your ancestors did. That's your job as a person, not our job as Americans.

    11. Re:blame the people too by SmellMyTeenSpirit · · Score: 1

      too many generalizations are dangerous, but your point is wel made

      --
      "Cornflakes are not the innocent critters they seem"- Sterling Morrison
    12. Re:blame the people too by Twylite · · Score: 1

      I think we need to clear up some facts about AIDS, African problems and drug companies before we can attack any of the parties.

      First, be aware that there are several strains of AIDS, and the African strain in particular is not responsive to treatments made for the US strain, for which most research has been done.

      Second, African countries feel their hands are tied by drug companies - any country attempting to produce treatments locally (under license) or import cheaply produced drugs from Asia has been met with a cool reception by the pharmaceutical conglomerates, who have threatened to withdraw support and research from the country altogether. This equates to disinvestment in countries which are already in dire economic positions.

      Third, let it be noted that that the claim that "... wearing a condom ... makes them less of a man" is not strictly correct. Studies have shown that African males prefer "dry sex". That's right - forget the lubricantsm try talc power instead. Personally I don't want to know ... but it means that condoms aren't exciting, and the risk of blood contact is higher. Furthermore in many African societies your status in the community is linked to the number of children (and wives) you have. And to put the cherry on the top - tribal custom (in many areas) holds that the young will look after their parents when they grow old ... hence more children is a good thing, and condoms aren't.

      In most of these African countries there is a strong hatred for Western people and culture. This is largely due to the perceived wealth and success of the West, ostensibly at the cost of exploitation of African. The suggestion/rumour that AIDS is made by Western governments is widely believed in some areas of African, as is the belief that a cure exists, but is being withheld by the West. Alternative beliefs include that AIDS is a punnishment from the ancestors (== gods) and that strong, healthy or rich people don't get AIDS.

      Of course, there's always the problem that admitting you have AIDS is a quick signature of your death certificate.

      So, sure, feel free to blame Africans for their lack of knowledge, lack of doing anything about it, whatever. Until medical science became accepted in Europe disease was treated with fear and resentment, leading to inhuman treatment, killings, and the belief that God was sending punnishments on man for his heresy.

      We may laugh at the foolish beliefs of African cultures. In the West you trust you security in old age to the government or investments based on perceived values of companies. That's also pretty stupid if you think about it. And let's not forget the one billion people worldwide that are told to ignore the "use a condom" message because it is "against the word of God" in the eyes of the Catholic church.

      Its easy to blame other people. Its not easy to understand why exploiting them is so easy. Its almost as good business as selling crosses to Christians :)

      --
      i-name =twylite [http://public.xdi.org/=twylite], see idcommons.net
    13. Re:blame the people too by Marx's+Ghost · · Score: 1

      Blame the people, too? The great poverty of the African nations, the corruption of the small African elites in charge of many of the national governments, the extremely large prostitution industry that has been a catalyst for the spread of HIV: these are all products of the colonial and neocolonial relationships the British empire, the French empire, the Dutch, and Germans enforced in the region. Since poverty has been the direct result of the colonial use of African labor and resources by Western imperial nations, excepting the few elites favored by the West to create an organized bureaucracy to underlie trade, then your conclusion for the latest manifestation of problems they have: fuck'em. Blame them. Hey, let the WTO screw them and make the majority of cheaply manufactured drugs too expensive for anyone but the richest Africans.

      That is the wonder of Western historical amnesia. Their actions have disasterous consequences for many people, they wait a couple years and soon they can blame the victim.

    14. Re:blame the people too by Throw+Away+Account · · Score: 2

      Tribes may have taken slaves, but not on the scale, or in the form, that white slave traders called for.

      The large-scale slave trade was centuries old before the first black Africans were imported to the Americas. The Arab world imported millions across the Sahara; in no year did the number of blacks transported across the Atlantic exceed the number shipped across the Sahara.

      And they died in far greater numbers in the Arab world than in the Americas; that's the reason why there are so many people of African descent in the Western Hemisphere and so few in the Arab countries.

      The transatlantic trade had more men than the trans-Saharan did, which encouraged warring tribes to enslave enemy warriors and sell them. Previously, the warriors were killed them out-of-hand, captured boys were castrated, and the eunuchs and women were shipped across the Sahara.

      And it was the European powers that ended not only the transatlantic slave trade, but the trans-Saharan trade.

      Was the transatlantic trade evil? Yes. Was it worse than what was already happening? No.

      --
      There's no "we" in team, only "me"
    15. Re:blame the people too by junkgrep · · Score: 1

      they need to change their ways,

      Who is this "they" here? Africans? All Africans? "They" are all equally at fault, so fuck them? That seems a little hamfisted.

    16. Re:blame the people too by junkgrep · · Score: 1

      How do you know who has what beliefs, or what behavior they practiced? How can you make such a wide and wacky generalization?

    17. Re:blame the people too by junkgrep · · Score: 1

      Associating entire nations with single organisms is just wrong. Not to mention rather sickening.

      And that's exactly my point here- blaming the leaders so that you feel less obligated to help the people... what a lame excuse.

    18. Re:blame the people too by junkgrep · · Score: 2

      African nations simply can't and won't cope. That much is pretty certain. The question is: is it in our vital interests to do something about it. And the answer of most policy people is: yes. The "what" we aren't sure about yet. But for TOTALLY SELFISH reasons, there is good cause for the U.S. and other industrialized nations to do something about this. It's not like we haven't been heavily involved before, or aren't complicit in many of the things that are happening in Africa today- or can't be traced almost directly back to dictators we propped up in the interests of the Cold War, democracies we squashed, and millions and millions of weapons we pumped into the continent for our own gain. After playing so many as pawns, then suddenly saying "oop! we have nothing to do with you" when the repercussions crop up is downright goofy. And regardless, why is the fault of a dying farmer that his nation is a fucking mess? How can you say "fuck him, his dictator isn't trying hard enough, and his culture is stupid."

    19. Re:blame the people too by junkgrep · · Score: 3

      Sad, but true in many ways. Yet the problem, however, is not "who do we blame," but "how can we stop it?" And those who want to mobilize as many tools as possible to fight the crisis can't help but be a little irritated that a MAJOR tool for combatting the disease is basically closed to Africa, simply because of the dubious nature of IP. The continent is indeed a real mess. But we, the U.S., DO have significant interests in helping to fix that problem. We want a less destabilized, more secure world. And this crisis, whoever is at fault, really threatens to destabilize the entire continent for DECADES, maybe longer. This is not something we want.

  132. Re:Stop domestic knock offs? by hautis · · Score: 1

    If somebody dies because you denied him or her the cure _which you could have afforded to give him or her_, in my opinion you just killed him/her. That's it. No shit-talk about property or patents. Human life goes before all that.

    Not one even remotely civilized nation values industry or economy more than the health and safety of its inhabitants.

    --
    NOSPAM@REMOVETHIS.NO.SPAM - you'll find the real address somewhere
  133. Companies are companies by blakestah · · Score: 2

    Why should we expect companies to give ??

    Companies are beholden to the bottom-line, the dollar. The onus is not on the phamaceutical companies on this one. We should expect resistance from them. Deaths of people in third world countries do not hurt quarterly reports - but free drug giveaways do.

    What is really needed is a non-profit organization being given licensing over critical patents so that the drugs may be made for distribution in places where drug company prices are absurd. $10000/yr for AIDS medications seems high but affordable in San Francisco - but patently ridiculous in some African nations.

    This charge MUST be backed strongly by the president of the US. He may claim it doesn't affect American interests. He may claim the corporations have a right to their patents. Or he may do the right thing. Time will tell.

    The first step will be a re-affirmation of the trade watch list - not banning companies that provide generics that work around US patents to AIDS victims.

    1. Re:Companies are companies by cabalamat2 · · Score: 1

      Why should we expect companies to give ??

      We shouldn't. Companies have no particular obligation to help others.

      But they do have an obligation not to harm others, which is what they are doing. South Africa wants to by generic anti-Aids drugs from Thailand, costing 22c per pill, but the drug companies instead want them (under WIPO rules) to buy the patented version costing $13, which many South Africans can't afford and will die because of.

      The drug companies want to kill people in their insatiable quest for profits. This is evil and the bosses of these companies deserve to be injected with HIV and then denied treatment for AIDS.

    2. Re:Companies are companies by Natalie's+Hot+Grits · · Score: 1
      This charge MUST be backed strongly by the president of the US. He may claim it doesn't affect American interests. He may claim the corporations have a right to their patents. Or he may do the right thing. Time will tell.

      while we are at it, why dont we just drill an oil well right through the polar bear and tribe leaders. This will help offset the cost of the drug and make it almost free to everyone!

      --
      Two infinite things: your stupidity and mine. But I'm not sure about the latter. If my sig offends you, I'm sorry.
  134. Re:Hype and the AIDS crisis by dingbat_hp · · Score: 1

    Good point, but you're wrong.

    There's a drug (whose name escapes me) that does nothing at all for curing HIV, but is effective at stopping transmission from mothers to new borns. It's cheap too. This is the sort of healthcare that Africa is currently being prevented from having access to.

    Not all HIV treatments are rocket-science. Yes, it's unreasonable to expect the same standards as you might expect on the US West Coast, but that's not the same as saying that there's nothing more that could be done.

    Mbeki's attitude doesn't help either 8-(

  135. Re:What do we expect? by terminal.dk · · Score: 3

    If there wasn't profits in AIDS research, governments would fund it, andthus the taxpayers.

    The main problem with the medical / biotech industry right now is, that they have realized that a cure / vaccine is a BAD thing. They can make much more money by only selling medical products that you have to take the rest of your life to survive.

    They are getting worse than the drug dealer selling crack to kids in school.

  136. Re:Hype and the AIDS crisis by jamesl · · Score: 1

    We should probably give up on syphilis too.

    There was a time when that disease was rampant, slow to surface and expensive to treat. It's clearly sexually transmitted so they deserve whatever they get.

    Of course, man will never walk on the moon, polio will continue to kill and cripple kids and computers will be too expensive to be used by anyone but the military.

  137. Re:Perhaps you should read the article by Stephen+Samuel · · Score: 2

    To this evidence, add the point that most of the basic research is done with heavy government subsidization (usually at universities). Much drug company 'research' is really development of an idea that was actually researched elsewhere at public expense.
    `ø,,ø!

    --
    Free Software: Like love, it grows best when given away.
  138. It take two hands to strangle by Stephen+Samuel · · Score: 3
    It generally takes two hands to strangle someone. If you are one hand, and blame the other, then the stranglation continues.

    The blame syndrome is part of how the Nazi's managed to keep their killing machine running. Each person was responsible for only one stage of the process. Someone would open the door. Another person would run the ventilation machine. The guards simply escorted people from place to place. Someone else, entirely, was responsible for clearing the bodies out afterwards. Various other people did the paperwork, but weren't physically involved in the actuall killing.

    Who among them was responsible for the deaths? Any one of them could say that if somebody else had refused to do their part that the killing would have stopped. A call to take responsibility is a call to say this part is mine to control. You may want to call on others to do their part, as well, but your actions are what you control directly.

    Drug companies are oriented to maximize their profits. They lobby various governments to change the laws to allow even greater profits, and then blame the government when the changed laws lead to excesses. We need to hold the people to account -- each for their own stage. It's fine to say that there are cultural problems in various nations (not like there were none here in North America!). Just don't use it as an excuse to take anybody else off the hook.
    `ø,,ø!

    --
    Free Software: Like love, it grows best when given away.
  139. Re:Greedy Americans! by Tralfamadorian · · Score: 1

    Just in case this is NOT a joke (I know that idealists like this exist)

    Americans spend over 460 BILLION DOLLARS PER YEAR just on leisure! This is not necessary!
    Compare this to the 168 million dollars the US gave to help fight AIDS in Africa.


    Well, firstly, that 460 billion was speant by citizens, and the 168 million is speant by our government.

    Secondly, do you realize that if we didn't live in such a way, we wouldn't be giving ANY money to Africa? Our capitalism has given people soft enough lives to care about animals and people in Africa.

    I have come to the conclusion that this *is* a joke, but will post it for the sake of those ignorant enough to agree with your joke :)


    He who knows not, and knows he knows not is a wise man

  140. Oops, dropped the keyboard by nobody69 · · Score: 1

    What I was trying to say was...

    Well, this is a pretty ignorant comment, at least with regards to Africa don't you think? You've probably been told a million times to 'put a helmet on your soldier', if you grew up in the USA, but is this true for sub-Saharan Africa?

    Let's see, throw out all the times you heard that in school, because you're too poor to go to school.

    Throw out all the times you read that someplace because even if you could read well (and it's hard to learn to read without a school), you probably don't have anything to read except maybe a Bible/Koran - no magazines, newspapers, etc. Nothing with new info.

    Throw out all the times you saw a 'Safe Sex' PSA or news story, or an after school special on tv, because you're too poor to have a tv, and so's everyone else in your village.

    You can probably throw out 99% of the times you heard something about AIDS from the radio too, because you're too poor to own a radio, but somebody in the village probably does.

    Throw out all the crap we USAians heard from the government about HIV, because the corrupt general who runs your country doesn't want to admit that anything is going wrong because some other corrupt general might start another revolution and depose/kill him before he finishes looting the treasury.

    Throw out all the times you got a speech from a parent or other adult about condoms because they are getting their info from the same places you are - nowhere.

    Throw in some speeches about how condoms are make you a bad person, or a girly-man, or that they're unnecessary because 'we' are cleaner than 'they' are, so it's okay.

    How would you know that unsafe sex can kill you?

    --
    "Bugger this, I want a better world." - Jenny Sparks
  141. Re:Human Life vs. Intellectual Property by dtr21 · · Score: 1

    A very well thought out comment :)

    But I'm not sure that I agree with the part about seperating the Capitalists from the Communists. How about people like me who are uneasy with all choices?

    Whatever we do, the interests of the "Elected" will always lie with the interests of those with money. That is, unless we can try and seperate them. Lets face it - those with money to influence Politicians are such a tiny minority of the population that the influence they have is unfair.

    In the UK, MPs have to publically declare all interests that they have. There's a move towards limiting campaign budgets, and (hopefully) towards forced disclosure of all sums above a certain amount. Other protection schemes (like blind campaign funds where the PM does not know who is paying for his TV campaign) are used as well.

    None of this is perfect. It probably doesn't go far enough. But only by removing the money from politics will we ever hope to achieve sense from it.

    When Corporations no longer have such a huge influence over Politicians, then someone might start to sit down and think "what would be the best thing for society" rather than "what will please my campaign contributors most." The length of Patents and Copyrights might be shortened to cope with the increasing speed of change. And, yes, outrageous abuses of the law (MPAA, RIAA anyone) and attempts to create new laws to protect these companies might be thrown out with the contempt that they deserve.

    Sigh. I dream too much.

  142. My career is more important than 3rd world lives by GMOL · · Score: 1
    It's true.

    Every year we have thousands of university graduates. Among them are people with the knowledge to produce these drugs.

    While the companies do have patents on these drugs, it would take a handful of synthetic organic chemists; chemical engineers and a lawyer or two to setup a firm that is producing these drugs (using another companies patented process) and giving them away at cost to people in the thrid world. Many lives could be saved, while the legal implications of copyright infringment could be negotiated. I don't think any court could order a prelimanry injuction, during the legal battle, against such a company given the lives at stake.

    But no one does, and no one wants to; heck I barely hear the idea mentioned. The fact that I haven't done such a thing either tells me that I am more worried about a good standard of living than 50 years shaved off of millions of lives. It's scary how this shows how little life is worth.

  143. Re:My career is more important than 3rd world live by GMOL · · Score: 1

    You guys don't get it. Yes you are violoating a patent, you pay legal costs and risk jail time, but a handful of people could save a whole lot more;yet we do not want to.

  144. A good article by lohen · · Score: 1

    On someone who is doing something to help with the Aids and TB in the Third World may be found here:

    http://www.observer.co.uk/life/story/0,6903,4297 98 ,00.html

    It puts us all to shame.

    --
    "What is freedom of expression? Without the freedom to offend, it ceases to exist." Salman Rushdie
  145. Sorry by lohen · · Score: 1

    If you'd like that as a link, just click here:

    http://www.observer.co.uk/life/story/0,6903,4297 98 ,00.html

    --
    "What is freedom of expression? Without the freedom to offend, it ceases to exist." Salman Rushdie
  146. Re:My career is more important than 3rd world live by lohen · · Score: 1

    The drug companies would sue you if you tried this. If you check the article, you'll find that they've been suing the South African Gvt. since 1997 for allowing measure such as these. It's dangerous to be naive when you're dealing with pharmaceutical companies - they'll fight for their profit margin as fiercely as the next multinational, and the existence or non-existence of half the population of Sub-Saharan Africa, or India, or most of Latin America, is irrelevant to that. I don't know what I can do, either, except publicise this and sell my shares in them (although holding onto a single share so that I can lobby them at shareholders' meetings seems tempting).

    --
    "What is freedom of expression? Without the freedom to offend, it ceases to exist." Salman Rushdie
  147. Re:a book suggestion by lohen · · Score: 1

    I haven't read the book you advocate. But I will oppose the premise you draw from it, which is that Africans should be left to clean up the mess themselves. They lack the funds, and their leaders lack the political motivation, to take the necessary action. What is needed is a combined effort - we must educate them in the dangers, promote safe sex (or, for the religious, monogamy), and provide therapy so that those infected with HIV may continue to be valuable members of their societies. Their governments must be persuaded to provide this information, their medical facilities must be upgraded to enable dispensal of therapies, and they must be persuaded to take the therapies. A good article on how this is being done in Haiti may be found in today's Observer (a British newspaper):

    http://www.observer.co.uk/life/story/0,6903,4297 98 ,00.html

    --
    "What is freedom of expression? Without the freedom to offend, it ceases to exist." Salman Rushdie
  148. Re:This is where the right to ip should end by lohen · · Score: 2

    Actually, I kind of think this AC has a point. Too many of us are so happy to enjoy our comfortable little existence while ignoring the evident fact that the prosperity which we enjoy is often gained at the cost of human lives elsewhere. I reckon more people should get out of their small corner of the world and do something for others in need. Or at least write out nice fat checks, as Bill Gates did the other day ($100m pledged for Aids vaccines research. I'm actually starting to like the guy). If you're in any doubt of the realities of the global situation, and of what people can do to help, check out this article from today's Observer (a British newspaper):

    http://www.observer.co.uk/life/story/0,6903,4297 98 ,00.html

    --
    "What is freedom of expression? Without the freedom to offend, it ceases to exist." Salman Rushdie
  149. Perhaps you should read the article by lohen · · Score: 2

    Take this paragraph for instance:

    > Innovation would certainly suffer if pharmaceutical
    > manufacturers could not charge high prices in their primary
    > markets, although how high is open to debate. But applying
    > this argument to Ukraine or Uganda is a scare tactic. No
    > manufacturer depends on profits in Africa, which will
    > account for 1.3 percent of worldwide drug sales next year, to
    > motivate the search for new medicines. And companies can
    > sell their AIDS drugs at very steep discounts - some at 90
    > percent or more off the American price - and still profit.

    Against this evidence, the 'necessity' of charging unmanageable prices for the medicines begins to look just a tad dubious, wouldn't you say?

    --
    "What is freedom of expression? Without the freedom to offend, it ceases to exist." Salman Rushdie
  150. Re:Think about long-term implications by Wateshay · · Score: 1

    Whether or not "good scientists" are in it for the money or not depends on how you define "good". Just because a scientist agrees with your moral view of "good science", doesn't make him/her talented. Sure, there are a lot of scientists with no drive to see big profits working for the betterment of humanity. And I comend them for the effort. There are just as many (if not more), who are doing research, not just because they see it as a noble cause, but also because they hope to find something which will allow them to make a profit, by which they can not only feed their families, but can provide said families with a better life. It's not that they don't care about the people they are trying to help, but that they also care about the quality of life of both themselves and their family, and if there were no profit in the research they would find a field where they could be profitable. Then, since it is completely impossible to force someone to do brilliant research, we would lose their potential contribution to society.

    --

    "If English was good enough for Jesus, it's good enough for everyone else."

  151. Re:HIV/AIDS Research Money by Wateshay · · Score: 1

    The problem with your argument that people would sit on a product/service which would be profitable in the short term in order to protect long term profits is that most short term profit opportunities that have the potential to wipe out an existing industry, are extremely profitable. That means that the person/company who develops it will be extremely wealthy after the short term profits dry up. Since most established industries only make normal profits, this is a good deal for the short term profiteer. For your argument to hold, you are implying that the average corporate critter would sacrifice his/her own profits in order to ensure long term profits for his/her peers. Personally, I am too cynical to believe that one.

    --

    "If English was good enough for Jesus, it's good enough for everyone else."

  152. uh, hello? by Lord+Omlette · · Score: 1

    Maybe it's just me, but how many people missed the following? Clinton told drug companies: "Lower your fucking prices or I will make sure that patent laws are not enforce in Africa so other people can make your drugs and sell them at a fraction of the cost." There was an executive order to that effect. Bush, I believe, just suspended that eo.

    Now if I could just dig up the URLs to confirm this :( Anyone wanna help me out?
    --
    Peace,
    Lord Omlette
    ICQ# 77863057

    --
    [o]_O
  153. Patents on necessary and irreplaceable methods by yerricde · · Score: 2

    The difference is that with these market monopolies, we're talking about the ENDS, not the MEANS. You're mostly incorrectly assuming that there is only one means to an end.

    Sometimes there is. What if a drug company finds a cure for AIDS, but it can be proven that the biomechanism it uses is the only mechanism possible to kill the virus without killing the patient? It'd be like the MP3 and LZW patents, where the only way to produce a conforming bitstream is by infringing the patent.


    Like Tetris? Like drugs? Ever try combining them?
    --
    Will I retire or break 10K?
  154. Unlike copyrights, patents expire. by yerricde · · Score: 2

    That's why we pay the estate of Alan Turing a percentage when we use a computer, or Alexander Graham Bell's descendants own the IP on the telephone.

    Unlike copyrights, which are perpetual in the USA and WIPO states because DisneyCo owns Congress, patents expire 20 years after they're filed or 17 years after they're granted, but it doesn't matter because the USPTO takes three years to process a patent. And in those three years, a company (except for drug companies that also deal with FDA induced lag) can start selling the products and building a market. Because the patent is "pending," it's still not illegal to clone the product. But after the patent is granted, the company can "pull a Unisys" and make a killing in the courtroom.


    Like Tetris? Like drugs? Ever try combining them?
    --
    Will I retire or break 10K?
  155. Too bad Congress doesn't apply this logic to �'s by yerricde · · Score: 2

    The term should be long enough to make the design work to create the invention a profitable investment, and no longer.

    Too bad Congress doesn't apply this logic to copyrights also. Does it really take 95 years for Disney to recoup its investment in creating Mickey Mouse?


    Like Tetris? Like drugs? Ever try combining them?
    --
    Will I retire or break 10K?
  156. The cluelessness is astronomical by yerricde · · Score: 2

    It's also well excepted by most mainstream economists economists that intellectual property is absolutely necessary to innovation.

    Assuming s/excepted/accepted/, it was once also "well [accepted] by most mainstream" philosophers that the Earth was at the center of the universe. "Because $CELEBRITY says so" is a logical fallacy.


    Like Tetris? Like drugs? Ever try combining them?
    --
    Will I retire or break 10K?
  157. The Confession by yerricde · · Score: 2

    if you walk into an emergency room and say "I need to see a doctor" it doesn't matter how much money it costs to treat you, there in no hospital in the US that can legally turn you away.

    Have you seen The Confession? That film explores this very issue. Oh wait, you're boycotting Hollywood because of the DMCA that turns perpetual copyright into a perpetual patent on DVD.


    Like Tetris? Like drugs? Ever try combining them?
    --
    Will I retire or break 10K?
  158. Slavery [Re:blame the people too] by pointym5 · · Score: 1
    The idea of gathering people up and keeping or selling them as slaves has been around for quite some time. It wasn't new when Europeans started exploiting the African slave machine in the sixteenth century, and it wasn't new when the African slave machine got rolling. The idea that when Our Side wins we get to keep individuals from Their Side and force them to do what we want is very, very old. It's just a short jump from that to slave-gathering as a business, which is also quite old.

    Modern Western slavery as in the US seems so repulsive to us because it stands out so glaringly against progress of the Enlightenment and the avowed principles of the United States itself. However, the basic "lifestyle" of an American slave would have been readily understandable to a time-travelling Greek captured and sold by the Achaemenid Persions a millenium and a half earlier. The scale and Industrial Revolution efficiency of early 19th century slaving would have seemed terrifying (as it seems appalling to us), but that's an unremarkable consequence of carrying on the practice during the early Industrial Revolution.

  159. IP: A dubious case by YIAAL · · Score: 1

    WE have patents & copyright because James Madison convinced Thomas Jefferson that even though monopolies were evil, in this one case the evil was outweighed by the value of the innovation it fostered. There's no natural right to intellectual property -- in every case it hinges on whether it's worth it for society. If it's not, then it shouldn't exist.

  160. Re:IP: A dubious case by YIAAL · · Score: 1

    Actually, the right to physical property *was* considered a natural right. Intellectual property was not. It also was not protected at common law. My point, however, was not that intellectual property is always bad -- it's not. It was merely that it's not always good, and that its legitimacy depends on whether it's returning benefits to society. Many pro-IP types say dumb things suggesting that the IP is a right guaranteed by the constitution, when actually all the Constitution does is empower the Congress to create IP interests where doing so seems like a good idea. And even then, those interests are placed under severe constraints.

  161. Re: Lung Cancer and Emphysema Vaccine or cure? by tz · · Score: 1

    Then everyone could smoke cigarettes and not worry.

    For all the expenses of marketing, if it worked as well as assumed, the disease would be prevented.

    AIDS would not be an epidemic if people had self-control. Anyone who can see people dying around them and not take precautions, much less abstain, is going to die of something rather quickly. If not AIDS, then something else.

    If we had to subsidize the repair of every self-inflicted wound, the world would be bankrupt, at least the responsible and prudent portion would be bankrupted at the expense of the debauched.

    OTOH, I think it would be an interesting experiment for some countries to reject the western idea of Patent protection. Remember that they were necessary to do trade (East India Co., South Seas).

    But before you get to easy with the idea, you end up with a might-makes-right in the IP world. Whoever can bribe or buy the largest DNS service could usurp slashdot.com or any other domain name. You could have a competing DNS server with duplicate entries, but there would be chaos.

    Conversely, if some drugs are that important, maybe Emminent domain should be used on IP (I wonder how many patents the NSA violates without compensation). Basically have government pay a one time fee based on the projected value of the patent to create a public-domain drug.

    They probably won't. I wonder how many slashdot readers approve of the "endangered species" act basically taking property WITHOUT compensation. This is convienient because the government kills any value of the land and it doesn't put a hole in the budget, Everyone is happy except the landowners and the endangered species that are burned out as people turn their plots into desert before anything is discovered.

  162. and by ArchieBunker · · Score: 1

    Have them stop fucking monkeys too, its disgusting. I hope AIDS kills everyone in africa, the world is overcrowded as it is.

    --
    Only the State obtains its revenue by coercion. - Murray Rothbard
    1. Re:and by Hiro2k · · Score: 1

      Wow your a moron. You are one stupid bastard. You suck, because you fail to see that no matter how many people there are in the world, no one deserves to die just for the better of the rest.

  163. thats how nature works by ArchieBunker · · Score: 1

    What happens when a pond gets overcrowded with fish? Pretty soon they start to die off from lack of food leaving a small population again.

    Answer this question: Can the world support an infinite number of people?

    Its justified because thats how nature works. Its not just africans with aids either, its the whole planet.

    Sam Kinison had a good joke about world hunger "YOU LIVE IN A FUCKING DESERT! NOTHING GROWS HERE THERES NO FOOD. MOVE TO WHERE THE FOOD IS."

    --
    Only the State obtains its revenue by coercion. - Murray Rothbard
  164. Re:Bill Gates as philanthropist by Sabriel · · Score: 1
    Hmmm. He's worth $72,273,900,000 right now, and his $100,000,000 is spread out over the next five years, so his yearly donation of $20,000,000 is worth a whopping 0.02767% of his net worth.

    If you're going to argue with facts, at least do it properly! Say I own a house and land worth $100,000. Say I make $10,000 a year. I donate $2,000. I've only donated 2% of my wealth (net worth), but I've donated 20% of my income. Not that Gates is lacking in income either, but sheesh, you also neglect to include (and thus miss an opportunity to downplay) his total donations - try not to give your opponents free ammo for their counter-arguments!

  165. The patents will eventually expire by pjrc · · Score: 2

    Unless patents go the way of copyright (getting extended continually), they will eventually expire. That doesn't help the millions who will die in the meantime, but in the long term the patent will go away and these and other drugs will enter the public domain.

  166. HIV/AIDS Research Money by Kotetsu · · Score: 2

    The really interesting part is that the government is the one spending the big money. In 1995 the gov't spent 6.7 billion USD and in 1998 almost 8.7 billion USD on HIV and AIDS. A lot of that money is spent actually treating people to already have AIDS, only 1.4 billion USD in 1995 and about 1.7 billion USD in 1998 went to research. The funny word in that sentence is only. These corporations get to patent ideas resulting (at least in part) from the government spending money on research, then claim that they have to jack the price way up to make up for those horrible research costs. Don't expect any discounts for us for using our tax dollars for that research. These corporations will next insist of receiving tax breaks or government subsidies for any charitable uses of "their IP".

    If you could figure out a way for it to be profitable to do it, hunger and disease would be wiped out in a generation. Except (yes, I am that cynical), most of them still wouldn't want to do it, because it would eliminate the market, and they wouldn't be able to make still more money in the future.

    --

    "Bite me, it's fun!" - Crowe T. Robot
    1. Re:HIV/AIDS Research Money by Arkaein · · Score: 1

      Thank you for putting a few numbers behind the argument that it's really us taxpayers who are subsidizing these companies. I really hate it when people blather about the importance of IP for future development and how enforcing pricing restrictions goes against free-market economics, when the pharmaceutical companies aren't playing in a true free-market or the sole forces behind the drug research in the first place.

  167. Poverty by h0mi · · Score: 1

    Poverty doesn't mean you can't stop having unprotected sex, or have multiple partners, or use IV drugs.

  168. "The evidence that HIV causes AIDS" by h0mi · · Score: 2

    http://www.niaid.nih.gov/factsheets/evidhiv.htm

  169. South Africa by mrBlond · · Score: 1

    The HIV education programs here in South Africa are now getting some funding from the health insurance companies (guess why). Personally, being educated by someone who has the disease has been a powerful experience, knowing that they're only being funded to improve profits is not.

    Only recently has the gov allowed AZT to be given to pregnant mothers, after it's insane stance up to now.

    The big resentment here in SA has been that the former freedom-fighters, the ANC, has been screwing the poeple and selling out to the IMF, WB, WTO, drug companies, arms dealers, you-name-it... We now have a representative democracy that doesn't give a shit about the people or the invoronment when there's a buck to be made.
    --
    mrBlond

    --
    CowboyNeal for president!
    "Hit any user to continue."
    1. Re:South Africa by mrBlond · · Score: 1

      "Lethal"? Based on the fact that AIDS mothers who use AZT die of immune deficiency, exactly like non AZT users?

      Have you heard doctors report that 50% of perinatal AZT babies are HIV-? While poor, non AZT mother's babies die before reaching adulthood?

      Why then has the President done a 180 on issuing AZT? 'cos it's cost won't interfere with buying arms? (I agree with Mbeki on Heath tho, Willie couldn't find an APC if he was in it - he found nothing wrong with Vlakplaas and De Kock!!)

      PS: selling evidence to people who don't need evidence to believe in some moronic horror story doesn't seem like a good business plan. The fact that it's been dotcommed doesn't help anymore. Remember, no AZT means less people to buy your CD-ROM.

      --
      mrBlond

      --
      CowboyNeal for president!
      "Hit any user to continue."
  170. Re:What do we expect? by elegant7x · · Score: 1

    The main problem with the medical / biotech industry right now is, that they have realized that a cure / vaccine is a BAD thing. They can make much more money by only selling medical products that you have to take the rest of your life to survive.

    at least 99% of the people who have aids now got it from doing something that they knew would put them at risk. And the only reason they are alive today is beacuse of the new drugs. I hate all these people who act like deserve a cure or something.

    Amber Yuan 2k A.D

    --

    "and dear god does this website suck now." -- CmdrTaco
  171. Marketing and adminstration by elegant7x · · Score: 2

    two-thirds of the drug companies costs are in marketing and administration

    Ok, look. I hear this all the time, and every time I do I just get more and more pissed off

    repeat after me YOU MAKE MORE MONEY IF YOU ADVERTIZE THEN IF YOU DON'T ok? If the drug companies spent the 1/3rd of the money they spent on TV adds for aleve this year on R&D then they would have even less money. Things like Clariton and Viagra arn't required by people to live, but they do make their lives easier and more fun. But if the drug companies didn't advertise them, no less people would buy them, a lot less, and there would be a lot less money to spend on R&D. Marketing is a damn loss leader, damnit!

    And as far as administration, well, what the fuck? You think they can run the company without any administration? They wouldn't even be able to ship products without it. I seriously doubt any company would spend more here then they need to.

    Amber Yuan 2k A.D

    --

    "and dear god does this website suck now." -- CmdrTaco
  172. Re:Human Life vs. Intellectual Property by elegant7x · · Score: 2

    People who are infected with AIDS should be able to get medicine at the cost of manufacturing the medicine, at most, if only because those drugs reduce contagion and help prevent spread of the disease.

    That isn't necessarily true. Remember, people are going to have take several pills every day for the rest of their lives. And if they go off the pills at any time they run the risk of producing AIDS viruses that are immune, witch would cause even more problems down the road.

    Amber Yuan 2k A.D

    --

    "and dear god does this website suck now." -- CmdrTaco
  173. Cheap Processors by elegant7x · · Score: 3

    Hey, Taiwan does not have the same problems with aids that places like Veitnam and Thailand do, damnit. We are fine. We arn't some damn 3rd world contry like Burma!

    Amber Yuan 2k A.D

    --

    "and dear god does this website suck now." -- CmdrTaco
  174. I've got it! The Solution! by clink · · Score: 1
    Ok, here is a fair way to fix this. Everyone who wants to send AIDS drugs to Africa can pay a voluntary tax. This money will then be used to buy AIDS drugs from the drug companies. In return for "at-cost" drugs these companies will receive a tax break or something to make it worthwile.

    This way all the people who are complaining about evil drug companies can actually do something instead of blaming others.

    Those who don't care, don't have to pay the tax.

  175. COMMUNISM WOULD SOLVE THIS!!! by guynorton · · Score: 1

    We all know that Capitalisn doesn't work. Look at the Capitalist nations and see how life has improved in these last 50 years.....it hasnt. We are churning in neutral.

    In a communist society this wouldn't be a problem. (I am talking about Communism as defined by K. Marx and not China, Russia etc, or the media machine of greedy mediocre capitalists.)
    In communism the state is supposed to be transparent, not centralised and all powerful (this is Facism...the opposite end of the scale). It is a way of coordinating the balance of needs that society has.
    The world is capable of producing near infinite wealth. We have the resources and science to do this. But we don't because it is at odds with the Capitalist system.

    A Communist society would liberate us through production, research and development. Take away profit as a motive and the sky is the limit.....Remember, we have the ability to create so much wealth that the word 'wealth' would no longer have any meaning. Invention and discovery would be spurred by our thirst for knowledge and our thirst for progress. Far more noble reasons than profit.

    Under Communism, Aids would never have become a problem. Education would have prevented its spread. If this had failed then we would have used our technology to invent the drugs neccessary to halt its spread and eventually to banish it.

    all the best, Guy

    p.s. Before you come back with remarks about the supposed nature of Communism (please dont mention Russia etc)I suggest that for the first time in your life you research it yourself.
    If you think it's against human nature then think how this reflects your own nature and not the nature of others.

    1. Re:COMMUNISM WOULD SOLVE THIS!!! by guynorton · · Score: 1

      You make some valid points.

      The transition from Capitalism to Communism is never going to be easy...
      in the same way that the transition from slavery to the feudal system wasn't...or from the feudal system to capitalism wasn't...there was a lot of blood shed over a long time....

      So far Communism has failed to take root anywhere in the world and this isn't surprising. Capitalism is a formidable opponent...it was a dynamic system which has benefitted mankind greatly. However, it's benefits nowadays are dubious to say the least. Our potential is constrained by a system which has no interest in improving our condition. Any benefits we get from capitalism are a by-product of its intent, which is to provide wealth only to the capitalist (or his shareholders etc)...this is very limiting. If the constraints of turning a profit were removed (and the REAL form of Communism were implemented) then development and progress would explode....wealth would be produced on such a scale that it would lose relevance as a concept.

      But how to get there...? You mention the problem of power being abused. This is without doubt the biggest problem. Firstly, communism does not rely on a 'state mechanism' as we understand the term. The finished product is the 'stateless' state (transparent and without power) There has to be a transition between capitalism and this stateless state ....the stepping stone is a temporary state which has some powers....it is essential to make sure this power isn't abused. This is where it has failed in the past. That is not to say it would fail again. Remember that Capitalism had a tremendous struggle. fighting against the reactionary system of royalty and feudalism. It won in the end because its arguments were so strong and progressive. These arguments have been supplanted by the stronger ones of its natural successor, Communism. Look at the arguments for Capitalism provided by Ayn Rand. She is a third rate philosopher and her ideas do not stand up to scrutiny. They are riddled with contradiction. Why are her arguments so successful?..because in her uncritical (blind) support of Capitalism she got the whole support of the Capitalist establishment. If this is the best that the modern day advocates of Capitalism have to offer then the ground beneath their feet is shakier than they know. The myths have to be dispelled.

      ...all the best, Guy

    2. Re:COMMUNISM WOULD SOLVE THIS!!! by Hiro+Antagonist · · Score: 1

      The problem with communism is that it, like any other form of government, is dependent on human beings who must be given total power over the production and distribution of goods and services. Human beings, especially human beings with power, have this habit of being greedy and wanting more for themselves.

      Communism, in the traditioal Marxist sense, is a phenominally great idea. It eliminates most of the ails of modern society -- poverty, starvation, maluntrition. But it depends on the flawed concept that humans are capable of making unbiased decisions about themselves and others. This is why pure communism has not succeeded -- because it is simply impossible to implement. When was the last time you saw a Porsche or Ferarri and said "I would love to drive that."

      What about wanting a bigger house? More, healtier, tastier food? That big-screen TV? Not everyone can have a big house, great food, and a Porsche in the driveway -- but everyone will always want these things (or some variant thereof). At least in a free-market economy, your contribution (what you put in) is, in theory, equal in value to your reward. This is why doctors make more than fast-food workers.

      Note that I don't understand why lawyers are so high-paid...*grin*

      I am not defending pure capitalism -- I find that horribly disgusting, as "pure capitalism" hardly allows for a free market (you end up with the ever-ubiquous nine-hundred-pound gorilla problem). There is a middle ground between the two, but it's not to be found by saying that communism will fix it and make it all better.

      As far as the original topic (AIDS medication, and the distribution therein), I think a public healthcare system would go a long way. It wouldn't even really raise taxes that much -- divert some money from welfare, and use the same cash that you're paying your current HMO with. Doctors and nurses get paid, you get to pick your doctor and not mess with all the rest of this PCP (Primary Care Physician) crap, and the medical needs of a nation are met.

      --

      --

      --
      I Hit the Karma Cap, and All I Got Was This Lousy .sig.
    3. Re:COMMUNISM WOULD SOLVE THIS!!! by Hiro+Antagonist · · Score: 1

      You too make some valid points, but it seems to me that you either ignored a large portion of my post or have never cracked the spine of a psychology (or sociology) textbook.

      The base problem with communism is that it is completely dependent upon the false assumption of unlimited resources (or human integrity and kindness), to create the perfect society -- a blissful utopia lacking pain or want. Resources, however, are hardly unlimited; and human kindness and integrity seem to be on the out-and-out in this particular day and age.

      The reason that capitalism (in its myriad of forms) is so successful as an economic system (and a way of life) is that it utilizes the basic concepts of positive and negative reinforcement. Work hard, contribute to the greater good, and you will be rewarded. Don't work hard, detract from the community, and you will be punished. These are base ideas that are present in a variety of cultures around the world, and can even be seen in nature. I guess the phrase "imperialist dog" really is somewhat accurate...

      Capitalism is hardly a perfect system (I'm not a big advocate of Ayn Rand). It has many faults. but it is a system that is functional when dealing with human beings. Communism only works when the human factor is removed.

      --

      --

      --
      I Hit the Karma Cap, and All I Got Was This Lousy .sig.
  176. Re:Cuba by guynorton · · Score: 1

    What the hell does Cuba have to do with communism?
    It has absolutely nothing in common with the basic tenets of communism.

    It is NOT communist!

    100 years of propaganda......100 years of sheep

    all the best, Guy

    p.s. same goes for Russia, China, Vietnam etc

  177. ....Resources are infinite.... by guynorton · · Score: 1

    I believe that we can produce a surplus of every basic good now....food, clothing and shelter. Not many people would dispute this. I also believe that if we devoted our science and technology to solving the most pressing problems we could find solutions to these problems. Clean and unlimited energy. Industrial processes without pollution. etc..

    There is absolutely no chance of this happening under capitalism. Capitalism has no interest in this...

    and beyond food, clothing, shelter, energy, a clean environment...we will find ways to provide for the needs of people, whatever those needs may be.

    Under capitalism we are told to believe that resources are finite...(it's an essential prop for it's arguements)
    ...I say, resources are infinite (but not under capitalism)!!!

    I read the science journals....everyday something new that could fundamentally change the way we live, produce wealth is discovered. These discoveries are never harnessed until it can be proven that they will not threaten capitalism.

    Think about the trillions of dollars wasted on arms...think about channeling this into productive sciences (yes, I know military science does feedback into our society, but its not an efficient method) ..... I really believe that science can cure all our ills, and provide a standard of living which would be'sublime', and provide this for everyone. It would take time, but we could achieve this.

    Most of the 'ills' of human nature that plague us would vanish. Where is the need for crime in a world where everything (and more) is provided? Such a world would put such a high value on education and art (yes art!) and openess that the pressures that lead to the distorted dysfunctional behaviour we all know, would no longer exist.

    As for the comment that communism works only when the human factor is removed...well Yes and No....
    The communist state would exist purely to help communication, resource allocation, production etc. The state wouldn't actually have any power or consciousness. It will only be a tool for the needs of society. So yes, there will be no human factor in the communist state. We will provide the human factor. The 'state' will provide the needs...the science to produce. We will provide the 'love' if you will, that makes life worth living.

    What vision does capitalism have....NONE....look at Bush, the puppet rep. of the establishment...what vision does he have?....looks like he wants to start a mini cold war with Russia again...pollute the world, provide more for the already sated haves......capitalism has no ideology except to produce more capital...to feed itself.

    My words may seem out of synch with the world, they may seem idealistic.....but they hold an argument that is persuasive. Unless like many, you have become resigned to the fact that the world will always underachieve and stumble on under the threat of ecological or nuclear disaster....

    all the best, Guy

    re someones comment "I've heard that from people defending the forced famines and purges in 1920's Russia, and the forced famines of the Great Leap Forward..." This isnt relevant to my argument as I stated that Russia (apart from the short time after the revolution) and China have nothing to do with communism. Just read a little Marxist 'theory' to see this as true. These tragedies were at the hands of fascist regimes...totalitarian control with no regard for humanity.

    1. Re:....Resources are infinite.... by Hiro+Antagonist · · Score: 1

      Science can not defeat itself. You still have to deal with the laws of thermodynamics -- entropy will always exist. A closed system will always run out of energy, sooner or later. We function in a closed system. Therefore, we will run out of energy sooner or later.

      --

      --

      --
      I Hit the Karma Cap, and All I Got Was This Lousy .sig.
  178. .....poetic license by guynorton · · Score: 1

    I used a little poetic license....
    The basics of Marx's arguments have been maintained and refined over time by carriers of the torch (!), most of what I wrote is based on my experience with the RCP in England...

    The state I talk about has no leaders....power is not centralized...it is a stateless state..informed by the will of a true democracy

    as for feudalism .... history is vast and complex....nothing happened across continents in a uniform way....but there are many examples of such struggles...

    all the best, Guy

  179. Bill Gates as philanthropist by ruck · · Score: 2

    In a somewhat related story, The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation has just made a donation of $100 million dollars (in addition to the $53 million they've already given) to the International AIDS Vaccine Initiative which, in addition to supporting the development of vaccines, has the primary purpose of "ensuring any AIDS vaccine is made available to developing countries at a reasonable price." It sounds to me like capitalism (or the generous giving made possible thereby) overcoming the shortcomings of capitalism. And say what you will about Bill Gates, but at least he isn't hoarding all his wealth. The article doesn't mention it, but his foundation has already given large sums of money to Harvard and other schools to fund AIDS research. I think we can all give credit where it's due.

    1. Re:Bill Gates as philanthropist by partingshot · · Score: 1

      What a load of BS.
      Don't get me wrong. I am glad
      Bill Gates is giving out money.
      But it is like someone that makes
      $100,000/year donating $100

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    2. Re:Bill Gates as philanthropist by partingshot · · Score: 1

      I gave my 1992 ford tempo to the American
      Lung Association (instead of trading it in).
      When figured as a percentage of my disposable
      income, its a lot more than Bill Gates.
      I don't deny that his money will do more
      good though. How about you?

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    3. Re:Bill Gates as philanthropist by partingshot · · Score: 1

      I didn't condemn him. I was
      just cautioning people not to
      grant him sainthood. Like you.

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  180. Re:What do we expect? by partingshot · · Score: 1

    You miss the point that the people that
    do all of this R&D are not the ones that
    get rich off of the patents. Scientists
    usually have motives other than money.
    If we can spend a trillion dollars for a
    missile defense system, can't we sponsor
    a little research?

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  181. Re:Think about long-term implications by partingshot · · Score: 1

    Well, You miss the point that the people that
    do all of this R&D are not the ones that
    get rich off of the patents. Scientists
    usually have motives other than money.
    If we can spend a trillion dollars for a
    missile defense system, can't we sponsor
    a little research?

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  182. Re:Marketing by partingshot · · Score: 1

    Its nice to see someone making sense.
    Isn't government sponsored industry great?

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  183. Re:This is where the right to ip should end by partingshot · · Score: 1

    I agree. Who wins when Justice and Capitalism
    are at odds? Usually Capitalism. Of course
    dare to criticize it and your labeled a left
    wing socialist commie.

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  184. Re:These are drug companies, not drug charities by partingshot · · Score: 1

    No. You miss the point. Its not about
    price controls. Those usually don't work.
    Its about free markets. Its about competition.
    If other scientists are smart enough to clone
    a drug, then the government shouldn't be
    stepping in and stopping them from doing it.
    Especially when its an issue of justice.

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  185. Re:My career is more important than 3rd world live by partingshot · · Score: 1

    >while the legal implications of copyright
    >infringment could be negotiated

    Ummm. Thats the big problem there isn't it?
    The fact is, its a patent. You do this and
    you're violating a patent. That means trouble.

    Patents are anti free market. Lets do away
    with them.

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  186. Re:As usual, /. editorializing is just wrong by partingshot · · Score: 1

    Do you honestly think that a person dying
    of aids really needs marketing to convince
    him to use the drug?

    Let me repeat, Do you honestly think that a
    person dying of aids really needs marketing to
    convince him to use the drug?

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  187. Re:I just heard this argument being applied to ... by partingshot · · Score: 1

    > But, as usual, facts blow away knee-jerk
    > applications of Socialist propaganda

    It wasn't socialist propaganda. It was a case
    being made for 'true' free markets. Patent laws
    violate the concept of a free market. They
    are anti free market and anti competition.

    Take your capitalistic fascism elsewhere.

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  188. The importance of biotech intellectual property by vandelais · · Score: 2
    http://www.bio.org/genomics/primer.html

    Please visit this site, as it is an important starting point that explains the necessity, rationale, and history of patenting, especially biotechnology. Exclusive distribution for drugs for patents based novelty, enablement, and usefulness provides the incentive for research. Let me put it this way: How many documentable, tangible senior citizens will suffer because of GWBUSH's inaction on perscription drug plan vs the untold, unseen, millions of people that would have died if Gore got into office and got his way on price controls? Gore's plan would have gutted the venture capital for research and investment that goes into creating intellectual property, (yes property) that saves lives through medicine if his price controls were in place.

    The end.

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    Game: Player 'Donald J Trump' now has AI skill level 'experimental'.
  189. West Wing by fish4242 · · Score: 1

    The t.v. show the West Wing did an episode about this problem. Is the Ny times copying the West Wing ?

    --
    "The heresy of one age becomes the orthodoxy of the next" - Helen Keller
  190. Re:These are drug companies, not drug charities by urbanjunkie · · Score: 1
    Dickhead,

    Yes you should care how drug companies make their money, but as it's AIDS, you don't. If it were something that actually affected you, I'm sure you'd be one of the first whiny bitches.

    What about a different scenario - eg Pfizer discover a cure for lung cancer, or prostate cancer or something, and slap a patent on it. They then decide that they need to charge $1,000 for a course of the treatment, but the actual direct costs of production are $50. What's your take on that, Mr Free Market. It's called a monopoly, and that is wrong. It's not like someone can get the treatment from another source, their only choice is between finding the money or dying.

    Maybe we can't / shouldn't force them to sell at a given price. But we should force them to license their product at a non-extortionate rate to other companies, and then we'll see free markets at work.

    In future, please think a little before posting ignorant drivel.

  191. Re:These are drug companies, not drug charities by urbanjunkie · · Score: 1
    But the whole point is that other companies CAN'T develop a competing product if Pfizer own the patent and refuse to license it. Sure, competing companies can try and see if they can develop a different technique for curing the disease, but what happens if there is only one way to cure the disease ? How do the other companies get round Pfizer's patent ? They couldn't, without bootlegging the product.

    Another analogy. The US is at war with an unnamed country. One company owns the patent on bullets, and is charging $100 per bullet. They refuse to license the patent, ensuring they are not exposed to free market forces. What would you expect to happen ?

    I'm in the software industry. My products cost a reasonable amount, but then so do my competitors. Also, my products don't save lives (no matter what the marketeers say). If they did, and they were the only way of saving lives, and there were no competing products around because I own the patent and refuse to license it, then I would expect government scrutiny. I'm not saying they shouldn't make a profit, but in some cases there is a greater need.

  192. Blame the babies by bcrowell · · Score: 2
    Yeah, and blame the babies, too. It's their fault that Dad was promiscuous, and they deserve to die a slow and painful death for Dad's sins.


    The Assayer - free-information book reviews

  193. Re:What do we expect? by bcrowell · · Score: 2
    Sounds like you didn't read the article. The article goes into lots of detail on how the drug companies don't make any significant profits in most of these countries, and it wouldn't actually cost them anything to loosen up and let these countries produce their own drugs.

    The article also explains how the IP laws we're talking about have specific provisions for emergencies and mandatory licensing. The article suggests approaches that stay within the law.

    The article also explains that the drug companies undertook most of their research before most of these third-world countries were even signatories to the relevant treaties about IP. The third-world market, which they've intentionally priced themselves out of, was never even a factor in their decision to do the research.


    The Assayer - free-information book reviews

  194. Re:What do we expect? by PyRoNeRd · · Score: 1
    Well how about a black who finds himself in West Virginia or Kentucky then in a "redneck area"?

    Would you say he would be left unharmed? Everyone makes joke about "rednecks" and "white trash" being inbred scum, it is the acceptable form of racism these days.

    BTW: Ever seen Die Hard with a vengeance?

  195. Re:What do we expect? by richie123 · · Score: 1

    That is complete nonesense, drug companies do not have to give up their ip rights to help people in need. They only have to help.

    It is completely wrong to expect charitable people to line up and pay for all the drugs needed in the third world, and collect all the profit, while they themselves are in the best position to help.

    Do charitable people have a resposibility to help, by donating money, suplies etc.? Of course they do! As do the companies who have the drugs in the first place. Someones right to make money is simply not more important then someone else's right to live. Plain and simple, if you can't understand that then I feel sorry for you.

  196. This is where the right to ip should end by richie123 · · Score: 3

    I don't care how they try to justify the case for stoping others from having the medicine they to survive, there is simply no excuse for holding back medical aid to those in desperate need.

    It seems to me that the drug companies that are not supplying medications to third world aids victims have forgotten why exactly our society has given them property rights over information: To further the sciences, for the benefit of humanity.

    1. Re:This is where the right to ip should end by CeruleanSilver · · Score: 1

      The above is a good post, it's funny and true. It's too bad most of you won't be able to see it. Someone really should mod it up.

      It's true because unless you yourself are willing to make similar sacrifices as those you demand from pharmaceutical companies, you're a hypocrite. Should they really have to fork over privately owned cash/supplies whenever some 3rd world country is dying of something they might be able to treat? Would you be willing to do the same with your paycheck? If you readily answered "yes" to either of these questions, you're probably a socialist.

  197. Profiteering? by Alien54 · · Score: 3
    well, sadly the allegations are not new. They have shown up in alternative press for years. For example, there is this item from June 1999. The parent website actually has a competent series of stories

    Now we all know how honest and altruistic large companies are.

    Heck, even Bill Gates has recently donated 100 million dollars to aids research. The obvious arguement is that we should not criticise them for the good they do. Bill Gates has obviously been a benefactor of the computer community, and so we should not criticise him for possible errors. He has done so much good.

    That statement will obviously send people screaming out of the room. ;-)

    The real question is the question of the devils bargin: How much do we excuse in the way of possible errors or abuse because of the possible benefit?

    an example from another area of life: a very elderly elderly person is placed into a nursing home. Someone is named as the guardian. the idea is to self off property to help make the remaining years comfortable, because they are beloved family. And the argument is made to loot the property for personal gain instead of helping this person. This is something that happens, I have seen an interesting varient of this.

    How much should you be able to profit from the mis-fortune of others?

    I have no problem with the meeting of costs, and even some small profit to help a little with future development. Sadly once in the coffers, the bean counter types take cover, and will disperse the funds according to other principles

    So how often should we shoot the messenger? Even the infamous Evil Overlord's List has the famous rule:

    "32.I will not fly into a rage and kill a messenger who brings me bad news just to illustrate how evil I really am. Good messengers are hard to come by."

    --
    "It is a greater offense to steal men's labor, than their clothes"
    1. Re:Profiteering? by Garry+Anderson · · Score: 2

      Bill Gates donates 100 million dollars to aids research - out of goodness, expecting no reward.

      These drug companies spend this money - out of greed, expecting great rewards.

      Intellectual Property is about greed - maximising profits beyond what is reasonable. Look at what we pay in UK for CDs - them robbing us, is the best excuse for using Napster.

      This case at the expense of millions of lives in the third-world, has to be the best excuse to review Intellectual Property monopoly policy.

      WIPO.org.uk - no connection with, and wishes to be totally disassociated from, the World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO.org)

  198. Capatalism by SubtleNuance · · Score: 2

    two-thirds of the drug companies costs are in marketing and administration

    Another reason extreme uncontrolled capatalism is actually very wastefull. Do we really need palm pushers and paid liars? What value are they really adding to society?

  199. Re:What do we expect? by SubtleNuance · · Score: 2

    The kicker is that the 'government' and the 'corporations' are the same people, of the same class. When it comes down to it they are acting in both capacitites in their own best interest.

  200. Re:Bullshit -- wear a fucking condom... by psyclone · · Score: 1
    .. and you don't have to worry about AIDS. Been said several times over already. I might have complained if this was over a "remedy" for an airborne disease, but it's not. In this case, the people of Africa or any county/continent can choose for themselves, whether abstinence or other means.

  201. Retroviruses causing harm to humans and other misc by yardgnome · · Score: 1

    Retroviruses don't harm us? Perhaps you've never heard of a sarcoma virus. There are a whole lot of them out there, and a several are so well understood that they're used as vectors for genetic recombination. So they're pretty useful...

    But they can cause cancer. Gee, I'd say that's pretty harmful, wouldn't you? And don't even try to disagree with me about sarcoma viruses causing cancer. Go read any microbiology textbook if you're feeling uppity.

    And don't start on the "killing a host is suicide" kick. That's utter bullshit and pseudo-science. Compare the lifespan of a microorganism and a human. Killing a host is only suicide if the lifespan of the human after infection becomes shorter than the time it would take for the virus to infect another host. But guess what....it takes 10-20 years for HIV to cause AIDS. Not only do single virus particles not "live" that long, there is plenty of time to pass on progeny to other individuals.

    Latency: there is none. Instead, there's a 10/20 year lag before onset of symptoms simply because your body fights a losing battle. Your immune system is constantly fighting against HIV infection, but the act of resistance causes the virus to spread between immune cells (macrophages and T cells, especially). So the infection is progressing IMMEDIATELY, but you only see symptoms 10-years down the line because at first your immune system is quite healthy, but over time HIV manages to kill off almost all of your helper-T cells (which are responsible for keeping your immune system active). When that happens, AIDS symptoms set in. The virus HIV has no symptoms of its own, except for destruction of immune response. Everything else is associated with AIDS is a symptom of secondary infections.

    Admittedly, there is a lot HIV that we don't know. And I agree that it might be advantageous to look into some more radical lines of research.

    But I think it's a travesty that a homophobe like Duesbirg can influence people like you in an attempt to draw research money away from real attempts to solve this problem. You did know that's why most people ignore him now, right? He decided to put his own personal distaste for homosexuals before scientific objectivity. But now that many, many heterosexuals have been infected, he's still spewing an extremist line. I wish he'd shut up.

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    4-star general in a one-man army.
  202. Re:What do we expect? by wobblie · · Score: 4

    well, before I open my big mouth, I would like to know just how many millions of US taxpayers dollars are going into AIDS research so that some capitalist fuckwit can "own" the "intelletual property".

    That is bullshit, and I wager it's not a small amount of our money. I'm sick of the government stealing my money and giving it to corporations.

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  203. Re:Hype and the AIDS crisis by ckedge · · Score: 2

    Did you even read the article!?!?! One of the main issues dealt with was the very misconception that you are spouting!!!

    We may have gotten rid of the worst of the trolls, but now we're over-laden with idiots. The fight goes on...

  204. These are drug companies, not drug charities by scotay · · Score: 1

    Should I care how drug companies make their money? Does it matter that companies have to recoup costs in areas other than R&D to make a profit?

    Do we want government to tell companies how much of a profit is enough? Do we think government can set price or profit limits without unforeseen consequences that might impact that rate of future developments?

    If you are truly concerned, why not give to charities and let them buy drugs to give away where there is need. Seems like the best way to use our abundance to help the world without effecting the natural human greed that drives free market advancement.

    1. Re:These are drug companies, not drug charities by scotay · · Score: 1

      Why should you think AIDS doesn't affect me? As a single male, living in a large urban area, I have seen my share of AIDS devastation. Every time you meet someone in a bar, you need to think about the implications of AIDS. AIDS is much more of a concern when you are young than lung cancer or prostate cancer.

      If Pfizer is making a product that has such large margins, what's to stop another company from developing a competing product with less side effects or easier dosing? Without those margins, would competing companies see an incentive? If we shouldn't force companies to sell at a certain price, why should we force them to license at a certain price? The efforts are Pfizer's; the fruits should be theirs as well.

      It sounds like your idea of competition is having one company develop a product, then give it away to bunch more companies to manufacture it. Let companies' price products the way they want. Given enough profit, I expect competitors to develop alternate products that can compete on price and features.

      Would you be willing to have your labors scrutinized by the government? What line of work are you in? What is your cost of your product? How much profit should you be willing to make? Is that the governments business or is that between you and your employer or customer?

    2. Re:These are drug companies, not drug charities by Christ0ph · · Score: 1

      "They then decide that they need to charge $1,000 for a course of the treatment, but the actual direct costs of production are $50. " I've heard that the actual cost of producing a year's supply of AZT is around $0.11. That's right, eleven cents.

    3. Re:These are drug companies, not drug charities by Marx's+Ghost · · Score: 2

      Much of their "costs" in the United States is paid by federal and state tax dollars, through patented R&D at public universities. These businesses are engaged with something very very far from a free market; U.S. corporate subsidizing is very protective for these guys, as is the WTO. These companies wouldn't know a free market if it helped them. One more thing: Adam Smith made it clear in the Wealth of Nations that a free market wasn't possible without a free and equal society FIRST. Most people tend to read the short excerpts that the Chicago economists glorify, but boy, it's like they never opened the book.

  205. Stop domestic knock offs? by Syllepsis · · Score: 2
    Zone encoded DVDs violate fair use rules. I think you are missing my point. I don't care about the drug companies, human life is more important. If there are domestic knock-offs, than these companies don't need to sell there.

    IP != Capitalism

    If the drug corps go under, there will be new ones. There will always be new drug corps, even if the IP law does not suit them perfectly. Human greed is not quite that fragile.

  206. Nope, HIV is a real virus. by Syllepsis · · Score: 2

    Errr...This guy (Duesburg) believes that the weight loss due to AIDS is actually due to cocaine use, and sarcoma due to nitrous. The number of cocaine and inhalant users in the world is not near large enough to support such a hypothesis. Not only that, I think most Africans have no possible way to obtain cocaine and inhalants such as he describes. Furthermore, there is such a thing as HIV, it does attack immune cells, many people who test positive with HIV tend to have their T-cell count decrease quite a bit. If you read the other side of the argument, their position is incredibly strong. My uncle, who died of AIDS, did not use recreational drugs on a normal basis, but did have sex with a person who contracted AIDS a few years later, and was HIV positive. My uncle then tested HIV positive and several years later became ill with AIDS, and then died. He did not use AZT until after AIDS symptoms were present. I can point you at about ten million people with similar stories.

  207. They are called Koch's Postulates by Syllepsis · · Score: 2
    and they are fulfilled by the AIDS retrovirus.

    Go read some science:

    HIV-AIDS

    AIDS has historically discriminated between sexes becuase it arose in the urban scene through the gay community. The latency is natural and understandable when one studies the effects of the disease.

    Duesberg is not correct. This attack is outside his area of expertise completely, and probably an attack on gay and recreational drug lifestyles. The African leaders are promoting these theories as a measure against giving massive amounts of money to US corporations, an issue that this slashdot story is bringing up. No scientist is attacking HIV-AIDS theory that does not have a political motive.

    Furthermore, a virus can happily kill its host as long as it propogates to a new host before the first dies. The latency makes this a highly successful virus.

    1. Re:They are called Koch's Postulates by n2143666 · · Score: 1

      >No scientist is attacking HIV-AIDS theory that >does not have a political motive.

      If you had read the links you would realise just how stupid this make your entire post seem.

  208. Go brazil! by Syllepsis · · Score: 5
    Allright, forget about profit and capitalism for a moment, and think about this from the third world perspective:

    Your poor country is suffering from plague, your family is dying, and a strange organization is a far away land states that you do not have the right to cheaply produce the medication your family needs to survive, because said organization spent the money to develop this, and you cannot afford to buy it from them.

    So then through capitalist ethics, you say oh well, dont buy the drugs (since you can't) watch your family and countrymen die, and capitalism remains intact so that the betterment of humanity may continue.

    ...or you can die on your feet, and maybe the corporation will cave in, and you just might live. That is what you learn from Brazil.

  209. moderate up ip4noman's post. by grammar+nazi · · Score: 2
    Those two links bring forth some important and interesting issues. I took an 'Ethics of biological sciences' class that was taught by Dr. Root-Bernstein (mentioned in the first link). We spent a great deal of time on the issue of AIDS and its correlations to HIV.

    According to Dr. Root-Bernstein, there is no correlation between AIDS and HIV. He told us that he is willing to bet his entire carreer and reputation that Magic Johnson would never contract AIDS in Magic's lifetime.

    Since taking the class (spring, 95), I have heard nothing new in the arguments that HIV causes or leads to AIDS. I'm no expert, but Dr. Root-Bernstein refuted all of the common reasons that people think that HIV becomes AIDS and I've heard no new reasoning since.

    --

    Keeping /. free of grammatical errors for ~5 years.
  210. Duh by robt · · Score: 1

    Why should the third world be better than us? Why is everybody just figuring this out? The drug companies profit at the expense of ALL of us, every day. The chemical cartel controls agriculture, food processing and medicine. Why the hell is this such a mystery? We eat shit for food and wonder why we get sick. Then, whom do we turn to? The same cabal that made us sick. Wake up.

  211. most of the marketing money is spent on... by Technodummy · · Score: 1

    all expenses paid conferences...

    and things like golf bags, pencils, pens, writing pads, all inscribed with a products name. bribery is the goal.

    take a look around your doctor's office next time you visit.

    you'll probably recognise a few names, as you've probably been prescribed them.

    always ask your doctor for a generic prescription if there is one available.

  212. Re:Human Life vs. Intellectual Property by Linux_ho · · Score: 1

    PS: by "buy out", I mean FAIRLY buy out, some way to establish a price which covers all the research and costs of developing the product, plus some to cover research in other unprofitable areas (dead-end research), plus a healthy profit for the company. Just not a ridiculous profit for the company.

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  213. Human Life vs. Intellectual Property by Linux_ho · · Score: 3

    This is a pretty polarized argument, as would be expected from a discussion which basically divides the capitalists from the communists. The truth is that neither abolishing intellectual property nor 100% free markets are good solutions, whether the topic of discussion is software or AIDS medicines.

    What we need are more flexible intellectual property laws. We need to find a better way of balancing the interests of humanity with the interests of the individual. Our old, stiff IP laws are just not keeping up with the dynamic modern world.

    People who are infected with AIDS should be able to get medicine at the cost of manufacturing the medicine, at most, if only because those drugs reduce contagion and help prevent spread of the disease. It is in the best interest of humanity to contain the worst epidemic since the Bubonic Plague.

    However, drug companies need to be assured that they can recoup their investments, and should be able to make a healthy profit. We need to keep motivating them to do new research in productive areas of exploration. That's also in the best interest of humanity.

    The real problem is that there is no mechanism for balancing the two interests. In the United States, the result of this imbalance is that huge corporations make millions of dollars on intellectual property, recouping far, far more than their investment. Look at Microsoft. They are pulling in more money than their actual contribution to society should justify. But businesses need the software to survive, so they pay the outrageously high fees.

    However, in a country without any means of protecting intellectual property, nobody would make the initial investment. The current laws, based on expiration of intellectual property rights after a period of time, are on the right track but are too inflexible. For instance, software should go into the public domain faster than it currently does due to the rate of change in technology. Also, we need to establish a mechanism by which the government can "buy out" a company's IP rights and put them into the public domain. AIDS drugs would be a prime target for this.

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  214. These people are the true heroes.. by Christ0ph · · Score: 1

    All I can say is that these people who are defying the pharmaceutical companies and the US government to manufacture these drugs are real-life heroes. These are life-or-death issues, and people can't ignore them. The US should take the lead and make it clear to the pharmaceutical 'giants' that their social contract with *americans* depends on how they behave in the third world. When those who need them are poor, they should be giving these drugs away. Let them make money in other ways. Or they don't deserve our protection. Let them set up their corporations in some other country, behavior like this makes me ashamed to be an American. :-( (TM)

  215. Re:'Hype and the AIDS crisis'- Flawed logic... by Christ0ph · · Score: 1
    Honestly, you are fooling yourself. I doubt if you have ever travelled in Third World countries. These people are usually normal people like yourself. They don't live like animals. They have homes, watches, lives like you. They just don't happen to be american. I'm sorry, but you are engaging in the long tradition of rationalization. De-humanize the victims. Blame the victims.

    If this problem exists, we have to address it. The best we can. Thats all there is to it. Otherwise we are commiting a terrible crime.

  216. Re:What do we expect? by SmellMyTeenSpirit · · Score: 1

    personaly, i can expect them not to be so gaurded with their hordes of intellectual property, when it is a medicen used to SAVE LIVES. this isn't copywrited songs here, this is human beings, and we should be doing everything we can to help.

    --
    "Cornflakes are not the innocent critters they seem"- Sterling Morrison
  217. Greedy Americans! by mc6809e · · Score: 1
    This is all about typical American greed. All Americans care about are profits that they end up spending on themselves and their greedy corporations reflect this.

    Americans spend over 460 BILLION DOLLARS PER YEAR just on leisure! This is not necessary!

    Compare this to the 168 million dollars the US gave to help fight AIDS in Africa.

    Americans can obviously afford to do more. There's no reason why Americans should get to drive their expensive cars, buy their expensive clothes, and play Quake on via a cable modem, at the expense of the rest of the world. The only solution is to force Americans to do their fair share. Perhaps the United Nations can help. Americans will not give up what they ought to unless forced somehow. The rest of the world is suffering while Americans live well!

    Americans must be MADE to be more altruistic!

    Your imperialistic military is the only thing stopping the rest of the world from coming to America to take its fair share!

    So the next time you greedy Americans are buying your latest DVD, or a hamburger, or a new CD player for your car, think about all the people dying so you can have a little fun!

    I hope your guilty conscience doesn't ruin the next movie you go out and see.

  218. End global IP by Mnemia · · Score: 1

    The problem here is not the drug companies themselves; they are only behaving as any corporation would, and attemping to maximize their profits. At core, these Third World generic manufacturers are simply engaging in capitalism: a state of pure competition for drug prices. If they were allowed by the Western governments to compete with these government supported pharmaceutical oligopolies, there wouldn't really be a problem. This is where it makes little sense globally for IP regulations to be forced upon non-developed nations like Uganda: the U.S. is actually undermining global competition in order to preserve the interests of large multinationals. It is not likely that these large corporations are best suited to meeting the needs of local markets in the Third World: how do we know a local startup couldn't do the job better for local condition, and at a reasonable price locally? We need to stop allowing global IP to cut off the air supply of these startups.

  219. Re:What do we expect? by Weh · · Score: 1

    Research costs money. Whether it is the government paying for it or some company. the only difference is that companies spend their own maoney on the research and try to make a profit later on. The government uses public money and doesn't have a need to make a profit.

    How much should the government spend on health care/drug research etc. ? Here in Europe it's a big debate since most health care is sort of free. Should public money be spent on keeping people tied up to machines that cost thousands of dollars to operate just to extend their life a little bit ? Should we spend thousands of dollars in public money on very expensive anti-AIDS medication jsut to keep AIDS victims alive for a little while longer ? I'm not saying we shouldn't per se but it is something to think about. The money could have been used to vaccinate little kids in Africa instead.

  220. I can point out one improvement to be made. by AFCArchvile · · Score: 1
    ...two-thirds of the drug companies costs are in marketing and administration...

    Therefore, if Pfizer stopped paying those ad agencies to make those Viagra ads, then they could concentrate on curing diseases other than vanity and lust.

    --
    "Ancillary does not mean you get to rule the world." --U.S. Circuit Judge Harry Edwards, speaking to the FCC's lawyer
  221. Re:look at Peoples Republic of California by teatime · · Score: 1

    Who fixes the prices? The corporations that you think are so good. Why do they fix prices? For maximum profit of course. Otherwise I agrre with you. Greed is the cause of the reprehensible behavior in Africa and California, pure and simple.

  222. Re:Right on, Brother! by mother_superius · · Score: 1

    To clarify, when Communism is capitalised, it typically refers to The Party. But I do agree with everything. Capitialists need only look at Cuba. Also, I believe in the principles on Menshveism. Bolshevism relies on extreme nationalism. Menshevism is if the Liberals ran it. (I know many liberals abhorr communism, but just imagine those who support communism).

  223. Marketing by blamario · · Score: 2
    If these companies spend 2/3 on marketing, that means they could sell they product for third the current price in the Third World countries. Why? Simply because their marketing strategy is targeted primarily on the First World citizens, and on stuff like cures-against-cold, Viagra, and similar.

    Marketing is necessary only to sell non-essential products: If you have AIDS you don't need a TV commercial to tell you to save your life. Imagine those 2/3 used for real research instead... but the fact is that research doesn't pay. The best business strategy is to pick promising discoveries from the university research, pay for the government testing, devise a good marketing scheme and collect profits.

  224. Pretty sad by RandomPeon · · Score: 2

    It's pretty sad to see all the "the Holy Corporation is entitled to all the money in the world because it's so fucking special and the Free Market isn't just a means to an end, it is intrinsically and absolutely good."

    Are these abstract principles of property so absolute that we can't make any exceptions, even in the hardest of cases? Are your hearts really that hard? Is helping people really evil? When a woman with AIDS dies because her husband who she was forced to marry transmits the disease to her and she can't get any treatment, is it still wrong to make an exception?

    I'm most definitely not religous, but a brief bible passage, which I read many years ago, came to mind:

    If there is among you a poor man, one of your brethren, in any of your towns within your land which the LORD your God gives you, you shall not harden your heart or shut your hand against your poor brother, but you shall open your hand to him, and lend him sufficient for his need, whatever it may be.

    I know, helping others is utopian socialism, the end of property rights, the ultimate wrong, etc.. I know that if we don't let drug companies have all the profits from government funded research, they won't accept government funded research anymore, and we'll all be plummeted back into the dark ages. Of course the free market accurately models the behaviors of multinational pharmeceuticals, I can go start one with the money in my pocket tommmorrow...

    Let's remember that all this intellectual property is actually a grant from the government. It's a giant social construct. It has it limits. Get off your pedestal, develop a heart, and live in the real world.

  225. Re:Drug companies Bad? by GLOCK23 · · Score: 1

    Third world countries need to be able to stop AIDS from spreading, and this means treating those who are already infected. WO! did i miss somthing... when did the big bad drug companies make a drug that stops the spread of hiv/aids? last i herd they only made drugs that keep the infected helthy looking and alive longer so that they can spred hiv/aids to more people! they are walking dead/killers the quicker they die the better off the other people will be! remember aids/hiv isn't contagous or spread in the air or through casual contact. you have to make some bad choices before you can get it. so let the infected live(DIE) with their choices. don't make me flip the bill. if you want to pay for them to spread it some more... by all means do so. but i try to remember all the other people you may sentence to death, just so you can "feal" good about your self and show your friends how caring you are.

  226. Re:Drug companies Bad? by GLOCK23 · · Score: 1

    The triad of drugs reduce the prevealence of the virus in the body. If you reduce how much of the virus there is in the patients body, not only does the person live longer and have a better quality of life, the virus is less likely to be passed on. It makes sense: The less of the virus there is, the less likely it is to be transmitted.
    less likely
    that is the key phrase. not "won't be passed on" but "less likely"
    that is enough for people in denial to keep up their bad habits.
    This disease could devastate the entire continent of Africa. It has gotten to the point that it's not about individual people but entire nations. This is an epidemic, like the bubonic plague, and it needs to be controlled.
    the bubonic plague was not spread by sex and needle shareing or blood transfusions.
    it all comes down to peoples choices and responsability!!!
    stop having sex and taking drugs!!!
    blamo! solved the "problem".
    now if we were talking about E-Bola or some other dangerous threat then i'd agree with your bleeding hearts
    other wise screw stupid people, they get whats coming to them!
    stop making me responsible for their stupid actions!!

  227. Re:Drug companies Bad? by GLOCK23 · · Score: 1

    damn...
    you people never give up do you?

    "world bank"?!
    what the hell does the world bank know about the spread of nasty bugs? of coarse their gonna estimate wrong!

    and all that other crap you said was really nice... but you STILL have not shown ME how treating aids will help me HERE in this country! yeah yeah SA and Brazil will be all WARM and FUZZIE... but that doesn't inprove the US at all. unless we run short on cheap labor.
    now show me how people dieing in some other land is my problem and that if i don't "SAVE them from themselves" then we'll have world caose!
    you guys are worse then a bunch of right wing religious zelots!!
    "SAVE the SINERS!"
    GAG!
    now go away and save somebody who needs saving!
    i have to goto work and PAY for all the "SAVING" your doing.

  228. We've all seen this before. by QuokkaNetGuru · · Score: 3
    Anyone remember Jonny Mnemonic?

    The Disease that was ravaging the world: The Black Shakes?

    The company that was more interested in the profits from treating the disease than in actually curing it: PharmaKom?

    And the AI that wanted to release the cure?

    Once again, Life Imitates Art.

    --

    People who say it cannot be done should not interrupt those who are doing it.

  229. You mind if I prick you with an HIV-infected ndle? by Linuxathome · · Score: 1

    If you truly believe that HIV doesn't cause AIDS and if you truly believe that retroviruses don't cause disease (BTW, look up HTLV-I and HTLV-II), would you mind getting pricked by an HIV-infected needle? Or if you don't like needles, we can work out an eye-dropper method of administration. "Alternative" arguments such as yours are not helping the effort to eradicate this disease.

  230. Re:Hope they dont find a vaccine by vb.warrior · · Score: 2

    Are you so cold and pompous that you find the idea of millions of people dying is morally justifiable because, in your opinion, they would probably just starve anyway?

    Or is it because its 'just' Africans? If this was happening in the US or Western Europe would you still have the same attitude? Is my life worth more because I was born in the UK rather than Nigeria?

    Try experiencing a thought other than selfish self-centered ones.

  231. Re:Nope, HIV is a *RETRO* virus. by sales_worldwide · · Score: 1

    HIV is *retro* virus.

    There are no known retro viruses (virii?) that harm us.

    They can nly replicate within cells (i.e. they use our own cell division to duplicate).

    Killing their host is suicide.

    Why is AIDS the only retroviruthat harms us? Why does it discriminate between sexes? Why does it have a 10/20 year latency?

    The point is this - the truth is not known. Regatrdless of whther or not Duesbirg is correct, do more reeasrch in these "wacko" areas.

    The truth can withstand scrutiny.

    --
    "Making linux GPL was the best thing I ever did" - Torvalds. I'd hate to see the worst thing...
  232. Think about long-term implications by wwwojtek · · Score: 2
    A lot of money was invested in developing the medicines. If the pharmaceutical companies did not believe that they would make profit on it, they would not have done it. Now it is so easy to simply confiscate the existing discoveries, but AIDS is not the last disease that the world will see. If you don't let them make their profit, next time nobody will want to invest in researching new treatments.

    Basically, somebody has to pay. The simplistic view in the article is that you can make drug companies pay and everybody (but them) will be happy. What it ignores is that in the longer term we will all have to pay for it by not having access to better treatments.

    1. Re:Think about long-term implications by Arkaein · · Score: 1
      The long term implications include millions of people dying in far off lands. Which the pharmaceutical companies are probably looking forward to; more sick people may mean more potential customers. Even if they can't profit (at least hugely profit) from selling drugs to these individuals, worldwide epidemics will surely lead to more sick customers who can pay.

      When the next big disease comes around, the drugs will largely be payed for by the same source as the AIDS drugs currently developed, through government funding (i.e. by us) as much as through pharmaceutical company holdings.

  233. Explosion of AIDS in africa by The+Blackrat · · Score: 1

    All the drugs in the world will not do one thing in the fight against AIDS until people are more educated. In Uganda and other african nations, it is commonly thought that if infected, a man can get rid of the disease by having sex with a virgin. (Who will "draw out" the disease). How are drugs which mearly slow the progress of AIDS going to help until people start practicing true monogamy/abstinence (which most geeks practice anyways ;)/or a FREAKING CONDOM!!! How difficult is it to put a rubber on your john thomas to save your life and possibly your partners? AIDS thrives on ignorance. We could have had it under control long ago, but for the stupidity of the masses.

  234. AIDS is a FRAUD and is BAD SCIENCE by ip4noman · · Score: 1

    Hey, I'm down on how Western Medicine is about Profits over healing as much as the next guy, but there are bigger issues here...

    There is NO correlation between the so-called HIV virus and the AIDS syndrome... Don't they teach the Scientific Method in medical school anymore?

    http://www.virusmyth.net/aids/

    http://www.duesberg.com/

  235. Re:'Hype and the AIDS crisis'- Flawed logic... by Blain · · Score: 1

    My travel history isn't extensive. However, I was recently given some basic AIDS/HIV training from someone who has travelled through the world, including Africa, and has given AIDS/HIV training to medical people in Africa. That's where I got the information I used.

    I understand the notion that "people are people", and I think it's got a lot going for it. However, to claim that there's no difference between my life in the USA and the life of someone in Africa is ludicrous (and I don't think you've done so, here). I don't have national leaders telling me that the reason so many of my countrymen have AIDS is because they are poor, and that their behavior has nothing to do with their infection rate. I don't have armed conflict going on in my country. I have never had to leave my home and move to another country to try to get away from fighting. I do have access to roads that stretch continuously across my country that I can drive with little fear. I have access to electricity 24 hours a day (which may be available in parts of Africa, but is not available to everybody).

    All of those issues have contributed to the spread of HIV and complicate trying to provide treatment -- they even make it difficult in using prevention technologies such as latex condoms.

    There isn't time to worry about blame in dealing with this disease. Once we have a cure, we will have that luxury. Until then, we need to address and challenge the cultural issues that stand in the way of limiting the spread of the disease. It isn't cultural bigotry to discuss them -- every culture has them.

  236. Hype and the AIDS crisis by Blain · · Score: 4

    It's amazing to me how much time people are willing to spend hyping this or that supposed AIDS problem, and how little time people are willing to spend on providing quality information about AIDS. It's also amazing to me the willful blindness most people have about this disease.

    The assertion that drug companies are putting their profits ahead of lives in Africa is ludicrous. Pumping out enough AIDS/HIV medications to treat all of the HIV+ people in Africa and shipping it there at cost (without regard to marketing or promotion) would not stop the spread of the disease, nor would it save a significant number of lives. In the US, with a massive medical infrastructure, it is difficult to support the claim that these medications save any lives either. The idea that things would work even this well on a continent with problems of basic distribution and very little infrastructure (not to mention armed revolution) is silly.

    The implication is that there is some pill that you take that keeps AIDS at bay indefinitely, and this just isn't the case. A treatment regimen for HIV involves a mixture of pills that have to be taken multiple times a day in a very specific fashion (with food, without food, different times of day, etc.), some of which require special treatment (like refrigeration). Religiously following this regimen may leave an individual with little to no measurable virus, and may slow the destruction of that person's immune system, but it will definitely bring major lifestyle impacts including the very real risk of major side effects which can be more difficult to live with than active HIV (not to mention more deadly). Following the regimen less religiously brings the very real danger of medication resistant virus taking over.

    Throwing HIV medications into Africa, under current conditions, would do little to nothing for the masses of HIV+ people there -- those who have a stable enough situation that they can preserve the medications properly are few.

    When people start talking about the realities of HIV tests and that they don't reliably show infection for six to twelve months after exposure, which means that having unprotected sex with someone after a few months puts you at risk regardless of how much you trust that person, then we'll have something available which can save lives.

  237. Right on, Brother! by lobotomy42 · · Score: 4

    I completely agree. For the past few months I've been arguing vigorously against my father about socialism/communism versus capitalism. The most common argument I get is 'human nature.' Everyone uses this little phrase to explain away any behavior that they can't understand. Why would anyone not want to share? Oh, well, I don't know so it must be human nature. Why are the humans the only species to periodically engage in the mass destruction of ourselves? Hmmm, must be our nature. Can't be the socialogical factors contributing to our behavior, or the subconscious influences we've recieved from anything and everything over the years. Nope, it's just undefiable human nature. Capitalists will argue that communism has failed and turned into despotism in its first implementations because it is against human nature. However, human nature doesn't really explain anything. It makes much more sense to me that the reason people cannout immediately adapt from capitalism to communism is because capitalism has been mentally entrenched in everyone's minds so firmly, that we don't even realize when we're being selfish. From birth we are taught to be responsible for ourselves, and not to worry about other people. The glamor associated with winning and being victorious in our society is incredible strong, and to suggest that this is so merely because it is human nature seems to me ludicrous. The other argument is that communism is undemocratic. This stems from the common perception that USSR/Despotism = Communism. THIS IS NOT SO. The minimal government that would initially exist should be entirely democratic. (Here was one failure of its first implementations - they had leaders! In a true communistic society, whoever gets the bright idea to set it up would be working in the fields right along side everyone else.) As history progresses, governments tend to get more progressive and geared towards the people, not less. The trend has gone from feudalism to monarchism to capitalism to a democratic republic; it is only logical that the next step would be one to where no one person is given importance over anyone else, where *every* occupation is democratic, and where every citizen is entitled to a roof over their head and three meals a day.

    1. Re:Right on, Brother! by paranormalized · · Score: 1
      Why are the humans the only species to periodically engage in the mass destruction of ourselves? Hmmm, must be our nature. Can't be the socialogical factors contributing to our behavior, or the subconscious influences we've recieved from anything and everything over the years.
      Actually, if you had ever read The Third Chimpanzee by Jared Diamond, (review here) you would find that even chimps attempt genocide in their own way, (one band systematically tracking down and attempting to kill individuals of another band), but they are limited in their abilities to do so..i.e., they don't have spears to stab with or even clubs to help them beat other chimps to death.

      So yes, AFAIK it is our nature to commit attrocities. We're just better at than chimps. Human nature can be incredibly ugly at times. But some degree of kindness is 'human nature' too, so there's still some hope....

      -------

      --

      -----
      IANASRP- I am not a self-referential phrase
      -----
      email: proprietary becomes free, org to com
  238. Re:CONDOMS SUCK! by n2143666 · · Score: 1

    > I will never ever wear one

    Ignoring AIDS completely for a sec. I hope you have no problem with all the other veneral diseases that condoms help protect you from. Ever heard of Herpes or syphilus (sp?)?

  239. Re:What do we expect? by junkgrep · · Score: 1

    Plus, in many cases, his point is simply not true. Government research originally came up with many of the drugs in question- they were sold to drug companies so that they could be marketed and mass-produced in an efficient manner. Much of the R&D was done with YOUR tax dollars, then sold away at a HUGE profit to the drug companies.

  240. Pay for play by deran9ed · · Score: 1



    This same scenario was being shown on "Jon Stossel goes to Washington."

    Governments and utilities corporations should assist some of these pharma companies with an incentive to keep their drugs at a reasonable cost. This would be a nice solution and would save some drug co's money:

    1. Lower rents, property taxes for pharmaceuticals so they can't rollover the costs to the consumer.
    2. Stop the beaurucracy when allowing products to be used by those in need. (note: FDA)
    3. Use George Dubya as a test dummy for drugs
    4. Provide subsidies to pharmaceutical companies perhaps on a UN like effort to make a one shop price to avoid capitalizing on poorer third world nations. 5. Pharmaceutical companies: Stop waisting so much on advertising in assinine media like the super bowl and TV. [We don't see anyone with AIDS watching television and saying "Oh Merck had such a nice commercial, and since I'm dying let me just switch drugs for a change]

    Lower rent, sure some people can bitch about this, and it does sound odd but anything and everything is going to be charged by other corporations to companies who attempt to assist others, and there are pharmaceuticals companies who have enough to pay. There should be an organization created to allow companies whos' underlying factors aren't money.

    I would post more but cmdrtaco hurt my feelings. ;) See you at Linux World

  241. This story is in itself flamebait. by abumarie · · Score: 1


    • Anyone who believes the NY Times deserves it.
    • The racist African kleptocracts don't care about their people.
    • Funny how the companies who develloped these treatments did so in a free market.


    muff said

    --


    Sex is heriditary, if your parents didn't have it chances are good you won't either.
  242. Re:blame the people too (from india) by nemesis51178 · · Score: 1

    i'm writing from the midst of a crisis- the earthquake in india that has killed tens of thousands of people. and let me tell you this, these people want more than anybody else to set their own lives right, and yet they can't. simply because they don't have the resources, the earthquake has left them with nothing. the same argument applies to AIDS patients too. milions in india are dying today of AIDS. yes, community stigmatizes them and they are shunned, the government turns a blind eye. but if everybody said it's the fault of the people and the government, even those who could be saved would die. action is what is needed at the moment. instead of blaming anybody those of us who can do something should. or those poor people will lose the one last thing that they still have- hope.

  243. What do we expect? by Urban+Existentialist · · Score: 2
    If the companies couldn't make money from their AIDS research, said AIDS research would not exist. Let us make that plain: 99% of the research effort into curing AIDS happening around the world right now would not be occurring at all.

    Now we find that the companies are regarded as 'evil' because they are trying to make a profit from their extremely expensive drugs. Can we really take some sort of moral high ground and expect them to give away the rights to the production of the drugs they have spent so much time and money developing? The only way that these drugs will be seen in Africa is if the agencies whose responsibility it really is - our respective governments - stop moaning and do the right thing and pay up. Nothing, not even charity is free. Doctors expect a wage, nurses axpexta pension scheme, and drugs must be payed for. This is the simple truth, and it is about time that the various moaning idealists realised it.

    You know exactly what to do-
    Your kiss, your fingers on my thigh-

    --

    You know exactly what to do-
    Your kiss, your fingers on my thigh-
    I think of little else but you.

    1. Re:What do we expect? by Titaniq · · Score: 1

      What do we expect indeed from someone who is "not going to say that all homeless people are dangerous, because that would be an unfair generalization." see 2001.01.27 | The NYC homeless situation http://vicez.com/html/written/editorial_01-01-27.h tml I am sure he is convinced that though the majority of Africa is negroes, they may still be a small percentage worth saving. And he is polite to everyone, including jews. What do we expect?

  244. Hope they dont find a vaccine by SIR_CUPOFTEA · · Score: 1

    I beleive AIDS has come about as a natural defence against the over population of the planet. If we create a vacine, idiots will be sleeping with a new partner every night and there will be no decentive for them not to, the number of pregnancy's (wanted and unwanted) will continue to rise and the population will spiral with no stop gap. We have a finite amount of space on this planet and we cannot keep adding to it without expecting some kind of problem. AIDS is acting as control for sexualy promiscuous people who will sleep with multiple partners without any thought for the them of there current partner ( im thinking first world countries here) As for third world countries, would you rather the population keep going up and up and dying from starvation or would you rather see it bought under control by a natural control system like the AIDS virus? We should help these countries with there eco systems so they can feed the people they have, then we should educate them not to have sex without protection. So open the gates and create a vaccine, but im sure it will be a very very bad thing.

  245. Re:My career is more important than 3rd world live by Soonak · · Score: 1

    Wouldn't holding on to and buying more of the shares gives you more voting power and more of a loss?

  246. Re:My career is more important than 3rd world live by Soonak · · Score: 1

    Forgot this: http://www.thekidsaidssite.com just click it

  247. Misleading economics... by Dork+King · · Score: 1

    I'm always shocked that even fine publications such as the NYTimes can publish stories with such specious economic analysis. Some points... 1. It's very true that a few countries such as Brazil have managed to squeeze pharmaceuticals for a much better price on AIDS drugs; they may even be able to sustain this price advantage for a long period of time -- that is, unless other countries decide to mimic their hardline negotiating tactics. What is in essence happening here is that the rich countries of the world are subsidizing the poorer ones (which, depending on your worldview, could be a good thing). If drug companies were forced to sell WORLDWIDE at current third-world prices, they would decide that it'd be better not to produce the drug at all (and more importantly, truncate current R&D on related drugs). Fixed costs (mostly R&D) DOMINATE drug production -- it usually costs around $500 mil to bring a drug onto the market -- what other industry can you name that spends that much money on ONE product, that may or may not be obselete by the time it hits the market? Conclusion: it makes sense for a drug company to sell to limited packs of consumers at lower prices where they are forced to do so (the marginal cost of each pill, after all, is extremely low, and pharmaceuticals need to milk the few projects in their pipeline that actually come to fruition), but when the question of gov't coercion and price control is broadened to the entire potential market, the firm's (and industry's) decision-making changes drastically. 2. I find it quite amusing that someone could argue that "claim of patents being needed to finance new research is rebutted with the statistic that two-thirds of the drug companies costs are in marketing and administration." Let me get this straight -- 1/3 of a company's expenses are R&D, and thus they DON'T need patents to protect their innovation?!?!? The fact of the matter is that one-third is an EXTREMELY large proportion of one's expenses to be spending on R&D -- cut 1/3 of the revenue out of almost ANY company's balance sheet and they're bankrupt 10 times over. Correlatively, ask someone to ignore 1/3 of their costs in producing a product (which is essentially what you do when you abolish patenting, since generic firms will enter IMMEDIATELY post-discovery and price identical generic drugs based purely on the post-R&D marginal cost -- which is an insignificant amount), and 99 times out of 100, they'll tell you that it's simply not worth producing. Conclusion: abolishing the patent system WILL, in fact, eliminate any incentives for drug research and development -- and thus eliminate private research and development. A more reasonable arument can be made with regard to the length of patenting (This will depend on the extent to which one believes society should invest in health-care and drugs, because regardless of where you set the patent length, it will have a differential effect on investment), but wholesale abolition is surely bad policy. 3. I think the only real alternative to a patent system is government financing. The government (as we should know by now) is more than willing to finance projects that are less than profitable, and thus it could price at marginal cost (or subsidize companies to do the same) once a drug is discovered -- say, by researchers at the NIH or a private institution. The problem with this solution, as with all central-planning solutions, is the problem of efficient allocation -- i.e. it nearly always ends up that investment and production is based more on personal relationships, bureaucratic greed, and other irrational allocative incentives. Who chooses which drugs to fund? And who pays the price when the wrong drugs are funded? In the private sector, executive teams make decisions, and they are PUNISHED (along with the entire firm and the shareholders) when they make the wrong choice. In a centrally-planned market, the government loses some money, but is anyone really going to take the fall in a system of 'flexible culpability'? Particularly in a market where a huge proportion of research eventually fails in any event? This doesn't even take into account the problem of pricing -- should every drug be priced at marginal cost? What if some diseases have external costs to society, e.g HIV, which poses a threat to others in the community? My guess is that the current political pressures to force PRIVATE COMPANIES to lower their prices will prove irresistable in cases where the GOVERNMENT is setting prices. The result? Even successful drugs will be HUGE fiscal black holes -- we're talking billions of dollars a year -- sucking up money that may be more useful in other places (e.g. in shoring up Medicare or Social Security). Conclusion: if you don't like patents, the only alternative (assuming you think drug research is good, haha) is government finance, and government finance has nearly insurmountable allocative and pricing problems. As a final point I'd just like to emphasize that I do not think that the current system is necessarily the best, nor do I believe that drug companies are angels (patent review, in particular, is something we should be concerned about... as in the tech sector, too many drug companies get away with frivolous patents). Nonetheless -- contrary to the Slashdotian Widsom, I think most informed individuals realize that patents (and -- gasp! -- drug company profits) are a NECESSITY to any rational system of drug development. Without patents, the alternatives are severe underinvestment/underproduction, or discombobulated combinations of philanthropic/governmental finance.

  248. Drug companies Bad? by spookadelic · · Score: 1

    People seem to forget that one of the largest reasons science and medicine has came so far is the idea of profiting from them. Universities do a lot of noble research... to make money for the school. Few people are doing research for free. It seems funny to me that people sit arong and whine cause someone isnt sacrificing there life to provide them with free drugs. I say shut up and make you own damn drug. O gee... you cant do that, nor are you willing to make that sacrifice. I suppose you work in the IT industry for peanuts eh? For the betterment of all people. Tell you what.. sell your car, sell you house, quit your job and go back to school. Then start your own damn drug company... Then Ill lissen when you pass out free to low cost drugs. Your not motivated enough eh? Well I guess no one else is either... I got another idea... why dont you by the drugs and send them to africa. Or will that hurt your pocket book too much? Well IM sure I have just offended a lot of people. Im not flaming anyone, just a friendly rant. Replys welcome. ::Puts on flame retardent suit::