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Google AdWords And Ethics Issues

trystanu writes "The Washington Post reports that Google 'will stop accepting advertising from unlicensed pharmacies that have used the Internet to sell millions of doses of narcotics and prescription drugs without medical supervision', following both Yahoo and Microsoft's similar moves last month. The head of Google's U.S. AdWords branch maintains it's not just for the money but that they want their searchers to have the ads most relevant to what they're looking for. It's quite clear some advertisers are using the front door to spam Google rankings. Are some of the 100,000 advertisers now signed up for Adwords tarnishing Google's image at a delicate time?"

15 of 256 comments (clear)

  1. Why Not? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Plenty of sites block or blocked porn in one form or another. They have the right to refuse money from anyone.

    Or so I would hope.

    1. Re:Why Not? by Kenja · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Not so, or at least not allways. You cannot refuse to do buisness with people based on some criteria such as race etc. However I don't see any problem with what Google is doing.

      --

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  2. They're not filtering them out by Perianwyr+Stormcrow · · Score: 4, Insightful

    They're going to exercise more care about who they sell ad space to, not excise the sellers from the results. Two totally different things- and it's the ad space sales that they have to take actual responsibility for, since they're being paid...

    --

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  3. Of course by SargeZT · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Of course this is tarnishing google's image. This is basically the same thing that has happened to every single search engine. Yahoo was a great search engine in its time. They started getting millions of hits a day, and they decided to sell space on the site. Then, yahoo sold ranking on the engine, and you start having skewed results. Finally, People stop coming because of the pop-ups and bad search results. This isn't a great position for google.

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  4. Which Google are you using? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Nowhere to them claim to be unfiltered or unrestricted. They don't take ads for a number of other categories including guns. They also filter out sites they feel are fraudulent in trying to gain higher pagerank. So, where is this unfiltered and unrestricted Google?

  5. Stick a fork in it; google is done. by RLiegh · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Now that people are starting to exploit googles' page ranking system on a regular basis and since google is having to bow to legal pressure and thereby lose their outsider "street cred"...they're in the exact spot that yahoo was in in 1999.

    All they need now is a half-assed web hosting service.

    How many times are we going to see this repeated online until we learn that a jack-of-all-trades really IS master of none?

  6. not so fast by gearheadsmp · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I don't think the problem of buying cheap drugs from Canada/Mexico is the whole piece. Counterfeit drugs are a real problem. The are plenty of mail order drug companies that have been featured on TV. Quite a few politicians are still supporting state programs that import from Canada and/or mandate discounts from the Big Drug Companies. From an ethical standpoint, I find the prices drug corporations rake in on their patented drugs more revolting than the RIAA. My impression is that the drug companies spend more money on marketing than they do on R&D, despite their B.S. excuse that mandatory discounts will cut their R&D budget.

  7. Re:Bullshit it's not about the money! by HeghmoH · · Score: 4, Insightful

    This is the wackiest conspiracy theory I've seen all day.

    How exactly are the big pharmaceutical companies "leaning on" Google? Talk of Google's IPO has included mention of the company's value, which is several billion dollars. They aren't a small company that anybody can just push around. The only "leaning" tactic I can think of that would work would be a fleet of armored cars, loaded with green paper cargo, driving to Google's headquarters and unloading.

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  8. It all needs to go to froogle anyway! by kcornia · · Score: 5, Insightful

    When I do a search for something (Simcity 4 strategies this weekend for instance), I don't want the first 4 pages to be links to stores where I can buy the Prima guide. If I want that, I'll go to froogle.

    And yeah, so what if most users don't know its there. If that's the case, make the first link that's returned say something to the effect of "Were you looking for something to BUY?" If so, click here. You get the idea.

    Or add froogle as a tab on the front page, with a bubble that tells users what it is.

    Anything to make searches for information return links to just that, not 2000 mom and pop websites that link to amazon.

  9. It's their own fault. by ro_coyote · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Are some of the 100,000 advertisers now signed up for Adwords tarnishing Google's image at a delicate time?

    No. It's Google's own fault for tarnishing its own image. They have control of how they function and others have merely taken advantage of it. Google allowed it to continue until now, when they realized problems were in the making.

    But then again, tarnishing its image towards whom? Advertisers, users of Google, the government, or everyone?

  10. If people want it.. let 'em. by DroopyStonx · · Score: 2, Insightful

    If people want to buy pills without a prescription, then by all means let them. What's the big deal?

    I've been lookin' at some of those sites lately because I would like some Ambien. I've had sleeping issues for years now and doctors are very reluctant to prescribe them to me because they're "too addictive", which is total BS. They might be, but I don't have addictive personality. The best sleep I've had in my life has been while on those pills. Considering it's my sleep being affected, I really don't see the problem with buying 'em online. It's not like I'm buying Oxycontin and getting doped up.

    Who's Google to step in and play the police?

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    1. Re:If people want it.. let 'em. by lkaos · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I've been lookin' at some of those sites lately because I would like some Ambien. I've had sleeping issues for years now and doctors are very reluctant to prescribe them to me because they're "too addictive", which is total BS.

      Ok, for once a doctor is not prescribing something. He cites the main reason as it being too addictive.

      They might be, but I don't have addictive personality. The best sleep I've had in my life has been while on those pills.

      So you have "sleeping issues" and think that these pills are going to solve it. Because you had them before and now you need them to be able to live your life normally. Um, that's an addiction pal :-)

      If you're not diagnosed with a sleeping disorder (and sleep problems are just a symptom of something else), then sleeping pills are not going to help you in the long term. If it's not stress/lifestyle/health, then go see a sleep specialist. Some sleep disorders are very very serious (read: life threatening).

      This is why self-medicating is bad. If being able to buy these things online prevents you from going to see a specialist and inevitably leads to you not getting diagnosed with a serious illness then that would be a Bad Thing(TM).

      Check out SleepNet for more info.

      --
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  11. It's not just a good idea, it's the law. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Direct-to-consumer advertising of drugs, which is what these adwords are, is extremely tightly regulated in the US. It was only legalized recently, under strict controls, and is still illegal in many (most?) jurisdictions. Some people think that any DTC advertising is a bad idea.

    If you publish an ad for a drug, and the FDA didn't sign off on it first, you're breaking the law. Google is almost certainly required to do this -- I'm amazed that they got away with it for so long.

  12. Re:How does this HELP them at IPO? by geoffspear · · Score: 2, Insightful
    When did Google claim they're going to have ads that are relevant to any search that you might do? What if no one selling the product you're looking for chose to advertise with Google? Would that make them liars too?

    Are the TV networks unethical if they refuse to take huge fines from the FCC to run ads for illegal products?

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  13. Re:slightly offtopic, but by gnu-generation-one · · Score: 2, Insightful

    As you say, when one-person companies are paying 50 cents per click, the idea of somebody clicking away at their advert can get quite insulting.

    Not, of course, that anybody is above "spending" their competitors' money with the occasional click on a google ad-word for a competitive query.

    Note to google: you need to download the list of open proxies every day, and refuse adwords impressions from IP addresses on that list!

    Or just respond to a click with a portscan. If you don't mind being a little unpopular...