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Fake Tamiflu "Out-Spams Viagra On Web"

cin62 writes "The number of Internet scammers offering fake versions of the anti-swine flu drug Tamiflu has surpassed those selling counterfeit Viagra, reports CNN. Since the H1N1 virus, also known as swine flu, was declared a global pandemic last month, there has been an increase in the number of Web sites and junk emails offering Tamiflu for sale. 'Every Web site that used to sell Viagra is now selling Tamiflu. We are pretty sure that the same people are making the Tamiflu as are making the Viagra,' said Director of Policy for the UK's Royal Pharmaceutical Society." This news fits in nicely with a report Wired ran a couple weeks ago about the hysteria behind H1N1.

4 of 65 comments (clear)

  1. Do these actually do business? by DJRumpy · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I just can't come to grips with the fact that people will actually order stuff like this off the net. It would be no different than taking random drugs you bought off the street corner. It just seems insane to me.

    I'm also curious if any countries take steps to actively stamp these out? It seems like it should be fairly simple to figure out where these are based. I can only assume they are based in counties with no extradition laws?

    1. Re:Do these actually do business? by meyekul · · Score: 5, Funny

      I just can't come to grips with the fact that people will actually order stuff like this off the net. It would be no different than taking random drugs you bought off the street corner. It just seems insane to me.

      Yeah, nobody would buy drugs off a street corner... wtf

  2. Tired of response bashing... by logicfuzzy · · Score: 5, Insightful
    You know, I'm kind of tired of this bashing of the swine flu "hysteria". All reports coming from Mexico, since confirmed by studies, have shown that younger people were much more highly afflicted by this flu (I believe almost 50% were younger adults), and it seemed to be spreading very quickly. This was early information that was very alarming and showed it may become something very pandemic-like. Since then, some of this information has changed, or the virus may have mutated and become less deadly, but some of the pandemic-like characteristics still remain. Even the spanish flu started milder in the summer before it really broke out.

    And, nobody really knew what this early information meant. Even in April, some universities estimated the worst-case in the united states will be approximately 1,000 by May 18th (link) while the try number of cases was AT least 5x that (link). The actual cases were probably much more, and by july it was estimated at around a million in the US. Sure, it was becoming clearer that the death rate was small by then, but this couldn't have been known earlier on.

    The response to this information was nothing draconian: no viruses were mandated or anything like that. People were simply asked to wash their hands, avoid coming out if sick, etc. Schools were shut down, but again not that big of a deal. Obviously the majority of the big cities in Mexico, the epicenter, were shut down. The only possible conspiracy-theory type reasoning that may be true is that companies making tamiflu and other drugs made a lot of money off of this. Without additional evidence, that doesn't mean the "hysteria" was manufactured.

    All in all, everybody go to exercise their preparedness responses, and improve on them if they were deficient. I think the response, while probably not perfect, was pretty impressive actually.

  3. Re:Tamiflu is a joke by wiredlogic · · Score: 5, Informative

    It is very unwise to use Tamiflu as a prophylactic. It has neurological side effects, sometimes severe enough to induce suicidal behavior. Taking it like it's as harmless as a vitamin pill is courting danger. It is also reckless and irresponsible to keep the general populace in the dark by promoting it as wonder cure and causing the sort of over consumption that actually makes it profitable for the drug spammers to make money off the foolish.

    --
    I am becoming gerund, destroyer of verbs.