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Forums » Groups Demand Transparency For Secret Piracy Trade Agreement » Most of these groups are concerned with generic drug issue
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Flamers get free run of BBR front page »
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Karl Bode
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reply to TKJunkMail
Re: Most of these groups are concerned with generic drug issue

quote:
Their issue is about continuing to allow 3rd world countries to continue pirating patented drugs and making HIV & other drugs available without paying off 1st world drug companies for producing the drugs.
TK trolls the news, then gets upset when people call him names. A lose/lose all around. Lets play nice, gents!


kamm

join:2001-02-14
Brooklyn, NY
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reply to TKJunkMail
said by TKJunkMail See Profile :

Most of these 100 groups mentioned could care less about ISP privacy. Their issue is about continuing to allow 3rd world countries to continue pirating patented drugs and making HIV & other drugs available without paying off 1st world drug companies for producing the drugs.
And that's the way it should be - Big Pharma is using them for uncontrolled shady testing, paying very little money, let alone claiming 'patents' over things we have had long time available.

US patent system is a complete joke and it's more than idiotic to base any argument on it - but I'm sure it flies way over your head, Tjunk.
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[BQUOTE=[user=bicker]]Waaaa waaaa waaaa. You just want what you want and don't care to factor in what is right or true. Your perspectives are un-American, and deserve far more ridicule than I'm prepared to pile on them.
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kamm

join:2001-02-14
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reply to digitalfreak
said by digitalfreak See Profile :

said by cho0b See Profile :

I've watched your comments for a long while... I can't tell if you're just looking past the bad and trying to squeeze out some good or what.
You don't need to put too much thought into it. If it might be bad for corporate America, you'll see TK jump all over it. He's so predictable.
Hehehe, exactly. He's a typical one-bit corporate shill, full of lies and hilariously obvious mispresentations.
--
[BQUOTE=[user=bicker]]Waaaa waaaa waaaa. You just want what you want and don't care to factor in what is right or true. Your perspectives are un-American, and deserve far more ridicule than I'm prepared to pile on them.
[/BQUOTE]


digitalfreak

join:2005-12-09
49533

reply to cho0b
said by cho0b See Profile :

I've watched your comments for a long while... I can't tell if you're just looking past the bad and trying to squeeze out some good or what.
You don't need to put too much thought into it. If it might be bad for corporate America, you'll see TK jump all over it. He's so predictable.


cho0b

join:2006-09-26
united state

reply to La Luna
I wasn't blaming George Bush. I was asking him specifically what he thought about Bush and his signing statements. It was basically unrelated to the discussion going on.

Thanks though, it means a lot to me to be called clueless.

Ahrenl

join:2004-10-26
North Andover, MA
·Verizon FIOS

reply to EPS
It's not the 10year initial period that's the problem.

It's when they change the name add another side-effect and apply for another 10 year patent. Of course they just taking their cue's from content owners who are up to what? The life of the creator plus 90 years? IF you can't make a profit after 10 years you don't deserve to.


La Luna
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1 edit
reply to cho0b
said by cho0b See Profile :

I've watched your comments for a long while... I can't tell if you're just looking past the bad and trying to squeeze out some good or what.

I wonder if George Bush would ever think about using one of his mighty signing statements to stop piracy. I mean, he's already used them to stop the Bill of Rights.

Why aren't we entitled to see his signing statements? Why did the president give himself the power to be a legislator?

What do you think about that? Aren't the terrorists winning if we let them rape our Constitution?

p.s. terrorists=pirates? Right? Riiiight. Mkay.
Well that didn't take long....six posts until some clueless one blames George Bush, lmao!

Has it occurred to you that George Bush might not even be in office when this treaty, IF it ever happens, goes through? Might be your Golden Boy wielding that mighty pen. And if you think he won't, think again. His corruption runs deep.
--
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st7860

join:2004-05-13
San Francisco, CA

reply to SilverSurfer
said by SilverSurfer See Profile :

said by EPS See Profile :

Drug companies aren't as profitable as you seem to think they are. [...]
Hahahahahahahaha hahahahahaha. And the moon is made of green cheese. George Bush is a scholar. And filtering/capping/throttling/banning users cures "piracy." Please do yourself a favor and wake up.
i hereby and solemnly declare +1


funchords
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1 edit
reply to EPS
said by EPS See Profile :

Drug companies aren't as profitable as you seem to think they are.
That's not a very helpful way to think about it.

Item by item, it's a pretty big gamble. R&D costs are high, litigation risks are high, and payoffs are high. Some companies are small and only have a few items in development -- they've never made a dime. Some tiny companies have hit the lottery jackpot. Some large companies spread their risk and profit more slowly on a percentage basis. And, frankly, there's nothing wrong with this part of the pharmaceutical industry.

said by EPS See Profile :

If pirating the drug potentially saves the lives of say, 500 people overseas, but the reduction in the drug companies finances means that drugs in the pipeline are cancelled, potentially killing 1,000 people who could have been helped, what is the right course of action?
If those 500 people weren't going to get the drug by paying for it, then how does allowing them to die help anyone at all? How does manufacturing it and allowing them to live hurt anyone at all?

Don't get me wrong -- there is a problem here. Taking that formula from the US (where costs and risks are high) to some legitimate critical needs of the 3rd world may have zero immediate effect for that drug's market success or failure. That said -- within a year, legitimate buyers will start going to to the free sources, instead.
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funchords
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1 edit
reply to TKJunkMail
said by TKJunkMail See Profile :

And perhaps you don't understand how treaties are negotiated. They are done away from the public eye or no treaty would ever be drafted due to pressures brought by populist groups from around the world.
Look at our copyright laws now, and look at the sorry state of our patent system. These knuckleheads are the ones we're letting talk in secret?

One thing is clear -- our government and our populace are not on the same page WRT intellectual property. And the longer we keep pretending that we are, the longer we delay the solutions that would benefit artist, inventor, and consumer alike.
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o2cool8

join:2002-04-19
Miami, FL


1 edit
reply to SilverSurfer
said by SilverSurfer See Profile :

said by EPS See Profile :

Drug companies aren't as profitable as you seem to think they are. [...]
Hahahahahahahaha hahahahahaha. And the moon is made of green cheese. George Bush is a scholar. And filtering/capping/throttling/banning users cures "piracy." Please do yourself a favor and wake up.
He has a point, although I wouldn't go on and say they aren't profitable. The reason they companies are profitable is because they have a 10 year window to sell their new drug before anyone can make a generic. When you buy a name brand, you are paying for the research and money put into making that drug, not just the cost of the ingredients. If they allow any company to copy a new drug, then companies would have no incentive to research for new drugs and nothing new will ever come out to the market again.

Edit: I would like to add that I do agree new drugs should be cheaper, however letting anyone copy a new drug is NOT the answer. Maybe allow the company to re-cope its initial investment into the drug plus 5% or 10% on top of that. Once that has been reached or 10 years(which ever comes first), then open the drug to generics.


Toguro

join:2003-10-23
Ottawa, IL

reply to EPS
This is from one of many sites.
Pfizer Annual Revenue: $48.4 billion ($12.9 billion is profit).
»nymag.com/news/features/2007/profit/32900/
maybe if they pirate there drugs they will stop making so many herpes commercials.


funchords
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reply to TKJunkMail
said by TKJunkMail See Profile :

Most of these 100 groups mentioned could care less about ISP privacy. Their issue is about continuing to allow 3rd world countries to continue pirating patented drugs and making HIV & other drugs available without paying off 1st world drug companies for producing the drugs.
Without looking, so what?

Negotiating in secret on matters that will affect all of us is bad on its face.

said by TKJunkMail See Profile :

And as far as the not-democratic charge - the ELECTED representatives of these countries will sign off on the treaty. So I guess democracy isn't being threatened either.
Could democracy stand if public debate isn't allowed? Our system is a system of checks and balances, and one of those big checks is the ability to scrutinize what the government is doing.

When wikileaks exposed ACTA, some of the proposals there seemed like distant reaches. But, lately, I'm beginning to see some convergence between ACTA and some of the proposals recently made by legislators and industry. Coincidence?
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TKJunkMail
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reply to bjbrock
said by bjbrock See Profile :

Because in out democracy the drafting is being done by my representative. I have a right to know what my rep is doing.

Perhaps you are not familiar with how a democracy is supposed to work.
And perhaps you don't understand how treaties are negotiated. They are done away from the public eye or no treaty would ever be drafted due to pressures brought by populist groups from around the world.
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bjbrock

join:2002-10-28
Mcalester, OK
reply to TKJunkMail
Because in out democracy the drafting is being done by my representative. I have a right to know what my rep is doing.

Perhaps you are not familiar with how a democracy is supposed to work.

SilverSurfer

join:2007-08-19

reply to EPS
said by EPS See Profile :

Drug companies aren't as profitable as you seem to think they are. [...]
Hahahahahahahaha hahahahahaha. And the moon is made of green cheese. George Bush is a scholar. And filtering/capping/throttling/banning users cures "piracy." Please do yourself a favor and wake up.


Noah Vail
Premium
join:2004-12-10
Lorton, VA
·RoadRunner Cable

reply to TKJunkMail
said by TKJunkMail See Profile :

Why do you think you are entitled to drafts and works in progress?
Because they are MY legislators, working by the grace of MY dollar, writing legislation that affects ME.

That's why I AM ENTITLED.

Why might you suppose that Americans shouldn't be fully informed of business centric legislation, that further restrains citizens?

*chirp*

*chirp*

NV
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cho0b

join:2006-09-26
united state

reply to TKJunkMail
I've watched your comments for a long while... I can't tell if you're just looking past the bad and trying to squeeze out some good or what.

I wonder if George Bush would ever think about using one of his mighty signing statements to stop piracy. I mean, he's already used them to stop the Bill of Rights.

Why aren't we entitled to see his signing statements? Why did the president give himself the power to be a legislator?

What do you think about that? Aren't the terrorists winning if we let them rape our Constitution?

p.s. terrorists=pirates? Right? Riiiight. Mkay.

EPS

join:2008-02-13
Hingham, MA

reply to karlmarx
Drug companies aren't as profitable as you seem to think they are. If pirating the drug potentially saves the lives of say, 500 people overseas, but the reduction in the drug companies finances means that drugs in the pipeline are cancelled, potentially killing 1,000 people who could have been helped, what is the right course of action? (And all numbers are potentials, since that drug in the pipeline could have been a waste of money, or the pirated drug could be contaminated due to low quality standards and hurt more than it helps, etc. etc.)


hopeflicker
Capitalism breeds greed
Premium
join:2003-04-03
Long Beach, CA

reply to TKJunkMail
said by TKJunkMail See Profile :

said by amungus See Profile :

Seems you also forget that elected representatives are also obligated to disclose WHAT they actually do...

They work for us, we don't work for them.
. All part of their anti-corporate jihad.
How sweet of you. Lumping pirates in with terrorists.
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