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posted by Fnord666 on Monday April 09 2018, @08:13AM   Printer-friendly
from the forbidden-hashtags dept.

One Woman Got Facebook to Police Opioid Sales On Instagram (archive)

Eileen Carey says she has regularly reported Instagram accounts selling opioids to the company for three years, with few results. Last week, Carey confronted two executives of Facebook, which owns Instagram, about the issue on Twitter. Since then, Instagram removed some accounts, banned one opioid-related hashtag and restricted the results for others.

Searches for the hashtag #oxycontin on Instagram now show no results. Other opioid-related hashtags, such as #opiates, #fentanyl, and #narcos, surface a limited number of results along with a message stating, "Recent posts from [the hashtag] are currently hidden because the community has reported some content that may not meet Instagram's community guidelines." Some accounts that appeared to be selling opioids on Instagram also were removed.

The moves come amid increased government concern about the role of tech platforms in opioid abuse, and follow years of media reports about the illegal sale of opioids on Instagram and Facebook, from the BBC, Venturebeat, CNBC, Sky News and others. Following the BBC probe in 2013, Instagram blocked searches of terms associated with the sale of illegal drugs.

[...] Carey is now the CEO of Glassbreakers, a startup maker of software to support workforce diversity. But she worked on illegal drug sales in her previous job at MarkMonitor, a company that protects brands like pharmaceutical companies from online counterfeiting, piracy, and fraud. In a Mar. 30 tweet to Rob Leathern, Facebook's director of product management, Carey wrote, "The historical response that users can report abuse and moderators will review hasn't changed in 4 years." She asked him to "Please hold leadership accountable."

#StopSnitching.

Also at CNN.

See also: Facebook Needs to Do More to Stop the Online Opioid Market, Says FDA Chief

Related: Senate Investigators Google Their Way to $766 Million of Fentanyl
U.S. Surgeon General Urges More Americans to Carry Naloxone
U.S. Life Expectancy Continues to Decline Due to Opioid Crisis


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  • (Score: 2) by Runaway1956 on Monday April 09 2018, @10:36AM (1 child)

    by Runaway1956 (2926) Subscriber Badge on Monday April 09 2018, @10:36AM (#664343) Journal

    some of it is legit prescribed medication

    Thinking out loud here, actually. But, I don't think that they are selling knockoffs, or, fake drugs. I think they are selling legitimate drugs, outside of legitimate supply lines. Kinda like, you want an authentic AK-47. There is no legitimate, legal way for you to buy one (in the US), but you want the real thing. So, you go outside the legitimate gun dealers, and purchase under the table.

    Of course, when you go outside the legitimate supply channels, you can purchase as much as you can afford, and take as much of your drug as you like. There is no medical supervision, no medical advice. The drugs are wide open for recreational use and abuse.

    The price may or may not be significantly higher if you get a prescription, and have it filled at a pharmacy. But, theoretically at least, prescription drugs are less prone to abuse.

    If my take on all of this is wrong, someone please enlighten me.

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  • (Score: 2) by zocalo on Monday April 09 2018, @11:03AM

    by zocalo (302) on Monday April 09 2018, @11:03AM (#664354)
    That is definitely another option I'd overlooked. There are things like Canadian pharmacies that will ship perfectly genuine drugs over the border for less (and in some cases, much less) than US prices, aren't there? Not sure what the legal position on those is, but I suspect that unless it's all completely above board with a legitimate pharmacy doing the shipping then Carey would have also been attempting to shut them down during her time at MarkMonitor. Presumably there are also a number of shady operations doing this with genuine drugs acquired through illegitimate means too though, and they'd absolutely be a target of Carey's "brand protection" based takedowns.
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