Killing Cancer With a Virus 662
just___giver writes "The U.S. National Cancer Institute has just decided to fund multiple human clinical studies to test the reovirus. This naturally occuring virus has a remarkable ability to infect and kill cancer cells, without affecting normal, healthy cells. Here is a before and after picture of a terminal patient with an actively growing neck tumour that had failed to respond to conventional treatments. This tumour was eliminated with only a single injection of the Reovirus. Researchers at Oncolytics Biotech have shown that the Reovirus can kill many types of cancer, including breast, prostate, pancreatic and brain tumours. Human clinical trial results indicate that there are no safety concerns and that the reovirus shrinks and even eliminates tumours injected with this virus. Numerous other third party studies show that the reovirus should be an important discovery in the treatment of 2/3 of all human cancers."
Okay, lets try it then... (Score:3, Insightful)
Hope is better than nothing.
Re:Okay, lets try it then... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Okay, lets try it then... (Score:5, Informative)
Speaking personally, I just underwent surgery and am awaiting radiation for a tumor. I would have much prefer to have gotten an injection, a severe cold, no tumor, and the continued use of an important body part. But I was not selected for such a study and couldn't have paid for the drug anyway. Such is life. I am just glad that my prognosis is good and hope that the virus will be approved as soon as is scientifically appropriate.
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Based on Clinical Trails to Date?? (Score:2)
This investigational drug/virus has a long way to go before there is acceptance.
Re:Okay, lets try it then... (Score:5, Insightful)
Physician perspective (Score:5, Interesting)
Most of these unlabeled uses of drugs/viruses/devices are done under compassionate use protocols of one type or another. There is also "emergency use," which can even be done before clinical trials... try this link [fda.gov] for some more info.
Even so, you should read the fine print. Even for emergency use, you still have to consult your IRB (that's "institutional review board" for you non-medical folks... they can veto what you want to do), and at least one other physician before submitting the paperwork... and who knows how long before your approval comes back? I've not personally submitted one of these (I am not an oncologist), so I won't speculate on the time frame, though I'd hope they would bypass the usual beauracratic delays.
Re:Physician perspective (Score:4, Interesting)
Mine went pretty fast. The looked at it and approved it in one meeting, so I had to wait about a month total. I was not giving people drugs, though. I was doing a psychophysics type experiment.
If you're doing something like this, I would expect it to take from several months to a year.
Re:Physician perspective (Score:4, Insightful)
They can raise the rates, then cut off payoffs via the "torn reform" bullshit, and finally refuse to lower the rates even after the "reform" has taken place as their stock investments are soaring!
PROFIT!
And Americans fell for it. The insurance companies are looting us.
We are so stupid, we all deserve to lose health coverage.
No, actually... (Score:5, Interesting)
Malpractice lawsuits have nothing to do with the increase in premiums? Please... losses directly affect premiums in virtually any insurance arena, though not always in the short term. Notably, my state has seen its total number of malpractice insurers drop from 15-20 to only 3 in the last ten years.
Also, state law where I practice limits the amount of assets an insurance company can place in the stock market. They are required by law to keep certain amounts liquid and available to settle claims, while much of the remainder of their assets goes into the much-less-volatile bond market. This state also prevents insurers from recouping investment losses via premium hikes, thus discouraging any sort of wild futures trading, or risky investment nonsense. Many insurers used to resell policies, much like banks resell loans... but the worldwide reinsurance market has also taken a beating in the last five years, preventing insurers from reshuffling some of their exposure.
It's a complicated problem... but that doesn't mean malpractice caps are not useful. Unless, of course, you are a med-mal attorney, in which case your self-interest is obvious. My personal preference would have been to institute some form of loser-pays, or a malpractice review board made up of laymen, attorneys, and physicians of various specialties to vet lawsuits for merit BEFORE they go to trial.
Blaming it soley on evil corporations losing money in the stock market makes you sound like a ABA lobbiest.
Re:Physician perspective (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Okay, lets try it then... (Score:4, Informative)
Even the thought of having to defend against such a suit may well be enough to stop a lot of places from doing this. Such a waste.
Re:Okay, lets try it then... (Score:3, Informative)
Here's some interesting reading: OverLawyered.com [overlawyered.com]
that's why they have (Score:5, Informative)
They've been using this in HIV patients for years. The only reason I could see them being more hesitant to treat cancer patients in a like manner is this: there ARE treatments for cancer that are curative... most all the treatments for HIV simply buy time... they do not eliminate the disease. Chemo is extraordinarily unpleasant, but it does have a proven track record...
Re:Okay, lets try it then... (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Okay, lets try it then... (Score:3, Insightful)
For any particular type of cancer there are probably hundreds of promising treatments. Which ones do you put your hope in? Whose advice do you take? How do you know that it will help and not hurt? What if you pick the wrong one and waste your time when there was a better choice?
There is a reason for clinical trials and all of the procedures that a treatment has to go through for approval. If nothing else it forces the drug companies to spend the money on the scienc
Re:Okay, lets try it then... (Score:5, Funny)
Ah, that could present a problem right there. The pharmaceutical industry industry has invested a lot of money in R&D for patentable anti-cancer drugs. If it turns out that there is a naturally occuring substance that aids some cancer patients they'll probably lobby to have it outlawed.
Coming soon: The War on Naturally-Occuring Pool-Dwelling Viruses; sponsored by your favorite big-time pharmaceutical companies.
Am I overreacting? Yeah, probably.
Re:Okay, lets try it then... (Score:3)
They don't have to outlaw it; they merely have to patent it.
You aren't overreacting at all. They are patenting genes, for gosssakes.
Re:Okay, lets try it then... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Okay, lets try it then... (Score:3, Insightful)
Naturally occuring doesn't seem to count as prior art.
Re:Copyrighted virus ? (Score:3, Funny)
I agree; copyrighting natural phenomena is outrageous. This is what patents are for.
How do they know? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:How do they know? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:How do they know? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:How do they know? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:How do they know? (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:How do they know? (Score:3, Informative)
In addition, if the virus only responds to the receptors found on cancer cells (which is, I imagine, how it works), then there is next to no chance of it ever infecting normal healthy cells.
Though, I agree...this should be studied for a couple of more years, just to be on the safe side. However, I'm nigh positive that this could lead to a definitive cancer cure.
Re:How do they know? (Score:5, Informative)
Actually, the FAQ linked to by the article has a very simple description of how it works:
So in fact, it can and does infect normal cells; but it's so weak that it never causes any problem. Elsewhere on the FAQ it says that most humans show evidence of having been infected by it at some time (it's a naturally occuring virus).
Re:How do they know? (Score:4, Informative)
That text comes from section 3 of this [uwaterloo.ca] article. So it would seem that the answer to your question was determined quite some time ago.
Re:How do they know? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:How do they know? (Score:5, Informative)
Then it gets patented. (Score:3, Interesting)
Well... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Then it gets patented. (Score:2)
Re:Then it gets patented. (Score:4, Insightful)
However, how many cancer patients caught the common cold and were thus cured? Right, none. The virus that they're using in the trials is definitely genetically manipulated, not native. And that's patentable (and rightfully so).
Re:Then it gets patented. (Score:5, Interesting)
Yes, a company could patent the usage of this retrovirus for curing cancer. Sure, the virus has existed for some unknown amount of time, but the usage of it as a method to cure cancer would certainly fulfill the "new" and "non-obvious" requirements for patent law.
And, hey, maybe they'll make some money on doing so as long as they license it widely at some low cost. After all, they certainly spent some money in finding out that the retrovirus causes the anti-cancer effect, and paid for the trials, and whatnot to go forward. Shouldn't they receive some compensation for doing so?
And what will happen if they try to charge too much for it? Particularly if the retrovirus can be easily manufactured from existing natural sources?
They'll discover that countries will nationalize their patent and they'll get bupkis. It's happened before, both in and outside of the US, and it'll happen again. And even for similar causes. Numerous South American and African countries do not recognize the patents on various HIV medications. The drug companies have been told that they can either sell it for a fixed price (or, more likely, be paid a fixed amount by the government regardless of how much is administered) or the government will simply nationalize the patent and the drug companies will get nothing. Generally they go for the settlement.
Of course, it's not that simple. Every time this occurs it's a disincentive for the drug companies to actually produce miracle cures, or even to produce treatment drugs for maladies. Do you spend $100M on research for degenerative neural disorders like Alzheimer's and MS, knowing that if you succeed you might never see the money back, or do you spend it on a drug to reduce anxiety, depression, or other sociological problems -- which aren't likely to ever be nationalized? And while I agree that drugs are often overpriced, the flip side to that is it's hideously expensive to actually get a new drug approved by the FDA and its counterparts (mostly in Europe). It costs millions of dollars. And most of them fail to get through the process. You can look at streamlining the process, but then you run the risk of having drugs with very bad side effects slipping through.
Do you want to leave actually finding cures up to purely governmental/good will efforts? Especially when a lot of the best are going to go into private industry because the pay is better?
Sorry, the real world isn't as simple as your flippant "intellectual property" comment. It's far more complex, and there are no easy solutions.
Re:Then it gets patented. (Score:5, Insightful)
Now realize that until the late 19th century the average life expectancy was in the early to mid 30s. People didn't die of cancer because something else got them first -- mostly disease, accidents, or (for women obviously) childbirth. As we started reducing those incidents we started seeing more people die of other conditions -- generally attributed to "old age", but most likely heart attacks, strokes, pneumonia, and so forth. As we've slowly beaten back those diseases we're seeing cancer become more prevelant. And when we beat cancer we'll still have to deal with dementia, alzheimer's, Parkinson's, and other central nervous system afflictions. And I'm willing to bet that when we tackle those we'll find other issues too. Eventually we may get to the point where one of the old killers becomes the most prevalent cause of death once again.
Accident.
Avg Life expectancy (Score:3, Informative)
Research develops in an international sea of ideas (Score:3, Insightful)
That's the kind of misinformation we often hear from the IP/investment-led corporate bullshit classes, but hopefully most technical people can see through it.
As an ex-researcher, let me tell you about research. Researchers do not develop ideas in a vacuum, and their pay packets do not magically transform into inventions. And the stuff from which ideas are made is not created by dumping invester's money into la
Re:Research develops in an international sea of id (Score:3, Insightful)
All of whom would be flipping burgers if people weren't paid to do research.
Beat me to it. (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Beat me to it. (Score:2)
Re:Beat me to it. (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Beat me to it. (Score:5, Funny)
IS NOT!!!
Oops, gotta go. Mom needs the phone.
--
Poor FARK.com (Score:5, Funny)
Scientific study concludes that eating a lot of fast food and sitting in front of the TV makes you fat. Still no cure for cancer.
Oh great- (Score:3, Funny)
good... (Score:4, Informative)
i find these as very very welcome news, especially so that i have personally seen the effects of conventional therapies; if you're lucky you'll have a tumor they can cut out, if not then too many of those chemotherapies are way too toxic, and quite a few radiotherapies too.
Re:good... (Score:4, Informative)
Inhibition of tumor angiogenesis by cannabinoids.
Blazquez C, Casanova ML, Planas A, Del Pulgar TG, Villanueva C, Fernandez-Acenero MJ, Aragones J, Huffman JW, Jorcano JL, Guzman M.
Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology I, School of Biology, Complutense University, Madrid, Spain.
Cannabinoids, the active components of marijuana and their derivatives, induce tumor regression in rodents (8). However, the mechanism of cannabinoid antitumoral action in vivo is as yet unknown. Here we show that local administration of a nonpsychoactive cannabinoid to mice inhibits angiogenesis of malignant gliomas as determined by immunohistochemical analyses and vascular permeability assays. In vitro and in vivo experiments show that at least two mechanisms may be involved in this cannabinoid action: the direct inhibition of vascular endothelial cell migration and survival as well as the decrease of the expression of proangiogenic factors (vascular endothelial growth factor and angiopoietin-2) and matrix metalloproteinase-2 in the tumors. Inhibition of tumor angiogenesis may allow new strategies for the design of cannabinoid-based antitumoral therapies.
PMID: 12514108 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
Re:good... (Score:5, Interesting)
The chemotherapy and radiotherapy is nasty, and this looks a lot better (at least, as long as it doesn't mutate as viruses are wont to do). But very few people actually die from the chemo/radiotherapy, at least not directly. A lot of people don't find out that they have cancer until the cancer is well formed. Once the cancer metastatizes and starts to spread there's very little that modern medicine can do for you (this may change that, as may the nanotech "bullets" I read about earlier today). All chemo and radiation can do at that point is attempt to minimize the suffering -- and I question that they do this for the most part.
Anyway, it's not the chemo/radiation that gets you. It's the side effects. By and large we use the same chemo drugs that we've used for decades, as well as the same radiotherapy methods. We've refined the dosages, but that's about it. Where the real breakthroughs have been is in the medicines to treat the side effects of the chemo -- nausea, dizziness, low white blood count, and so forth. And we've made strides on drugs to treat the side effects of those drugs. And so forth. Cancers that were fatal (as in 0% survival rate) twenty years ago now have an 80% survivability rate (my coworker's son is one such case). That's pretty amazing.
Even so, if there's a better solution out there, with fewer side effects, let's go for it. I hope the testing goes well. I'd also like to know what you need to do to be put on the human testing list. My sister's mother-in-law has been given less than 6 months to live, in part due to cancer that has metastatized and is pretty much everywhere now. It's likely that the cancer's done too much damage for her to recover though... and we don't have a magic bullet to cure that issue. Yet.
Re:good... (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:good... (Score:5, Informative)
The treatment sucks, but it's better than dying!
Re:good... (Score:4, Funny)
Oh man, my doctor doesn't want two appointments a day with me to discuss what happens every time I think of Natalie Portman...
Surgical strike medicine (Score:3, Insightful)
I wouldn't be surprised to see nanotech get involved in the action at some point.
Anyone looking to invest in companies for the long term should pay attention to companies that do this type of work.
Nanotech (Score:5, Insightful)
This seems to me to BE nanotech. It's just produced by nature instead of someone in a lab coat.
The really cool thing to do with this virus (assuming it really is harmless to normal human cells) would be to create an implant with a hospitible environment that 'feeds' it and keeps a minimum population of viable viruses in your body for an extended period of time to whack cancers as they start.
Re:Nanotech (Score:3, Insightful)
Or maybe a twice a year innoculation against cancers.
Now if they could program these things to seek and destroy cells infected by various VD's and put an end to one of the biggest dangers of sex then the world would be a very interesting place indeed.
Re:Surgical strike medicine (Score:3, Informative)
And you don't infect the entire patient if you can get at th
SMOKE THEM IF YOU GOT THEM! (Score:3, Funny)
Hah, here I was thinking I'd have to quit. Now, I'll just get a shot and knock the tumor right out.
Re:SMOKE THEM IF YOU GOT THEM! (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Not only a cure for cancer... (Score:3, Funny)
"Smoke up! We'll grow more!"
Clarify (Score:5, Informative)
Hope this clarifies things.
Re:Clarify (Score:5, Funny)
And people used to LAUGH at me when I would swim around in raw sewage!!! Who's laughing now, huh?!?
Re:Clarify (Score:5, Interesting)
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (AP) -- A Sandia National Laboratories researcher has discovered a material that could potentially mean a new AIDS treatment. The material, called niobium HPA, can attach itself to the AIDS virus in the bloodstream, preventing it from harming other cells. May Nyman stumbled onto it accidentally while investigating filters for liquid nuclear waste at the Department of Energy's Savannah River Site in South Carolina. The idea of using the discovery for medical purposes is intriguing, said Craig Hill, a chemistry professor at Emory University in Atlanta and an expert in a class of materials called heteropolyanions, or HPAs. "If the thing has a lifetime of hours [in the blood] versus minutes or seconds, then it is very likely to have interesting anti-viral properties," said Hill, who said he would be interested in testing the material at Emory. "There's a reasonable chance that its toxicity may be fairly low."
So the big bad nuclear power plants so reviled by hippies may cure AIDS. Oh the irony.
Not so fast buckwheat! (Score:2)
Some biotech companies have been known to lie about drug pipelines and even to trial patients in order to boost their stock prices.
Does the name Ethyol ring a bell?
Re:Not so fast buckwheat! (Score:3, Informative)
Orson Scott Card reference (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Orson Scott Card reference (Score:2)
Re:Orson Scott Card reference (Score:2)
But... (Score:2)
I will say though.... This is truly amazing if it works as well as reported.
Re:But... (Score:5, Informative)
However, it appears that the virus itself is fairly effective at killing of tumor cells on it's own which is fairly interesting. As it's not associated with any pathogenesis this is definately an interesting step.
Yes you can get infected more than once, hell you can get reinfected over and over again. If you have antibodies it'll probably be a fairly asymptomatic infection (pardon my spelling).
Not the newest news (Score:2)
Using cancer-cell-specific viruses isn't too new (although the NCI funding is). My lab has been working with this company [onyx-pharm.com] for a little over a year on their attenuated adenovirus for cancer-specific targeting.
Advanced Prostate cancer (Score:2)
Get it to the terminally ill patients now! (Score:4, Insightful)
In the case of my friend he only found out nine months before his death that he even had cancer. They tried every treatment available, but it had spread too far.
Something like this would have been wonderful. Once they had found out that it was far too wide-spread for normal treatments Ronnie would have jumped at a chance for this.
Some may say that we should try it without knowing the long-term effects, I disagree. With terminally ill patients there is no hope. This provides a double solution -- not only should the virus kill the cancer, it provides the patient with a reason to keep on fighting.
I hope they get this to all the terminally ill patients that they can ASAP.
Patents? (Score:2)
Could cleaner people have higher cases of cancer? (Score:5, Interesting)
According to the FAQ:
4. Where does the reovirus come from?
Reovirus is found naturally in shallow pools of water, lakes or streams or in the sewage system.
So assuming that we could naturally ingest these Reoviri, would someone in a cleaner environment be at a higher risk for cancer (or more to the point, a higher risk from dieing before the Reovirus healed them)? It would be really interesting to find out that drinking bottled water and organtic foods is actually increasing the risk of death from cancer.
Re:Could cleaner people have higher cases of cance (Score:4, Interesting)
Obvioulsy big bad doses of E Coli in meat kill us so we don't want to run out and do that but you get the point.
Maybe a biologist could explain this better.
Re:Could cleaner people have higher cases of cance (Score:3, Interesting)
As others have pointed out here, the benefits of living in a clean environment most likely outweigh living in filth and contracting a few "beneficial" viruses.
However there is something to be said for not living
Think George Carlin.. (Score:3, Funny)
And at that time, the big fear was polio.. No one in my neighborhood ever got polio.. EVER! You know why?! BECAUSE WE SWAM IN RAW SEWAGE! The polio never had a prayer, we we're tempered in liquid shit!"
- George Carlin
Ahh yes.. once again scien
Re:Could cleaner people have higher cases of cance (Score:5, Interesting)
Consider: if Alexander Fleming had been more conscientious about cleaning his petri dishes, he may never have found penicillin. (Reference [pbs.org] - I'd heard it was an accident, but never knew it was on a dish in a sink waiting to be cleaned.) Reading this article, it also occurs to me that while no one can (probably) patent a naturally occuring virus, they probably can patent an effective growing/harvesting process.
D'oh! (Score:2)
Pancreatic... (Score:2)
I know it's a cliche, and a total farkism, but every time I read about something like "Chickens Prefer Beautiful Humans" [archaeoworld.com] I can't help but think perhaps some of our scientists could find a little better use for their time.
-dameron
Another Recent Cancer Cure Story (Score:3, Interesting)
Ever happen naturally? (Score:5, Interesting)
Reading the article (which by the way puts one in the top 1% of /. readers), it seems this reovirus is quite common, and that non-cancerous cells kill it off quite readily. I wonder though if this reovirus has ever "wandered in" on cancer cells in a patient and led to remission in that patient.
You always here anecdotal stories about some people recovering in cases where others haven't, and it's usually attributed to God, positive thinking, a close family, and so forth.
Maybe it's been these little buggers all along.
old soviet PHAGE technique (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:old soviet PHAGE technique (Score:2)
I remember seeing a PBS show on this - where a doctor would go to the sewage pipe exiting his hospital (directly into the local river, BTW) and hold a large beaker in the stream to collect a sample.
The collected samples would be applied, a drop at a time, into various petri dishes with a harmful bacterial culture. He'd then wait to see if any particular culture started to die, and then look in that dish to see what was doing it. Final stage, feed it more of the original culture until you have lots of the
Slashdot editors: still asleep at the wheel. (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Slashdot editors: still asleep at the wheel. (Score:5, Informative)
You hit that one on the head... It's a company PR release no less. Interesting, but definitely astroturf.
From the ONCY Yahoo Stock message board [yahoo.com]...
Re:Slashdot editors: still asleep at the wheel. (Score:3, Informative)
-Todd
OK, I'll bite (Score:5, Interesting)
When the first word of this treatment hit the papers five years ago in 1998, his colleagues at other universities (read: his competitors) were quoted saying (I'm paraphrasing) that if Patrick Lee has published, you know the science has to be solid. The peer-reviewed journals agree: he's been published in Cell, Nature, Science and Nature Cell Biology, among others.
This is the real deal. I've put my money where my mouth is, too: several thousand dollars of my own money is banking on this.
This treatment brought to you in part by... (Score:3, Funny)
I hope this pans out (Score:3, Insightful)
Mother diagonsed with a rare form of Breast Cancer, and caught in stage 4 despite regular check ups and mamagrams.
Very ill due to chemo treatments. Made an effort to see my marching competitions, but couldn't be around large crowds.
Had to drop out of several activities because she was in and out of the hospital including an audition for a music scholarship to college.
Day of prom, rushed to the hospital, discovered the tumor has spread to her brain. Spent my senior prom in an emergancy waiting room.
Made it through graduation, but couldn't walk without a walker and after my graduation party went into the hospital that night. Found the cancer in her spine, didn't respond to any more treatments and watched my mother waste away for the next month at home until she died exactly 1 month after my high school graduation.
Some how I managed to regain enough will to enter college just over six weeks later.
I hope this isn't some marketing/investment blitz and that this might be a giant leap forward in cancer treatment. Sometimes I wonder if these companies want to find a cure. I mean, research is profitable business. Just look at the March of Dimes. Their orginial goal was to help find a cure for Polio and after one was discovered, they had to find a new mission.
It's not just Reovirus: (Score:3, Informative)
It's shameful that the companies who make the most press releases get the most attention.
It's only Phase II, not ready for prime time (Score:5, Informative)
On the Oncolytics web site, they only list Phase I and Phase II trials. That's just to evaluate safety and dosing. In Phase III, they finally get around to testing for effectiveness, and they haven't done that yet.
I've seen lots of drugs that did this well in Phase II trials but flunked Phase III. I remember seeing Fortune magazine with the headline on the cover, "Cure for Cancer!" 20 years ago. Unfortunately not. (They got over-enthusiastic about cancer vaccines.)
Phase III is a randomized controlled trial. They randomly assign half the patients to the drug, and half the patients to a placebo. If it really works, you should see the difference. A lot of times it doesn't work and you know the drug is useless. Until the RCT you don't know anything for sure.
Another distinction you have to make is the end point. It's one thing to shrink a tumor, but the main thing most cancer patients are interested in is whether they're going to die. There are a lot of drugs that shrink tumors, but have no effect on how long they live.
Here's a discussion, "Levels of Clinical Evidence in the Primary Literature" [uic.edu]which describes the different levels of evidence. Or look at BMJ [bmj.com] Or if you want to search Google look for "Evidence-based medicine."
I hope this will encourage investors to throw lots of money at basic research and give us a better understanding of why cells become cancerous. It makes the New England Journal of Medicine more fun to read. Who knows? Maybe they'll come up with something useful some day. But not today.
Cancer in Lab Rats (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Never create what you can't control. (Score:2)
Re:Never create what you can't control. (Score:2)
Re:Resistance (Score:4, Informative)
I may be out of date in my medical knowledge... but I'm pretty sure cancers can only develop an immunity in a single person over a course of treatment, and can't spread like a virus or bacteria to other people carrying the acquired immunity with it.
After all, cancers aren't transmitted between people, they spontaneously appear for a variety of reasons.
Yes but... (Score:3, Interesting)
.
. In other words, would your computer become "allergic" to certain programs?
.
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Not a computer expert...just thinking out loud...
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Old news (Score:2)
World Domination (Score:2)
Have you been unfortuneate enough to see "The Stuff"? [imdb.com]
Re:Why do they try to find a cure? (Score:3, Insightful)
I know it's fashionable to be so cynical, but some people do occasionally do things JUST to help society. Scary, huh? Some people do things for reasons other than money... Look at Linux