From: Alex Future Bokov (alexboko@umich.edu)
Date: Mon Jul 26 1999 - 12:31:19 MDT
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----
On Mon, 26 Jul 1999, Lee Daniel Crocker wrote:
> "Detoxification" is one of the buzzwords that marks a charlatan, so
> any "information" on it is fraudulent and probably dangerous. More
> good info can be found at <http://www.quackwatch.com>.
There are quite a few buzzwords like that. I've been using some as
exclusion terms in my customized search links on GerOL. There are probably
many other uses for bullshit exclusion. Here's my collection of words that
automatically make a website suspect (add yours, if you have any):
free
teen
hardcore
adult
Life sciences specific exclusion terms:
miracle
immortality
western medicine
medical establishment
cure for cancer
homeopathic
spiritual
Terms that I've seen on legitimate sites (therefore not suitable as
exclusion terms), but usually have a strong correlation with BS:
fountain of youth
wholistic
herbal
alternative medicine
ancient
natural
healing
ginseng
I exclude the .com domain from my searches altogether to skip the hundreds
of pill-pusher sites out there, but this is probably too drastic a measure
since it may exclude real research organizations. Maybe to compile a list
of fraudulent sites, in the same way as lists of spam-sites are compiled?
What would be good criteria for categorizing a site as fraudulent?
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE-----
Version: 2.6.2
iQBpAwUBN5ypeJvUJaRNHMexAQHwZAKaAsgQvoXeRcSOvLuV7F0zMQVDOOflf30N
ecHFtr/m7RpMMyEVa7xYLWE177vRFg7h1+wHVEiIF4OHBzy6GyMRcshnzw3wbDjN
DMBtog6CM3rpr2Jd
=Gcfg
-----END PGP SIGNATURE-----
This archive was generated by hypermail 2.1.5 : Fri Nov 01 2002 - 15:04:34 MST