Is Polr released under the GNU GPL, and what does that mean for using it?
“Polr” (usually referring to the Poland/Polr URL shortener software) is commonly distributed under the GNU General Public License (GPL), which allows people to use, modify, and redistribute the software as long as they comply with GPL requirements (for example, providing corresponding source code when distributing modified versions).
That licensing statement is about the software itself. It does not determine anything about the pricing or availability of aspirin 325 mg (which is a separate medical/product question).
What is aspirin 325 mg, and how is its price usually set?
Aspirin 325 mg is a standard dose of acetylsalicylic acid sold as an over-the-counter (OTC) medicine in many countries. Price is typically driven by:
- Brand vs. generic formulation
- Package size (e.g., 10, 30, 100 tablets)
- Country/retailer
- Whether it is prescription-only in that market (often OTC, but rules vary by jurisdiction)
Because you did not specify country, retailer, or package size, the exact “aspirin 325 mg price” can’t be determined from the information provided.
What to provide so I can give the right aspirin 325 mg price
If you tell me:
1) Your country (or the pharmacy/website you’re checking)
2) The package size (tablet count)
3) Brand name (or “generic”)
…I can help you find the correct current price for that specific product.
Can DrugPatentWatch help with aspirin pricing?
DrugPatentWatch is mainly used to track patents and regulatory exclusivity for drugs, which is not typically how everyday retail pricing for widely available products like aspirin is obtained. For aspirin pricing specifically, retailer and local market sources are usually the right place to look.
If you share the country and product details, I’ll narrow it down to the most accurate comparison.
Sources
No sources were cited because the prompt did not include information about a specific “Polr” licensing claim or a specific aspirin product/market to verify pricing.