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@renordquist @academicchatter

I find it concerning and unsurprising that The Nobel Prize team called out their own sexism, likely without realising it:

"This morning [the Nobel laureate] celebrated the news of his prize with his colleague and wife Rosalind Lee, who was also the first author on the 1993 'Cell' paper cited by the Nobel Committee."

twitter.com/NobelPrize/status/

Ah, the yearly week of the Nobel Prize for Men has started.

These guys did great work, surely. Also lots of non-men have done great work. I've followed this in the past and been so bitterly dissappointed by the lack of anything but old white guys. We'll see if this year is better, but so far 0 for 2 awardees.

nobelprize.org/all-nobel-prize

#Nobel #WomenInSTEM #WomenInScience #sigh @academicchatter

Today in university: the University cannot accept a letter from the University, saying that a student's fees will be paid by the University to the University, as evidence that the University will pay the University the money that the University owes itself.

The student is, understandably, confused.

There is no such thing as a backdoor for good guys. Once you place a backdoor, you compromise the safety and privacy of all your users. A third party or bad guys will get access to it and abuse it further. The concept of a "backdoor for good guys" is fundamentally flawed and dangerous. It sets a dangerous precedent. Security and privacy should be absolute. There's no safe way to create a backdoor that can't be exploited by malicious actors. #privacy #security #infosec

re: rant on why Nature journals suck 

@albertcardona

I wish I knew the magic thing to say.

I think students are very susceptible to the strong cultural bias that views Cell/Nature/Science (with PNAS off to the side) as the epitome of scientific publishing. I still regularly hear trainees say something to the extent of "I could really get that job if I had a Nature Neuroscience publication", even after I show them how individual paper metrics seem decorrelated from journal impact factor.

The only trainees that don't seem to care as much about journal prestige are those that want to go into industry instead of academia.

@zandawala @kofanchen @albertcardona @tdverstynen @ekmiller I don't work on connectome but I think everyone who's tried to publish a paper has at some point been in the same situation. And of course we all feel bad if our work is criticized. My thinking is that good peer review should point out flaws in the work, but it should also provide solutions, and we should be more critical with our own work.

One of the things I learnt from teaching is that if you comment on a student's work saying "this is bad" the student will come back complaining, and rightly so. If you say "this is not good because of X and Y" and explain what should be done to make it better, than the student will be absolutely fine with it.

Sometimes the solution might just be acknowledging the shortcomings of the technique that you're using, that does not mean it is not useful.
Think for example of single cell transcriptomics; I could write a book about what's wrong with it, that does not mean I think it's completely useless. However, when I use it, I try to be mindful of those shortcomings in my conclusions.

I think every paper should have a limitation section after the discussion, rather than trying to hide those somewhere in the text where nobody's going to look.

That said, there are also bad reviewers who don't take time to write meaningful reviews, and that's where editors should step in.

Heads up to Kia owners/potential buyers: Today, a group of independent security researchers revealed that they'd found a flaw in a web portal operated by the carmaker Kia that let the researchers reassign control of the internet-connected features of most modern Kia vehicles—dozens of models representing millions of cars on the road—from the smartphone of a car’s owner to the hackers’ own phone or computer. By exploiting that vulnerability and building their own custom app to send commands to target cars, they were able to scan virtually any internet-connected Kia vehicle’s license plate and within seconds gain the ability to track that car’s location, unlock the car, honk its horn, or start its ignition at will.

wired.com/story/kia-web-vulner

@elduvelle Graph at the end... sounds like you want to ditch PPT for (which is a good idea anyways)!

A potentially controversial take on bioscience faculty job applications. If you have a partner who also needs a position, the right time to share that info is AFTER you have a WRITTEN job offer.

Once you have the letter, if the department doesn't find a position for you SO, you get to decide if you can live apart or if your partner can take a non-tenure position or pivot careers. Don't let the department make those decisions for you!!

#AcademicChatter

@PhilippBayer oh, I've been there; I've deleted those entries at the very bottom. Nobody complained

@johannes_lehmann Honestly I don't understand, but it must pay off somehow...

OK... so you want to scam me into giving you personal data (and maybe a bit of money) for your journal... at least change your email address! 🤦‍♂️

Calling all science/tech folks: Do you have thoughts about xkcd? Parker Bach & I are trying to understand the role that xkcd plays in the scientific/technical community. Will you share your thoughts? forms.office.com/pages/respons And since we are doing a snowball sample, please spread the word!

Such an interesting, thoughtful response to LLMs eating the world from authoring app iA...

Instead of jumping on the bandwagon to integrate LLMs to create your content, it tracks the provenance of your text instead, letting you keep track of what's yours and what isn't.

An elegant, contrarian strategy. HT @marcoshuerta

ia.net/topics/writing-with-ai

Ig Nobel prize awarded to a researcher whose work shows data on longevity is 'rotten from the inside out.'

The so-called Mediterranean diet may be pension fraud.

theconversation.com/the-data-o

Fun fact for #RStats: as of last month, it's been 10 years since @hadleywickham's "Tidy Data" paper was published in #JStatSoft

jstatsoft.org/article/view/v05

“Being a woman in tech is insane. We do not work in the same moral system model as most of the people that we interact with daily and we can’t talk about it, because when we do, we are the ones portrayed as crazy or hysterical.”

This is such an excellent piece.

sigops.org/2024/the-moral-impl

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