Sivasubramanian M on Sat, 14 Nov 2015 06:36:31 +0100 (CET) |
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Re: <nettime> How computers broke science... |
several groups have proposed similar solutions to this problem. Together they would break scientific data out of the black box of unrecorded computer manipulations so independent readers can again critically assess and reproduce results. Researchers, the public, and science itself would benefit. In this description of the need for reproduce or retrace the path of a scientific experiment, as one of the solutions, the argument that a blackbox style recording every command given to the computer is described. Finding a way to the steps to a scientific discovery is a lofty cause, but the technology suggested could be abused. The suggested technology is on the path of legitimizing the methods of malicious software that records every key stroke or mouse click to replay on screen frame by frame view of everything that a computer user has done on his personal or private computer. I am concerned about this blackbox approach, at the moment talked about as a method of recording scientific experiments. Thank you Sivasubramanian M âInternet Society India Chennaiâ On Tue, Nov 10, 2015 at 10:28 PM, august <august@alien.mur.at> wrote: I thought this article might be somewhat relevant for nettime. We don't read too much here about the business of (mostly academic) science. TLDR: point-and-click and closed-source software makes science hard to reproduce. <...>
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