Microryza Brings Crowd-Funding To Scientific Research 40
Zothecula writes "Crowd-funding sites like Kickstarter have proven popular for groups and individuals looking to get a consumer product, movie, music or video game project off the ground. Now a group of researchers and scientists is adopting a similar crowd-funding model to raise money for scientific research projects. The Microryza website, which launched this week, lets the public get behind research they care about and maybe help it get out of the lab."
awful (Score:4, Insightful)
We need to get away from this mindset that it's OK to let rich people have more of a say in charity (which includes academic research) than poor - it simply doesn't work.
There's a reason China's winning while the West's in the shitter: long term, high investment projects such as academia, infrastructure and industry are lifted up and celebtrated by Chinese government, while America and the UK have little interest in helping anyone but the banker. You tax and then you assign the money to projects which will help the country.
(and those who do not want to live in society, are welcome to reject *all* its advances and protections)
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The more additional sources for scientific research there are, the happier I am. Some people genuinely aren't good at going through the hoops to get government funding, or don't function well within the academic political piranha tank. To say nothing of recent serious questions being raised over the quality of some academic research.
Re:awful (Score:4, Insightful)
Actually, yeah, we do. We need to quit trying to make research provide immediate monetary value and let research just be research.
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Re:awful (Score:4, Insightful)
Yes, but now Im a bit put off by whether or not the sites are administrated well enough for them to take responsibility for de-trolling their site. I could end up either having my project removed for being stalked or having a project I fund disappear due to the ineptitude of those running the circus.
Whats my motivation again?...
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http://news.slashdot.org/story/12/04/14/1233254/banned-from-kickstarter-for-being-cyberstalked [slashdot.org]
Is an example of what I'm talking about.
This is a fear, you will probably need to address, now that it's news.
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What is the point of these article chains? (Score:5, Interesting)
What's the point of linking to the useless "Gizmag" article when the Slashdot summary contains basically the exact same content? Furthermore, why the hell does the "Gizmag" article even exist, when at the bottom of it, it in turn links to an article at some "Ubergizmo" site that also says essentially the same thing?
Worst of all, the Slashdot summary doesn't even fucking link to the Microryza [microryza.com] website!
Cutting out these useless middlemen blog articles and linking directly to the site being discussed is a lot more efficient, you know.
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You are forgetting that if you cut out the middlemen, then they don't get paid.
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So near, yet so far... (Score:5, Insightful)
I was actively excited when I read TFS. Looking at TFA, though, there's something that I don't like the sound of at all:
Importantly, the researchers retain 100 percent ownership of their project and its results and get to choose how much material they disclose. While backers will generally like to keep apprised of project developments and findings, researchers aren’t obliged to provide updates.
They want money from crowdsourcing, but they want to keep their findings to themselves? I'm not on board with that at all. If science is funded by the kindness of 1000 enthusiasts, it isn't acceptable to claim that the results are strictly yours to do with what you want. If you want money from the public, you have to accepts that the results belong to the public. Or at least you should do, in my opinion.
Usually we let groups get away with claiming "ownership" over information on the basis that they need rewarding for their risky investment. If you take away that element, and they're not investing themselves, what right do they have to keep the information to themselves? To keep it away from "competitors"?
I wouldn't give a penny to a project without at least some show of faith that they're doing the research for the good of the world, and not for themselves.
Re:So near, yet so far... (Score:5, Insightful)
The researchers don't really own their findings themselves. If the finding is lucrative, the university/institution takes a huge chunk of the money.
If microryza forces the ownership to be shared with the funding sources/share all findings with public, then they have to sit through a whole lots of legal meetings for each institution they ever get involved with. Nobody wants that.
Believe me, researchers will share their findings when time is right.
Each publication is one extra line on their CV afterall.
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There's no reason why those administrative components couldn't be taken care of by delegates selected by the funding crowds. A similar model would be a website that outsources its advertising tasks to affiliate websites, or musicians who join up with an indie record label. They need to spend their time doing what they do best, while profit-seekers handle the business side. In addition to sharing the results of their research, there's no reason why the funding crowds can't or shouldn't also share in any p
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I suppose it depends on the nature of the project; in the example of digging up triceratops fossils and sending them to a museum it makes perfect sense.
But overall I think you're right. This isn't really crowdsourcing; more like begging for donations without any strings attached.
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More importantly, how to make sure that they really work on that project if they are not required to give updates, nor final results? So you make a new project "I want to investigate [some interesting question], I need $100000." Then after you got the $100000 you remain silent, except maybe after a while claiming "I've solved the problem, but I've decided to share the result with nobody." Meanwhile you enjoy the new flat you've bought with that money.
So how to make sure there really was research going on wi
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I agree; donors should insist on openness (Score:2)
An essay I wrote on that from 2001: http://www.pdfernhout.net/open-letter-to-grantmakers-and-donors-on-copyright-policy.html [pdfernhout.net]
"Foundations, other grantmaking agencies handling public tax-exempt dollars, and charitable donors need to consider the implications for their grantmaking or donation policies if they use a now obsolete charitable model of subsidizing proprietary publishing and proprietary research. In order to improve the effectiveness and collaborativeness of the non-profit sector overall, it is sugg
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Note (Score:4, Informative)
This is because of a new law that passed in the last week or so.
Good news: crowd-sourcing of entrepreneurial dollars for small startups may really help some good companies, particularly where angel investing and venture capital financing are as hard to find as they are right now.
Bad news: there were huge concerns about due diligence/accounting/accountability/regulatory structure/people using this for scams (plus, of course, how many just plain *bad* business ideas there are out there). I don't know what they wound up doing to address these, or to what extent it will work. When doing angel investing or VC, the lender has lots of personal contact and the investment is for enough money that there is generally some significant amount of due diligence work done. ("So... does your company actually sell anything?")
Article about the new law enabling crowdsourcing (Score:2)
http://www.crowdsourcing.org/document/crowdfunding-new-law-opens-opportunities-risks/13257 [crowdsourcing.org]
What, no rewards? (Score:4, Funny)
I want a pathogen named after me, dammit!
What happens next? (Score:3)
Rewards (Score:1)
100$ : Many thanks.
1000$ : Thanks!!!!11 We'll even say thanks in our published papers (acknowledgements)
This model might not work as it has with games and other media.
Just sayin'
David Brin recommends petridish.org (Score:5, Informative)
from his Contrary Brin blog:
"... how about crowd sourcing to help fund science research: Choose your own projects through Petridish [petridish.org]: a crowdfunding site, where scientists can showcase their research to the public. In exchange, you will receive updates, acknowledgement and/or various rewards (photographs, DVD, field samples, journal acknowledgment, or invitations to talks/dinner), plus the satisfaction of assisting scientists trying to understand our world. (Donations are not currently tax deductible.) Way cool."
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This may be cautionary; what if the new law does to science publication what "Citizens United" did to political debate?
http://www.ssrc.org/workspace/images/crm/new_publication_3/%7Beee91c8f-ac35-de11-afac-001cc477ec70%7D.pdf [ssrc.org]
"The theoretical impetus behind the rise of the natural science think tanks is the belief that science progresses when everyone can buy the type of science they like, dispensing with whatever the academic disciplines say is mainstream or discredited science."
I don't think this will work (Score:3)
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Terrible site (Score:2)
I must have spent 10 minutes trying to get the website to give me the list of projects, preferably by theme, to which I failed.
All I can see is three random projects on the main page.
Those guys need to learn the basics of usability.
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There are only 9 projects!?