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NASA

'NASA's Plan To Make JWST Data Immediately Available Will Hurt Astronomy' 135

An anonymous reader shares an excerpt from an opinion piece in Scientific American, written by Jason Wright. Wright is a professor of astronomy and astrophysics at Pennsylvania State University, where he is director of the Penn State Extraterrestrial Intelligence Center. From the piece: In August the White House announced (PDF) that the results of all federally funded research should be freely accessible by the end of 2025. This will be a big change for scientists in many fields but ultimately a good move for the democratization of research. Under this new guidance, many peer-reviewed papers would be free for the world to read immediately upon publication rather than stuck behind expensive paywalls, and the data that underlay these papers would be fully available and properly archived for anyone who wanted to analyze them. As an astronomer, I'm pleased that our profession has been ahead of the curve on this, and most of the White House's recommendations are already standard in our field.

NASA, as a federal agency that funds and conducts research, is onboard with the idea of freely accessible data. But it has a plan that goes much further than the White House's and that is highly problematic. The agency currently gives a proprietary period to some scientists who use particular facilities, such as a 12-month period for the powerful James Webb Space Telescope (JWST), so that those scientists can gather and analyze data carefully without fear of their work being poached. NASA is looking to end this policy in its effort to make science more open-access. Losing this exclusivity would be really bad for astronomy and planetary science. Without a proprietary period, an astronomer with a brilliant insight might spend years developing it, months crafting a successful proposal to execute it, and precious hours of highly competitive JWST time to actually perform the observations -- only to have someone else scoop up the data from a public archive and publish the result. This is a reasonable concern -- such scooping has happened before.

Without a proprietary period during which the astronomers who proposed given observations have exclusive access to the data, those researchers will have to work very quickly in order to avoid being scooped. Receiving credit for discoveries is especially important for early-career astronomers looking to establish their credentials as they search for a permanent job. Under such time pressure, researchers will need to cut corners, such as skipping the checks and tests that define careful work. Such a sloppy approach will lead to hasty results and incorrect conclusions to the detriment of the entire field. It also can lead to the erosion of work-life boundaries, with astronomers working long hours, sacrificing their health and family time so their result gets out before the competition's. This is bad for the culture of science and disproportionately affects those with children or other time-consuming personal circumstances (such as being a student, a caretaker or a full-time college instructor while also performing research). Allowing researchers to properly benefit from their work is critical for making astronomy as fair and equitable as possible. [...]
"One potential alternative is to create a professional requirement that those who proposed an observation but have not published from it should be offered co-authorship on any paper that uses the data," suggests Wright, noting that it's "not currently the cultural norm in astronomy" and "comes with a whole host of complications."

"Another option is to change the standard for how credit is assigned for any observational work," adds Wright. "Astronomers could, for example, demand that any paper citing a result also cite the proposal that generated the enabling data. In this way, the proposal team could still accrue credit for its work, even if it wasn't the first to publish."

"In the end, though, such adjustments are secondary to the heart of the matter, which is that NASA's plan to eliminate the proprietary period for JWST data is bad for astronomy."
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'NASA's Plan To Make JWST Data Immediately Available Will Hurt Astronomy'

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  • Hypotheses (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Going_Digital ( 1485615 ) on Monday December 05, 2022 @10:51PM (#63106490)
    Perhaps the scientists can publish their hypothesis, showing what they hope to prove from the data. That is beneficial to the world for a number of reasons.

    1. It provides justification for collecting the data.

    2. Currently science works in a way that perhaps 20 hypothesis are tested, and only the experiment that best demonstrates the desired outcomes is published after the fact. We therefore do not get to see the failures. This may not seem too bad, until you realise that the data from failed experiments are often more valuable than that from a successful result. This is because looking at it from another perspective may raise new possibilities. Quite often when trying to prove A, you reject information that does not fit your purpose, but that actually proves B.

    • by lsllll ( 830002 )
      I'm sorry that I'm out of mod points, otherwise I would have given you +2.
    • by Roger W Moore ( 538166 ) on Tuesday December 06, 2022 @12:13AM (#63106602) Journal

      Currently science works in a way that perhaps 20 hypothesis are tested, and only the experiment that best demonstrates the desired outcomes is published after the fact.

      No, that is absolutely NOT how science currently works. Go look up searches for Supersymmetry, Dark Matter or any other beyond the Standard Model physics model and you'll find thousands of papers stretching back over decades - a few will even have my name on them! We do publish our results when the hypothesis fails because it is important to record what hypotheses were tested so that others do not waste their time looking for the same idea in the same place.

      These results are also useful to theorists coming up with new ideas since the results can sometimes be repurposed to put limits on new theories and ideas. The reason you may not be aware of this happening is that "Scientists fail to see New Physics" is not exactly an attention-grabbing headline for the media.

    • The original proposal to have the JWST pointed to a particular location will already contain the information you are seeking.
    • Data from failed experiments is often (but not always) of low value as there are many more ways something can fail than succeed. It's like listing ways not to assemble IKEA furniture. Method 1: throw boxes randomly into room. Fail. Method 2: throw contents of boxes randomly into room. Fail. Method 3: throw contents of boxes into room whilst whistling Dixie fowards. Fail. Method 4: Dixie backwards. Etc.
    • by esme ( 17526 )

      This is already an existing practice, called "pre-registration" (e.g., https://osf.io/prereg [osf.io]). The idea is that you register in advance what your hypothesis and methods are, so you can't go fishing around in collected data looking for something that's significant.

      This is definitely a good way to give people credit for designing and planning an astronomy data collection plan.

      All that said, this post seems like a pretty biased anti-open-science screed to me. It's really amazing how every time we try to peel a

      • so you can't go fishing around in collected data looking for something that's significant.

        Hmmm. I understand your purpose and intent; however, I feel very uncomfortable delaying the discovery of anything significant for any reasons. I think we should spend more time protecting the work people are doing rather than the data they are working from.

    • by ceoyoyo ( 59147 )

      They do. Here they are: https://www.stsci.edu/jwst/sci... [stsci.edu]

      The exclusive period is also listed. I don't know, but I suspect the exclusive period is probably part of the grant application and it's assessed for reasonableness.

      The detailed proposal is not public. This is because people absolutely do poach things like this. I applied for a job one place and mentioned something I was working on to the hiring committee. A couple months later one of them submitted a quick and dirty paper on the same topic.

    • That sort of post hoc hypothesis development is not kosher unless it is specifically spelled out in a paper. (It's not post hoc as you've framed it, but it's equivalent to not developing a hypothesis until you have the data in hand).

      What I think you might be trying to get at is a study planned to investigate A & B generates data that leads one to think about some completely unforeseen W. But even then, that should still be explicit in the paper.

  • publish or perish (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Anonymouse Cowtard ( 6211666 ) on Monday December 05, 2022 @11:00PM (#63106506) Homepage
    NASA is turning astronomy and cosmology into a 24/7 live blog. This is so stupid as to be farcical. Science takes time. Sure, it's a kind of race to be first and certain researchers play it with some cunning. But turning advancements into a mad rush is gonna result in a lot of wasted time and a lot of errors sending other researchers down dead ends and rabbit holes. How can this be good?
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by Tony Isaac ( 1301187 )

      It's not different from open source software. We programmers have long valued open source software, and many of us contribute huge amounts of time and effort developing it. When we do that, we're not trying to "beat the other guy" to the punch, we just want great code that everyone can use.

      Scientists need to learn to think this way too. If they are relying on hiding behind a proprietary shield to "protect" their research, that secrecy nearly always cloaks a commercial interest that distorts the true aim of

      • This would be a valid argument if programmers discovered code.

        If Taylor Swift shared rough demos of her songs, months before the final version and accompanying film clip appeared on YouTube, would her fans still be suing Ticketmaster?

        Raw information has less value than information that has been channelled and curated by an expert.

        • Taylor Swift isn't making music for the betterment of humanity, nor is she publicly funded. She is absolutely in the business of selling her music. You're kind of making my point. If you're in it for commercial gain, then you'd better hide the process from view. If you're publicly funded, your work belongs to *everybody.*

          You speak as if Taylor Swift somehow came up with magical inspirations. That's a romantic notion not unlike the idea that genius inventors have a brilliant flash of inspiration, and come up

      • Re:publish or perish (Score:5, Interesting)

        by edwebdev ( 1304531 ) on Tuesday December 06, 2022 @12:45AM (#63106636)

        It's much different from open source software. Science and open source are in some ways similar: people do both because they love it, believe in it, and want to move us forward. But there are also major differences.

        Scientists who pay mind to the competitive aspect of their field very rarely (but not never) have an ulterior commercial motive. They are just trying to survive. A scientist's whole career depends on their publication record. Reputable journals won't publish work that has already been published. Otherwise there would lots of duplicate work and less motivation to do new, harder, groundbreaking science. So, if someone "beats you to the punch," you can't publish. If you can't publish, you can't successfully compete for research funding. If you can't successfully compete for research funding, your career as an active scientist is over.

        Another distinction between open source and science is that you can meaningfully contribute to open source software in your free time with a laptop and an internet connection. This is not possible in modern science. To do work that pushes the boundaries, you need expensive things like lasers, supercomputers, graduate students, and space telescopes. Nobody is going to give a weekend warrior with some spare time access to this stuff because it is too precious. If you want access, you need to compete for it. To successfully compete for it, you need a credible publication record. And here we are again where we began.

        I will wrap up with the matter of publicly funded stuff being publicly available. I agree that this should be the case. However, it is important to appreciate that science goes nowhere without good questions. It is really hard to come up with good questions, which are generally formatted as a research proposal. I think it is reasonable to give the scientist who came up with the research proposal that motivated data collection of JWST some period of limited exclusivity on the data (6 months? 1 year?) so that they are able to develop publications and get credit for their work. The truth is that much of the scientific work has already been done by the time the telescope is collecting data. What movies like "Don't Look Up" or "Contact" don't show you is that before the astronomers go to the telescope to sit in the dark before screens full of data appear, they (or their PI) spent months carefully developing a plan/proposal for where they were going to point the telescope and what they were going to measure. Without that plan, the telescope is not very useful.

      • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

        This is just an inane take. You don't understand how science, software or jobs work somehow and you have entirely misunderstood what the scientists are even asking for.

        No one is objecting to the work being made public in principle, or even after a not especially long period of time.

        What you are asking is that the scientists sacrifice their entire career, because you want them to remove the mechanisms by which they can have a career, because you want the data 12 months faster.

        What you are essentially saying

        • AS Demand2HaveSumBooze replied, these aren't scientists doing their work for free. They are publicly funded. If they want public funding, the public should benefit. If they want commercial/financial success, they should get commercial funding.

          • Are you that dense?

            If they don't perform in their job, which means getting papers, then they will rapidly cease to have a job.

            You are advocating a system which will essentially destroy their careers given how science fighting works. I'm curious why you want that.

            • Yes, I am absolutely that dense.

              The purpose of Federal research dollars is NOT to keep desperate scientists employed. It is spent for the good of society, not for the good of the scientists.

              If the labor for such work is so cheap that scientists are essentially scrambling to beat each other to the punch, to get that grant money, then it's probably good for everybody to weed out a few who don't know how to get noticed. It's a classic sign of market saturation. Scientists are smart people, they can adapt and f

              • he purpose of Federal research dollars is NOT to keep desperate scientists employed.

                Ah yes. "desparate" scientists. You clearly hate scientists, no wonder you want them to ruin their careers for your gratification.

                It is spent for the good of society,

                Do you know what isn't for the good of society? Ruining the careers of those working for the good of society.

                If the labor for such work is so cheap that scientists are essentially scrambling to beat each other to the punch, to get that grant money, then it's pr

                • Oh, I don't hate scientists. I'm a dues-paying member of the American Scientific Affiliation, and I work in applied science. What I don't like, is low-performing scientists who whine and complain that they don't get a free ride from the government. Just because you have a degree after your name and call yourself a scientist, doesn't make you good at what you do, or your work useful to mankind.

      • Agreed! I do think most scientists "think this way". They just love what they're doing too much. Just like open source software.
        It's the glory seekers and profiteers who complain the loudest. The people getting the data from which their tax dollars paid for is entirely reasonable.

    • NASA is turning astronomy and cosmology into a 24/7 live blog. This is so stupid as to be farcical. Science takes time.

      Science takes time, recording data takes not. NASA isn't blogging science at breakneck pace, they are publishing data. When you learn to understand the difference you may realise how silly your comment looks.

    • As far as 24/7 live blogs go, its not the worst one people could consume.

  • It's hidden for the scientist's best (commercial) interests. If scientists really want to contribute to human knowledge, they should share all their data, just like open source developers share their code, immediately, pull request by pull request.

    Unlike open source developers, these scientists are funded by the government--we the people. There is no reason they should ALSO have proprietary shielding, which helps them turn their research into commercial profit. If they want proprietary shielding, they shoul

    • by suutar ( 1860506 ) on Tuesday December 06, 2022 @12:35AM (#63106620)

      It's not for commercial benefit, it's for reputational benefit - scientists who don't publish interesting papers don't get to keep working. Making the effort to get data to be gathered and then not being able to write an interesting paper on it (because someone else wrote it first) is bad for the career.

      • You make it sound like finding insights in raw data is an easy thing to do.

        • Out of a pool of 1,000 people, what are the chances that the scientists who did the research proposal are going to be the fastest ones to analyze it?

          • Again, you assume it's just a matter of speed, that it's otherwise not difficult. You clearly haven't been around people who analyze data looking for insights. The first problem is, you've got to know what you're looking for, and whether that thing you're looking for actually means anything.

            We saw a lot of this during the height of the COVID pandemic. There were many maps showing infection counts, such as this one from Google: https://news.google.com/covid1... [google.com] The map is (as far as I know) accurate. But wha

            • by suutar ( 1860506 )

              Wouldn't "what are we looking for" be part of the proposal for gathering the data in the first place, and therefore pretty much public?

              • Of course. And if we only find "what we are looking for" we aren't doing it right. If the insights are so obvious that we can determine beforehand what results and correlations we expect to find, then any researcher could guess the aims anyway.

                So perhaps we should protect scientists like we protect inventors through the patent system. In patent law, a patent filing must include enough detail to allow copycatters to build the "invention" themselves. In return, the inventor gets credit, and the exclusive righ

        • by edwebdev ( 1304531 ) on Tuesday December 06, 2022 @01:13AM (#63106676)

          JWST isn't just spitting out raw data on autopilot like some kind of chart recorder in space. It's being precisely targeted in space and time based on the recommendations and hypotheses of scientists who spend decades developing the experience and reputation they need to make good use of the resource. Without scientists volunteering their time to write proposals about what to measure with JWST, the instrument is useless. So a limited period of exclusivity can be viewed as a way of rewarding the scientists who front-loaded effort into developing plans for how to use the telescope, with the full expectation that the results they produce will be freely accessible to the public.

    • One thing that puzzles me about this argument is the claim of commercial benefit. How do you think these astronomers are going to commercialize results from JWST? It is a telescope that peers out into deep space. If we were talking about chemistry or materials science I could see the argument, but there is very little commercial potential for infrared images of deep space.

      • One obvious financial incentive is income from published research in the major journals. Also, fame and recognition, at least within their own circles.

        Astronomy is one area of research that may be harder to monetize, but this principle covers may types of research, including genetics, medicine, chemistry, and many other where the financial incentives for secrecy are much more obvious, and where Federal funding often helps people launch their own startup businesses, rather than benefitting us all.

        • Scientists receive no income from their publications in major journals. Typically, they pay the journal to have their work published after it has been reviewed for rigor by other scientists (who volunteer their time to do the review). So there is no financial incentive to publish research. Publishing is only about communicating new science and getting credit for the work.

          I think you are correct that scientists are after recognition, but that does not fall under the commercial incentives this thread is purpo

  • This policy was proposed under the Trump administration, and was fought by academia and industry both. Thanks Biden for finalizing the rules and finishing the job.

  • nope (Score:2, Interesting)

    by sxpert ( 139117 )

    it's not "bad for astronomy"
    it's bad for the papers numbers of said researchers and universities in the bullshit that is the Shanghai ranking

    • And what happens if you fuck over the careers of the kind of professional astronomers good enough to win time on the JWST? Do you think the result will be good or bad for astronomy if those people can no longer work, or won't work on the best instrument available?

      • by Zak3056 ( 69287 )

        FWIW, I don't think you can have this both ways. The statement (which I absolutely believe is true) that getting time on the JWST is an "intensely competitive process" is very much at odds with "no one will want to use the instrument, unless." It may be "bad" for Astronomy in the sense that fewer people may want to participate (though the process would still likely be "intensely competitive") but it may also be "good" in the sense that those writing the "point the telescope here" proposals would likely be

  • by BobC ( 101861 ) on Tuesday December 06, 2022 @12:06AM (#63106596)

    Sure, release the data immediately after capture. But give the proposing team the "Right of First Publication" for a period matching the current data exclusive access period.

    This will have the beneficial effect of EVERYONE ELSE working independently with the data then trying to become a collaborator on the analysis, to join the publication team. This means better papers will arrive sooner. It also means the team crafting the winning proposals will also be incentivized to collaborate. Some may try to "scoop" the proposal team by dumping their papers on the arXiv, but all will know who the proposing team is, including the publications.

    This path has its own problems, but they are administrative rather than scientific.

    • Sure, release the data immediately after capture. But give the proposing team the "Right of First Publication" for a period matching the current data exclusive access period.

      How do you propose to enforce this?

      • We could have a government office where you register an intention to do something that gives you a magic number and exclusive number that provides you the rights to sue anyone who copies you. You can then sell the rights to this magic number to someone else.

        Yes I described patents. But you asked how does someone propose it gets enforced, not if it is fundamentally a sane idea ;-)

        • Freely accessible data crosses national boundaries and jurisdictions very easily. The U.S. would be powerless to enforce this proposed intellectual property right in countries that don't have agree to it.

  • Making the data immediately free just means there's little incentive to be part of instrument development, which means less time invested in them and lower quality outcomes. The point of the public expenditure is to help build and maintain astronomy as a science, which has barely any natural marketplace, in recognition of its inherent value to humankind, not to drive news cycles on science blogs.
  • by physicsphairy ( 720718 ) on Tuesday December 06, 2022 @12:43AM (#63106628)

    Compare this with, e.g., Grigori Perelman, who declined the Field's Metal - "I'm not interested in money or fame." But we're going to hold up scientific progress for a year and deny the public access to what they spent $10 billion on so that... someone can be absolutely sure they will get to add an extra line to their CV claiming credit for part of the analysis?

    And this careerism is equated to the field of astronomical science itself to the extent that anything bad for the former is "bad for astronomy"?

    I'm pretty sure we can afford to break the citation system of career advancement without imperiling all of science. It's not that big of deal if the hiring process for astronomers starts to need more interview focus to discriminate quality candidates. In fact there are many other reasons to rethink the overemphasis on number of credited works as a proxy for measuring accomplishment.

    I don't mind that people want to piggy-back on scientific advancement for personal gain rather than pursue it for the pure intrinsic value of expanding human knowledge and enabling progress. But they should at least *act like* it's about the latter.

    • by serviscope_minor ( 664417 ) on Tuesday December 06, 2022 @03:08AM (#63106788) Journal

      Compare this with, e.g., Grigori Perelman, who declined the Field's Metal - "I'm not interested in money or fame."

      If he wasn't interested in money, then tell me, why did he have a job which paid him money to do maths?

      And this careerism is equated to the field of astronomical science itself to the extent that anything bad for the former is "bad for astronomy"?

      If Perelman wasn't actually paid to do maths as his day job, he'd have had to so something else, possibly something very time consuming and been unable to do nearly as much maths.

      Do you not see how that is bad for maths?

      I'm pretty sure we can afford to break the citation system of career advancement without imperiling all of science.

      Well let us know how, eh? Breaking it for one sub-sub field isn't going to break the citation system, it's just going to fuck things up for jobbing astronomers.

      But they should at least *act like* it's about the latter.

      Tell you what, you start acting like they need to be able to eat, then we can talk about how they act, eh?

  • Apart from the principled objections of public access to publicly funded research, the article also points out observations are iterative.

    If someone is faster to discover something which spurs a new useful observation, research moves faster as a whole. There is always more in the data than just the observers pet theory and apart from really basic stuff like discrete objects, even knowing the areas of research of competitors gambling that an observation was done by them trying to scoop them on cosmology seem

    • If someone is faster to discover something which spurs a new useful observation, research moves faster as a whole.

      Unless there's no data at all to examine, because it's no longer worth paying a scientist to spend months generating a research proposal for the telescope time.

      • Meh, I doubt Astronomy pulls any real weight for foreign students, private donations and grants. They are charity cases to begin with and will continue to get their pittance and free time on publicly funded telescopes regardless.

        Maybe the quality will decrease if they can get scooped, or maybe it will improve by not having as much research which can be reverse engineered simply from a bunch of observations the competition isn't even certain belongs together. Most of cosmology is so dependent on statistics a

  • by The Evil Atheist ( 2484676 ) on Tuesday December 06, 2022 @01:07AM (#63106672)
    Given the arguments raised, for sure it will hurt the individual astronomer or team that requested the observation time.

    But surely, if someone could come along and scoop others on a discovery, then that means they have uncovered a way of analyzing the data faster, and/or demonstrated an organizational/bureaucratic failure for the original astronomer(s)' institution. Both are valuable insights to gain. This can be good for astronomy, and indeed for all science.

    Also, why not pre-register a study? As I understand it, it's becoming a standard in other fields to pre-register a study in order to stop p-hacking and all that. This practice can be expanded to astronomy, not to mitigate p-hacking, but to prevent scooping by demonstrating priority. Perhaps make the data only downloadable after the downloader signs that they have read all the pre-registered studies associated with the data.
  • Perform a search on "dead sea scrolls publishing delay" for a classic example. If you don't see a slew of extension requests of the one (or whatever) year period, there's bridge in Brooklyn for sale. Getting one's proposed observation accepted should be reward enough. If "hasty results and incorrect conclusions" aren't discovered to the embarrassment of those who published them, there are bigger issues to deal with. I'm sure similar doom and gloom was predicted with arXiv which even this guy lauds for being
  • I call bullshit. If some brilliant young scientist has a great insight but needs time to analyse the data and get their arguments in order, then how is it that the non-brilliant poacher can get the job done faster?

    My guess is that someone is raising these bogus arguments in the hope of creating barriers to publication that can be used to delay the entire openness process.
    • I can think of a few ways. They can burn out a batch of postdocs and research assistants by forcing them to work 24/7 for a while. Or they can cut corners and not complete the analysis diligently. They get the credit and the flaw in the research either never gets discovered or gets discovered with little impact on their career. The first of those creates a race to the bottom - which is not good for astronomy. The second means that we might waste a decade or so further developing an idea that was flawed from

  • by sonamchauhan ( 587356 ) <sonamc@NOsPam.gmail.com> on Tuesday December 06, 2022 @03:04AM (#63106776) Journal

    Imagine of government funded research into healthcare had this open data mandate. And this hurt the careers of the medical researchers because someone scooped them to saving lives.

    Now astronomy is not about saving lives (except, like, killer asteroids). But the principle is similar ... If you paid for it, you get to set access.

    The 'cite original researchers' compromise is perfectly adequate

    • Yes, medicine, or how about patents. But wait, that's kind of how patents work! You have to supply instructions how to make your invention, in exchange for control of your invention for a few years. Once those years are up, you have to share it with everybody, and you had to tell them how to make it.

  • Let us apply this to business also, then businesses will never get "scooped". Competition in anything has major downsides because someone always loses when there is competition. It is extremely inefficient in that sense. Maybe we need short term "patents" on scientific ideas, and once the patent runs out then anyone can pursue the idea.
  • How did Jason Wright get a PhD with the lame argument skills shown here ?

    In the end, though, all his whining is secondary to the heart of the matter, which is that more scientists accessing more data, faster, will produce better science.

  • The JWST was paid for from public funds for doing pure science.

    When I consider that the JWST was able to determine the composition of a distant gas giant class exoplanet's atmosphere and should also be able to detect high concentrations of free Oxygen (a sign of life) in any smaller rocky worlds in a star's "goldilocks zone" as well.

    Makes me wonder what NASA et al want to hide. /Tinfoil hat Mode OFF

  • If you don't like the rules for using the publicly funded telescope, don't play the game. Buy your own damn telescope.
  • 1. OWNERSHIP - The taxpayer owns the data. Therefore the taxpayer should have access to it w/o delay.

    2. PROPRIETARY PERIOD IS ALREADY PRESENT - If it takes the originator of an observation 3 months to analyse the data properly, then it will take competitors about the same amount of time. The advantage however is to the originator who knows in advance the data is coming, can prepare to do the analysis in advance, and therefore has the ability to get things out before they get 'scooped'.

    So there is no val

  • Any organization which receives taxpayer money should be required to open themselves up to public disclosure. Think of the fun people could have if they had access to the trading algorithms of the Wall Street firms or the chemical composition of certain substances.

    It's our money. If you get it, we get you.

  • Public science funding is broken and corrupt. The current model leads to cases like this where the interests of scientists are counter to the interests of the public. It's an annoyance in abstract fields like astronomy. In other fields it's deadly. Heck, when you consider that we could have easily done a much better survey of asteroids and comets by now, it's easy to see how to funding model has failed dangerously, even in astronomy.

  • ...those researchers will have to work very quickly in order to avoid being scooped...Such a sloppy approach will lead to hasty results and incorrect conclusions to the detriment of the entire field.

    If it turns out they were wrong and you can prove it with the years of research you've been sitting on then GREAT! You get to publish a paper detailing how the idiots that didn't do their due diligence completely botched it. Maybe a public shaming teaches them a lesson so they're not so quick to "scoop" peopl
  • Mine, mine, mine. Not yours. Give it!

  • Having a proprietary period delays science getting done. Say one person has a creative idea, gets a proprietary period of 1 year, publishes it. Many others see the data and get a new clever idea from it, one wins a bid for an observation, gets a proprietary period for that... ad infinum.

    Worse, is when the researchers realize others can benefit from the data and serve as gatekeepers requiring favors, money, and/or credit for work they didn't contribute anything to, other than just being lucky.

    It's really t

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