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Politics : Formerly About Advanced Micro Devices

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To: Wharf Rat who wrote (1403607)5/22/2023 5:22:40 PM
From: Tenchusatsu  Read Replies (1) of 1571744
 
Wharfie,
I'm not surprised that you are equating research with PR
Are you kidding me? Every time the media reports on some new "scientific study" that supports a given political narrative, I automatically assume that the "study" was done mainly for PR.

That applies equally to climate change alarmism as well as climate change denial, but it happens more with alarmism because there is more money involved. (There isn't much money involved in denialism because maintaining the status quo takes little effort.)

By the way, in case Saint Greta once again tells you to put your faith in the sCiEnCe ...

Fake scientific papers are alarmingly common | Science | AAAS

His findings underscore what was widely suspected: Journals are awash in a rising tide of scientific manuscripts from paper mills—secretive businesses that allow researchers to pad their publication records by paying for fake papers or undeserved authorship. “Paper mills have made a fortune by basically attacking a system that has had no idea how to cope with this stuff,” says Dorothy Bishop, a University of Oxford psychologist who studies fraudulent publishing practices. A 2 May announcement from the publisher Hindawi underlined the threat: It shut down four of its journals it found were “heavily compromised” by articles from paper mills.
If the system can't even tell which papers come from "paper mills," how do you expect said system to tell which studies are just plain false, or contain falsified data, or arrive at conclusions that aren't supported by the data?

Tenchusatsu
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