moinmoin wrote:Arc wrote:Using professional credentials in an attempt to lend credibility to pseudoscience nonsense in the public domain, as the Dales have chosen to do with the Interpreter paper, is never a good idea. There can be real world consequences for scientists who are listed as authors.
Published and well respected scientific staff are a technology company asset. When these assets publicly damage their own credibility, they erode the reputation of the company they work for.
There can be problems all around if the poorly conceived and executed material they author, even as a hobby, attracts the attention of persons who may be clients, or potential clients, of the author's employer.
I read this literally ten minutes after reading this:
https://www.acsh.org/news/2019/05/22/do ... ists-14049
moinmoin,
In spite of what you might think or believe, what I posted here was not doxing. The Dales did that to themselves. I suggest you check the definition of doxing again - posted below from Wikipedia for your convenience.
Doxing on my part would be sending an email to Dr. Brian Dale's supervisor in Germany and suggesting that he or she to have a look at the paper.
I did not do that, and never would so that, especially to someone working for a German tech company. Just the opposite, I was attempting a kindness to someone naïve enough to use their professional credentials to lend credence to a publication so nonsensical that should have never seen the light of day.
This was done after posting comments on the Interpreter site about the paper and sending a PM to Dale Sr. regarding my concerns - all to no avail.
That being said, this last resort post can best be described as anti-doxing - that is, it is suggesting to the authors of the offending paper that it be retracted and pulled to reduce the (admittedly low probability) chance that someone would use it to dox Dr. Brain Dale.
I appreciate your concern, moinmoin, and suggest that it might be better directed toward the authors of the paper.
Wikipedia definition of Doxing wrote:Doxing (from dox, abbreviation of documents) or doxxing, is the Internet-based practice of researching and broadcasting private or identifying information (especially personally identifying information) about an individual or organization.