@traducerad buddy this is capitalism, you don't get money for being good at things, you get money for owning stuff. All the big money-makers in tech got big by making a platform that is essentially a new/different type of market and owning that market. Google as a market for ads on things people search for, Facebook as a market for ads on peoples social relationships, Amazon as a fulfilment service and easier to use market for books/other goods.
Fuck. My graduate advisor removed my author contribution statement on a big paper we're doing. I proposed and perform all experiments, and he won't let me write that I proposed the work.
Even though half of it was performed without his knowledge, and nobody else proposed anything (with the small exception of somebody saying to add a skip layer, who we added to the paper).
I think he genuinely believes he came up with the work.
No, there is nobody I can complain too. Even borderline criminal stuff like using government resources or university resources for private companies didn't raise an eyebrow with administrators in our department. Or buying equipment using university resources from your own company at 2x+ markup...
@Mikhail too bad, that sounds like perfect legal blackmail material :')
Do a ThePhD and call them out on their bullshit through a blog post that you will massively share on Twitter as well as in programming and academia circles? x)
Problem is that everybody with an administrative role has this kind of conflict of interest, so it surprises nobody. Also the people that have the same conflict of interest are the ones that are supposed to police others.
The only real damaging thing I could do is threaten to retract my 35+ papers, but somehow this will hurt me. Also that isn't directly related to my current issue. Also won't be trivial to do.
So, I have the email where I directed my undergrads to do the work, in February. Then I have the presentation where I presented the results in March. Then we got good analysis in April. Then my advisor sent out an email about how great we were.
In some ways its worse because I wanted to showcase this work on my CV as an example of a project that I took from conceptualization to completion. We're also targeting Science Magazine (which is a good journal).
Beyond first, second, third, etc author. Ownership of the work is more important when applying to faculty positions etc.
I'm the first author on the paper. The problem is that there is this part of a paper called the "author contribution statement", that is the part that he removed me from.
At present it appears I didn't contribute too much except take the pictures. I actually proposed the experiment, built the system, wrote 99% of the code, lead a team of like 5 people for misc items, did all the analysis and integrated it into a commercial product. I did this while working on other stuff (which was also successful). Because I'm the fucking greatest I got it done in like 8 months, 2 of which were spent mostly writing (also 1 month break for my prelim).
A majority of the projects in my advisor's lab's are of my proposal, not to mention the actual construction of the system or control software.
• Projects: integrated AI into a slide scanning instrument, automated phenotypic screening of adherent cell populations, tomographic assays of neuronal traffic, high sensitivity detection of cellular cytoskeletal elements, real-time connected coordinate analysis, and user interaction, quantitative phase imaging with color and polarization Bayer-like arrays, bovine embryo quality assessment, improving reflected light DIC, tools for studying circadian rhythms using ex vivo tissue
Its mostly computational optics and applications.
So, I contributed to about 35/60 of the papers my advisor has ever published while being a PI. And all the high impact ones in the last 7 years (my tenure). I got like 3 high impact ones out.
I'm working on small projects to use cheap depth camera in medical applications and we've got nice results so far - apparently there are publications in the making but I can't say I'm concerned since I'm only a contractual engineer in the project and not a researcher
Oof, that's like lower than my own salary, which already isn't super high and even less so for the US
Probably because is wrong. Whats really surprising, is that if people would apply more effort, or any effort, they could do great things. But its easier just to bullshit, and come home to your family every night. Even easier if you have somebody doing all your work.
Yeah, but from what I understood even if you call out the bullshit the US will try to find and silence the whistleblower instead of actually trying to fix the overarching issues being mentioned
No. Nobody is trying to silence whistle-blowers, and certainly nobody is effective. What really happens is that Americans understand they can't do science, and choose something else. Then the US imports easily exploitable foreigners.
The only real way to solve the problems of bullshit science is to prevent scientists from judging their own work, and really prevent them from working on the same thing ad infinitum.
The exploitation in science is very much an American thing and somewhat due to ability of PIs to have easy access to vulnerable labor. The PhD students I collaborate with in Europe (France, Noreweigh) are still doing bullshit but are lot happier.
@Mikhail well it's academia, it doesn't matter if he did or didn't. Since he's the advisor he expects to take credit anyway. The small community around your specific subject might know better, but it won't matter because social norms require that they treat you like crap until you're published.
/**
* \brief Set a pair of delays to watch
* \param data Pointer to timing data
* Must point to a valid \c mbedtls_timing_delay_context struct.
*/
void mbedtls_timing_set_delay( void *data, uint32_t int_ms, uint32_t fin_ms );
Then why the fuck do you take a void* and not a struct mbedtls_timing_delay_context*?