[-] potsnpans@beehaw.org 4 points 1 year ago

That's fair, though personally I'm kindof glad they did. "Signal is a secure messaging app" is a lot easier to explain to non-tech-savvy people than "Signal is a secure messaging app, as long as you are messaging someone who is using Signal too. It can also send regular texts but they can't be encrypted." Leaving that nuance out would have left people texting with a false assumption of security, but I lost several people explaining it because it "sounds complicated".

[-] potsnpans@beehaw.org 9 points 1 year ago

Yup. Everyone here giving their own reasons for disliking her seems to be missing that the amount of vitriolic hatred spewed at her is wildly disproportionate to anything she's actually done or failed to do.

(speaking as someone who doesn't like her either, in that I don't "like" 99% of politicians)

1

"Our study finds that 67% of individuals with Long COVID are developing dysautonomia. That’s an estimated 38 million Americans with Long COVID dysautonomia, and millions more around the world,” says Lauren Stiles, President of Dysautonomia International and Research Assistant Professor of Neurology at Stony Brook University.

"We need the National Institutes of Health to immediately address this crisis and begin funding research aimed at developing effective treatments for Long COVID dysautonomia,” says Jacqueline Rutter, a Dysautonomia International Board Member whose family has been impacted by Long COVID.

[-] potsnpans@beehaw.org 2 points 1 year ago

If an entity is not subject to the legal restrictions of an individual, it should not benefit from the legal rights of an individual.

[-] potsnpans@beehaw.org 5 points 1 year ago

What - and I cannot emphasize this next part enough - the fuck

[-] potsnpans@beehaw.org 1 points 1 year ago

This exactly. Only I am quite certain it's already being used this way, on a much wider scale than we have any way to measure.

[-] potsnpans@beehaw.org 40 points 1 year ago

signal ftw ✊

[-] potsnpans@beehaw.org 2 points 1 year ago

This could be such a huge boon to accessibility, especially in rural areas and for those with limited means. Getting a child a diagnosis or support when the closest qualified clinician is hours away, has terrible reviews, and charges out the nose is nearly impossible, and far too common.

[-] potsnpans@beehaw.org 0 points 1 year ago

I do think this is more an issue with science communication broadly than string theory specifically - every field has its own examples, and medicine is notorious for it - but she is right that scientific researchers (the subject matter experts) have a responsibility to accurately communicate their work when speaking to the public.

Its one thing for an enthusiast to inadvertently oversell a concept to the public as fact because they are excited and only understand at only a basic level. It's another entirely for someone who's been researching that concept for 30-40 years, with the express intent of proving or disproving its validity, to oversell it as fact when they're whole job is to be intimately familiar with its shortcomings. They, of all people, should know better - and that means they have a responsibility to do better.

Science does get messy, by design, but it is the duty of those who communicate their science to be honest about that messiness, not mask it by unfounded statements to sell their ideas to people that don't have the research expertise to spot the falsehoods.

potsnpans

joined 1 year ago