rvallee
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
(From the no discussion thread with the responses)
This is exactly like Theranos having been handed millions in public money to "test" their own technology, in private, reporting with hidden data that it works, then somehow having the shamelessness to argue that any criticism of their own product, and testing, is invalid. After reanalysis of the data, obtained through litigation, showed the effect was not only massively inflated, but used absurd changes that made starting and end points overlap.
Then attacking regulators finding so, trying to corrupt the process behind the scenes, now documented. In that scenario, with a private company involved, someone would have gone to prison. Careers would have been ended. I don't think there is as much evidence behind the Stanford president's own scandal. It's just so much corruption.
I never understood how that was valid. It's so nakedly corrupt and incompatible with academic rigor to test the thing you invented yourself. In preliminary testing, sure, obviously. Which they did. Dozens of times over. Always small trials with no validity. But "the definitive trial" of it? Somehow presented as independent testing by the editor-in-chief of a reputable journal who made a promotional tour for it? WTH?
Oh that's a point I missed and an important one, even though I made it in the past. They tested their own product here. They literally invented this, then were handed millions to "test" whether their own product was any good.include being the developers, testers of their own clinical trials/therapies
This is exactly like Theranos having been handed millions in public money to "test" their own technology, in private, reporting with hidden data that it works, then somehow having the shamelessness to argue that any criticism of their own product, and testing, is invalid. After reanalysis of the data, obtained through litigation, showed the effect was not only massively inflated, but used absurd changes that made starting and end points overlap.
Then attacking regulators finding so, trying to corrupt the process behind the scenes, now documented. In that scenario, with a private company involved, someone would have gone to prison. Careers would have been ended. I don't think there is as much evidence behind the Stanford president's own scandal. It's just so much corruption.
I never understood how that was valid. It's so nakedly corrupt and incompatible with academic rigor to test the thing you invented yourself. In preliminary testing, sure, obviously. Which they did. Dozens of times over. Always small trials with no validity. But "the definitive trial" of it? Somehow presented as independent testing by the editor-in-chief of a reputable journal who made a promotional tour for it? WTH?
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