It's a wonderful example of careful science. I only have 1 criticism. "There is 
no plausible scientific reason for the deletion: the sequences are perfectly 
concordant with the samples described in Wang et al.(2020a,b), there are no 
corrections to the paper, the paper states human subjects approval was 
obtained, and the sequencing shows no evidence of plasmid or sample-to-sample 
contamination."

There's never *any* scientific reason to delete anything. So, the 1st clause in 
the sentence is *merely* an attempt to rouse the rabble. 8^D Otherwise known as 
"trolling". But buried under all the excellent, and excellently hygienic, 
sentences in the paper, it makes that trawl more poignant and well done.

Writ large, though, the phrase "systematic forensis" seems like a paradox. The 
approach I take, inspired by systems engineering, is to *log* absolutely 
everything, under version control, persistently. Rather than being a part of 
systematic forensis, it *facilitates* forensis. In light of our conversation on 
the myth of the objective, forensics imputes causality into a mesh of events 
... hunts down *the* criminal, *the* offending "$ shed -u" command. Nothing 
brings that to the public forum quite like the gumshoe's pavement-pounding 
response to her *hunch*.

It doesn't sound quite right to talk of systematic forensics. It sounds more 
right to say systematic bookkeeping for the sake of more publicizing to the 
forum.

On 6/23/21 9:42 PM, David Eric Smith wrote:
> Speaking of big data forensics (which no-one was):
> https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/2021.06.18.449051v1.full.pdf 
> <https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/2021.06.18.449051v1.full.pdf>
> 
> [...]
> I post because (apart from general interest), in the last paragraph of his 
> introduction, he makes a call for data forensics to be done more 
> systematically.


-- 
☤>$ uǝlƃ

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