They fixed it, hurrey! The material of the boardgame is now available here: osf.io/t9ngd/
I'll write the OSF help desk.
It's marked as spam, according to OSF. I'm sorry!
The game is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (CC BY 4.0). This means you can change, include new content, and add to all cards and instructions as you wish, just acknowledge the creator.
It is a very simple board game. We have played it with a diverse range of audiences (e.g., almost all psychology professors at Aarhus University), and it was enjoyable every time. The game is fun and easy: you throw a die and follow the instructions when you land on each section.
I was invited to give a talk on open and reproducible science. Sometimes, it is challenging to discuss this topic, so I created The Transparent and Open Science Game. I am sharing here all materials: osf.io/t9ngd
good news about needing to listen to people like Richard Dawkins, though! British people basically don't exist. There are only two nationalities: Chinese and Indian.
Plea to my fellow academics: CITE YOUR SOFTWARE. I'm hearing from several young scholars that they've given up on writing R packages and such because nobody cites them. Yet download stats and rep materials clearly show that they are being used. This is plagiarism, and it slows down innovation
It's finally out! Our large-scaled replication attempt of the induced compliance paradigm in the study of cognitive dissonance: journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/...
The latest infuriating thing about this to come to mind: How well did this excuse work for Aaron Swartz and Sci-Hub when they did it for free? How well has it been working for the Internet Archive so far? Why are we only supposed to consider it acceptable when someoneās profiting?
āImpossibleā to create AI tools like ChatGPT without copyrighted material, OpenAI says
Pressure grows on artificial intelligence firms over the content used to train their productsBusiness live ā latest updatesThe developer OpenAI has said it would be impossible to create tools like its groundbreaking chatbot ChatGPT without access to copyrighted material, as pressure grows on artificial intelligence firms over the content used to train their products.Chatbots such as ChatGPT and image generators like Stable Diffusion are ātrainedā on a vast trove of data taken from the internet, with much of it covered by copyright ā a legal protection against someoneās work being used without permission. Continue reading...