Also to be clear, if somebody is working on the same thing sees you're doing something similar and uses something you came up, a method
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Replying to @o_guest @DaniRabaiotti and
an analysis anything that's more yours than common knowledge, and publishes it without telling you... That's scooping & certainly malicious.
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Replying to @o_guest @DaniRabaiotti and
Even if their excuse is "sorry I forgot you came up with that"... Well, if they are indeed sorry they publish a correction stating as such!
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Replying to @o_guest @DaniRabaiotti and
This is exactly that situation in which a preprint can only strengthen your argument and demonstrate to others you came up with it.
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Replying to @o_guest @DaniRabaiotti and
IMHO this is one of the rarest ways people scoop. Needs so much data and experimental overlap for them to steal your method of idea.
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Replying to @o_guest @DaniRabaiotti and
*or not of. Also they need to jump into action so quickly as presumably you're already at the write up stage.
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Replying to @o_guest @DaniRabaiotti and
If you're not writing up, you should question why this person is asking you such detailed questions about your work.
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Replying to @o_guest @DaniRabaiotti and
In all honesty, if you're presenting a poster / talk you should ideally be at the write up stage. So it's quite hard to be scooped this way.
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I think it's an ecology thing but people with long term projects can easily have similar data to hand already, so more of a risk.
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Replying to @DaniRabaiotti @eteq and
Preprints. If you put it online they can't steal/accidentally steal it anymore in good faith.
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But it's also poss they just thought of it too independently. But if you both came up with it, then you should share credit.
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