Magnus Boman on Sat, 5 Mar 2016 17:21:33 +0100 (CET) |
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Re: <nettime> Tagging Banksy: Using Geographic Profiling to |
Are you sure? The first paragraph reads: >The pseudonymous Banksy is perhaps the most famous artist in Britain. His works regularly sell for hundreds of thousands of pounds but despite his popularity â and despite intense media interest â his identity officially remains a mystery. Here, we use geographic profiling, a statistical technique originally developed to prioritise large lists of suspects in cases of serial crime such as murder, rape and arson, to assess the evidence supporting one prominent candidate. Even if the paper is published in a journal that has existed for more than ten years and still has not reached an impact factor of 0.5, it must be considered extremely poor, and should have been rejected on methodological grounds. In fact, it is so bad one might suspect a classical Banksy scheme here: inventing a few QMW researchers and getting a rogue paper published on his own art. But since academia today is chock full of people that cannot read and write, and perhaps as Alexander Bard noted on this list recently, will be gone within a decade, the truth is probably more mundane: stepping all over the personal integrity of a named person suspected of the graffiti "crime" to get well-paid consultancy work for three-letter organizations, anyone? This is how the paper ends. >Ethical note: the authors are aware of, and respectful of, the privacy of Mr. Gunningham and his relatives and have thus only used data in the public domain. We have deliberately omitted precise addresses. After that are the references, sporting these gems as the first four -> Bull, M., 2010. Banksy locations (& tours): vol.2: an unofficial history of art locations in London. 5th revised ed. Wiltshire: Shellshock Publishing. Bull, M., 2013. Banksy locations (& tours): vol.1: an unofficial history of art locations in London. 5th revised ed. Wiltshire: Shellshock Publishing. Jordan, J., and Horsburgh, N., 2005. Mapping jihadist terrorism in Spain. Studies in Conflict & Terrorism, 28, 169â191. Joseph, C.A., 2008. Graffiti artist Banksy unmasked... as a former public schoolboy from middle-class suburbia. Daily Mail Available from: [1]http://www.dailymail.co.uk/femail/article-1034538/Graffiti-artist-Ba nksy-unmasked-public-schoolboy-middle-class-suburbia.html. I would suggest this journal put a sticker on their next issue like Banksy did: "New issue, now with 10% more CRAP". Oh, and if Banksy reads this, please contact me if you need help hacking the surveillance camera software around the homes of the authors. M. On Sat, Mar 5, 2016 at 12:17 AM Marco Jacquemet <[2]mjacquemet@usfca.edu> wrote:   It would be nice to have a link to a free download of this article.   Right now the only option is Francis and Taylor website, where they   charge USD 234.00 for issue! As you may know, there's an ongoing fight   (especially in Europe, see for instance [3]https://sci-hub.io/ or   [4]http://thecostofknowledge.com/) against this prostitution of   scholarship. <...>
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