After shunning scientist, University of Pennsylvania celebrates her Nobel Prize — School that once demoted Katalin Karikó and cut her pay has made millions of dollars from patenting her work (www.wsj.com)
from L4s@lemmy.world to technology@lemmy.world on 06 Oct 2023 22:00
https://lemmy.world/post/6412155

After shunning scientist, University of Pennsylvania celebrates her Nobel Prize — School that once demoted Katalin Karikó and cut her pay has made millions of dollars from patenting her work::School that once demoted Katalin Karikó and cut her pay has made millions of dollars from patenting her work

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Fixbeat@lemmy.ml on 06 Oct 2023 23:41 next collapse

IANAL, but seems like this lady should sue them.

foggy@lemmy.world on 07 Oct 2023 00:37 collapse

If she did the work there they likely own it.

5BC2E7@lemmy.world on 07 Oct 2023 01:35 collapse

she left after they gave her an ultimatum of having to take a pay cut if she wanted to continue. i am not sure if she is a founder but she worked at BioNTech , so it’s not owned by the university. I don’t think it’s illegal but this is the time she should be publicizing the story to shame them and divert talent to competing universities.

TorJansson@lemm.ee on 07 Oct 2023 00:01 next collapse

The fun, fair world of academia.

DragonTypeWyvern@literature.cafe on 07 Oct 2023 02:31 collapse

Where both students and teachers are somehow exploited by business majors.

applebusch@lemmy.world on 07 Oct 2023 04:01 next collapse

Business majors are ruining the world one quarter at a time.

Drewsteau@lemmy.world on 07 Oct 2023 19:36 next collapse

But profits are up 5%!

RizzRustbolt@lemmy.world on 07 Oct 2023 19:42 collapse

They’ll poison you over pennies.

czardestructo@lemmy.world on 07 Oct 2023 11:01 collapse

This hits hard even as an engineer working in product development.

Wahots@pawb.social on 07 Oct 2023 02:08 next collapse

Non pay walled version: archive.ph/hWXMz

They both saved all of our asses. And our families’ asses. We owe the two scientists a great deal.

Buffalox@lemmy.world on 07 Oct 2023 10:04 next collapse

Good that she had the determination to continue. The great thing is that she was vindicated because it turned out she was right. In science being right is what ultimately matters.

I’m guessing she will never have similar problems in the future.

winterayars@sh.itjust.works on 07 Oct 2023 19:47 next collapse

She may not, but i wonder how many other incredible technologies are being held back for effectively political reasons.

[deleted] on 07 Oct 2023 19:58 collapse

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zik@lemmy.world on 07 Oct 2023 20:02 next collapse

The thing is she randomly got lucky and proven right due to a pandemic that no-one expected. There are a huge number of other scientists out there who were also right but never had that luck.

[deleted] on 07 Oct 2023 20:13 next collapse

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Gabu@lemmy.world on 07 Oct 2023 20:21 collapse

“Humans are pretty dumb”
follows up by stating a badly structured and unsubstantiated subjective analysis of an economic system which was never used

Whew, lads.

[deleted] on 07 Oct 2023 20:38 collapse

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Misconduct@startrek.website on 07 Oct 2023 20:58 collapse

Randomly got lucky? What lol. Other scientists not being noticed doesn’t in any way invalidate her. How absurd

NightAuthor@lemmy.world on 07 Oct 2023 21:07 collapse

I think they’re just trying to say, even if you’re right, you can still get screwed over. She just happened to get lucky in having a solid real world situation to help vindicate her.

Cryophilia@lemmy.world on 07 Oct 2023 20:04 next collapse

Being wrong is just as important in science, imo

Right or wrong, it’s all data

NightAuthor@lemmy.world on 07 Oct 2023 21:08 collapse

#NormalizePublishingNegativeResults

Edgelord_Of_Tomorrow@lemmy.world on 07 Oct 2023 22:50 collapse

The problem is, and this happens a lot in science, often it takes so long for scientists to be vindicated they die poor and in disrepute. If the pandemic had never happened she may have gone the same way.

HulkSmashBurgers@reddthat.com on 07 Oct 2023 14:32 next collapse

mRNA vaccines are an interesting technology. I consider them to be nanotechnology.

NightAuthor@lemmy.world on 07 Oct 2023 21:09 collapse

It’s all just physics

argo_yamato@lemm.ee on 07 Oct 2023 18:55 next collapse

Don’t get me wrong U of P is a good school but it is also where trump got his “degree” which I am sure he did 100% of the work to obtain it.

winterayars@sh.itjust.works on 07 Oct 2023 19:46 collapse

Let’s not forget the medical world ignored and sidelined her research for years until suddenly it became necessary. If it weren’t for COVID they’d still be pretending this technology doesn’t exist. I bet they still don’t even want it (case in point: it was developed with the intent of treating HIV and there’s still no HIV treatment in sight) but the CEOs and shit have had to accept it.