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Insightful & Academic
BlueSky allows for slightly more text and is popular among the global research community.
Mummy Research Center representatives attended the VI Polish-British Science Forum at the University of Warsaw (17.03.2026).
#Science #Research #MummyResearchCenter #Nature #RoyalSociety

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The End of the Golden Age: Eggheads Loot the Stars of Their Doubloons ⚓The End of the Golden Age: Eggheads Loot the Stars of Their Doubloons 📜Read: https://thescallywag.online/go/553fdc8f #pirate #techsorcery #FribLaboratory #MichiganStateUniversity #Selenium82 #RoyalSociety #ScurvyPete #DepartmentOfEnergy

⚓The End of the Golden Age: Eggheads Loot the Stars of Their Doubloons

📜Read: thescallywag.online/go/553fdc8f

#pirate #techsorcery #FribLaboratory #MichiganStateUniversity #Selenium82 #RoyalSociety #ScurvyPete #DepartmentOfEnergy

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Attended “In the Cloud” how the Met Office are using the Cloud and AI to transform weather and climate intelligence.
Hosted by the Royal Society.

Fascinating talks and demos. Obviously the best was the LLM to Shipping Forecast generator.

#metoffice #cloud #data #ai #hpc #science #royalsociety

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Beyond bleaching: collapse of net coral reef carbonate budgets in the Tropical Eastern Pacific after the fourth global coral bleaching event Abstract. The increasing frequency and severity of marine heatwaves are driving unprecedented ecological changes in coral reefs. Although mass coral bleach

Read the paper: royalsocietypublishing.org/rspb/article...

@lalvarezfilip.bsky.social
#RoyalSociety #UNAM #Mexico
#Coralreef #Coralbleaching #Marineheatwave #heatwave

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📖 #OTD in the #History of #Literature 6 March 1665, the first joint Secretary of the Royal Society, Henry Oldenburg, published the first issue of Philosophical Transactions of the #RoyalSociety. It is the world's longest-running scientific journal.

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Original post on sauropods.win

"In the face of the daily degradation of public discourse by lies, deceit and conspiracy theories transmitted across social media, many of them touching on scientific matters such as vaccines, climate science and the wealth of human diversity, the Royal Society stands almost mute."
— […]

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A year of inaction: why has the Royal Society allowed itself to be hollowed out by Elon Musk? _Today, one year has passed since I published an_ _open letter_ _, signed by almost 3,500 members of the scientific community, asking the Royal Society to deal meaningfully with breaches of its code of conduct by Elon Musk FRS. Twelve months on, I look at why those concerns are still live, why they are important, and outline how our national science academy might, even at this late stage, recover its reputation._ Professor Sir Paul Nurse, President of the Royal Society, would have you believe that concerns raised within and without the Society about the behaviour of their honoured fellow, Elon Musk FRS, are because some people think he’s a “bad person”. Nurse’s predecessor as President, Sir Adrian Smith, repeatedly sought characterise the concerns as differences of political opinion so that any attempt to bring Musk to book would amount to interference with the right of fellows to hold and express controversial views. Several other Fellows have, I understand, dismissed the concerns over Musk’s actions as a storm in a social media teacup. If these various claims were true, the Royal Society’s inaction in respect of Mr Musk would indeed be warranted. There is of course _some_ political character to Musk’s activities, since over the past several years he has been very politically engaged, campaigning enthusiastically for Donald Trump and even for a time worked within the Trump administration (as head of DOGE); and it is true that some of those who have objected to Musk’s continued fellowship within the Royal Society clearly don’t like his politics. But the heart of the matter is not to do with political differences. It is to do with the fact that Musk actions amount to clear contraventions of the Fellows’ code of conduct. Given the ongoing obfuscation and confusion around the issues raised by this troubling episode, I think it is important to put on record carefully and straightforwardly why the Royal Society’s failure to address Musk’s breaches of their code has so undermined the integrity and authority of our national academy of science. Why does the Royal Society have a code? It explains that in the preamble: > _“The Royal Society’s fundamental purpose, reflected in its founding Charters of the 1660s, is to recognise, promote, and support excellence in science and to encourage the development and use of science for the benefit of humanity. The credibility of the Society’s work in pursuit of these objectives rests in large part upon its reputation. This in turn rests upon the reputation of the Fellows and Foreign Members of which the Society is composed, and their upholding of high standards in their work and conduct both inside and outside of the Society.”_ And how exactly has Musk’s conduct fallen below the standards enshrined in the code? I want to focus here on what I see as the primary concerns, steering clear of those that arguably have some partisan or political character. They can be simply stated: First: following Musk’s acquisition of X he removed the teams who worked to counteract the spread of deceptive material and by reconfiguring the algorithm to boost his own posts, has become one of the most prominent sources of misinformation on the platform. Second: as head of DOGE (Department of Government Efficiency), he played a leading role in grievously, chaotically and at times unlawfully undermining federal research agencies and programmes in the USA. Third, and most seriously: also as head of DOGE he bragged about defunding USAID, an action that is reckoned to have killed tens of thousands people by suddenly depriving them of critical healthcare and to result in up to 14 million deaths by 2030, according to a study published in the Lancet. It is difficult to see how spreading misinformation can “support excellence in science” given the long-established ethos of the scientific community that truth-claims should be consonant “with observation and with previously confirmed knowledge”; or how drastic and disorderly cuts to research and aid budgets that have cost some people their jobs and others their lives “encourage the development and use of science for the benefit of humanity”. Musk’s actions appear to be diametrically opposed to the mission and values of the Royal Society. As the code makes plain, his Fellowship of the Royal Society is “a privilege predicated on adherence to particular standards of conduct.” By accepting the honour of fellowship he has agreed that he “shall not act or fail to act in any way which would undermine the Society’s mission or bring the Society into disrepute” (Section 1.5). The code also clearly explains that this stricture applies to statements or conduct inside and outside the Royal Society: “When speaking or publicising statements in a personal capacity, Fellows and Foreign Members must still strive to uphold the reputation of the Society and those who work in it, and be mindful that what is said or stated in a personal capacity could still impact the Society” (Section 4.19); and “When acting in other capacities (for example, as an employee of another organisation), Fellows and Foreign Members must be mindful that what is done in other capacities may still reflect on the Society” (section 4.20). Fellows are also expected to understand the consequences that flow from breaches of the code; they must “acknowledge the responsibility and right of the Society to ensure this Code of Conduct is adhered to, and accept that if a breach of the Code of Conduct has occurred this may trigger enforcement action (including temporary or permanent suspension as a Fellow […]” (section 5.21) To date, more than a year since concerns about Musk’s breaches of the code of conduct were first raised, the leadership of the Royal Society has failed to take any meaningful action or to explain how his actions do not, in their view, contravene the code. When Nurse wrote to Musk last year detailing the concerns raised by his actions, he got no reply. It is hard to imagine how this disregard for the Royal Society and its code could be any clearer, yet the Society took no further action. Arguably, the leadership of the Royal Society is now also in breach of its _own_ code of conduct. As section 1.3 makes plain: “The Society strives to act in accordance with the highest standards of public life. In their work with the Society, all Fellows and Foreign Members are expected to follow the Nolan principles of public life, namely: selflessness, integrity, objectivity, accountability, openness, honesty and leadership.” Where is the accountability, the openness, the honesty and the leadership? Nurse has claimed in his interview with the Financial Times that the Royal Society “should not start ‘making judgments’ about the ‘character and behaviour’ of fellows”, a statement that is in essence a denial of the Society’s code of conduct. In failing to call Mr Musk to account over his actions and in repeatedly declining to explain why they believe he has not fallen foul of their code, our national academy gives the very strong impression of having abandoned its values. This has gravely weakened the legitimacy of the Royal Society’s claim to speak on behalf of the wider UK scientific community. The seriousness of this failure should not be underestimated. At a time when we need reputable institutions so speak up for high standards of integrity and evidence in public discourse, the Royal Society has – for reasons still known only itself – spiked its own guns. This affair has dragged on for far too long and barely makes the news anymore. Instead the headlines are dominated by politicians riding to power on waves of misinformation and clinging to it – as in the case of the recent killings of two US citizens on the streets of Minneapolis – with flat denials of the evidence of our own eyes. In the face of the daily degradation of public discourse by lies, deceit and conspiracy theories transmitted across social media, many of them touching on scientific matters such as vaccines, climate science and the wealth of human diversity, the Royal Society stands almost mute. Instead of facing the most serious challenge to its values in decades, it has averted its gaze and now clearly wishes this whole Musk business would just go away. But it will not go away. The Society now faces the shame and embarrassment of the fact that a company run by one of its Fellows is being investigated for the creation and distribution of child sexual abuse material. It isn’t just on matters of science that we must push back on misinformation spread in bad faith. The bedrock of our democracy is being eroded, as Eliot Higgins and Natalie Martin have described so succinctly in a recent Demos report that warns of the “epistemic collapse” due to the loss of trusted information supply chains and the breakdown of relationships between citizens and the state. Their verification, deliberation and accountability framework offers a tools for diagnosing the strengths and weaknesses in our democratic processes. Simply put, they identify three foundational functions of democracy: * * Citizens must be able to know what is true. * They must be able to see that their voices count in shaping public reasoning. * And they must be able to hold power to account. The Royal Society is hardly the main player when it comes to shoring up democracy, but it is an important one. Its failure to properly deal with Musk, particularly with regard to his spread of misinformation, has weakened each of the three pillars identified in the Demos report. Higgins and Martin are doing the hard thinking that we might once have looked for at the Royal Society. Our national academy should have a strong voice in the wider debates about truth, trust and accountability, but first it must put its own house in order. I offered suggestions over six months ago about how it might go about this. They will bear repeating and updating since so little has happened in the meantime. First, the Royal Society needs to demonstrate that it is willing to deal effectively and proportionately with breaches of its code of conduct. Although President Sir Paul Nurse has raised his breaches of the code in correspondence with Musk, even going so far as to suggest that Musk might wish to resign his fellowship, when no reply the Royal Society did nothing. Their failure to respond to Musk’s indifference to their values sends the message that these values have little meaning for the Society itself. It is frankly intolerable that the Royal Society has allowed itself to be hollowed out in this way. Second, the Royal Society needs to update its code of conduct to deal with cases where one of its Fellows pivots from science to more questionable activities, political or otherwise. The assumptions underlying the current draft – that Fellows would be practising scientists – clearly no longer hold. The updated code has to address cases where Fellows engage in behaviours that are divorced from evidence and truth-telling, while _explicitly_ still allowing for freedom of speech, political pluralism and robust, good-faith debate. Finally, the Society needs to deliver on its vague promises of action and communicate its plans to advocate for the value of science and scientific values amid the rising tides of misinformation. Having been mute for more than a year now, it has to rediscover a voice that truly speaks for the community it claims to represent.

"The leadership of the Royal Society is now also in breach of its own code of conduct."
— Stephen Curry at occamstypewriter.org/scurry/2026/02/11/year-o...

#RoyalSociety

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Prof. Bob White – Are Natural Disasters Inevitable? Insights from Science and Religion | Faraday Institute for Science and Religion

#CambridgeFestival:

#BobWhite is always worth listening to & this should be fascinating, from a Fellow of the #RoyalSociety & Emeritus Professor of #Geophysics, #CambridgeUniversity

www.faraday.cam.ac.uk/event/prof-b...
@buddhistuniversity.net @tricyclemag.bsky.social @buddhistdoor.bsky.social

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Christopher Wren #royalsociety #rkgk

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A Microscopic Mutiny: the Viral Lever That Cracks the Great Rot ⚓A Microscopic Mutiny: the Viral Lever That Cracks the Great Rot 📜Read: https://thescallywag.online/go/5ad4f55a #pirate #techsorcery #GreatRot #TinyViralSwitch #OldManHaddock #AntibioticResistance #RoyalSociety #MicroscopicSaboteur

⚓A Microscopic Mutiny: the Viral Lever That Cracks the Great Rot

📜Read: thescallywag.online/go/5ad4f55a

#pirate #techsorcery #GreatRot #TinyViralSwitch #OldManHaddock #AntibioticResistance #RoyalSociety #MicroscopicSaboteur

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Back to my roots!

Looking forward to sharing some initial research at this #RoyalSociety conference in March on Scientific portraits and portraits for science.

I’ll be talking about an unrealised scheme for sculptures of scientists in the Palace of Westminster

royalsociety.org/science-even...

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Original post on mastodon.green

Vast amounts of work at the science-policy interface – countless statements, declarations, reports, committees, events and workshops – are not seemingly leading to policy action at anything like the scale needed. Scientists in a global emergency - London's #RoyalSociety March 18th […]

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MSN

That'll be Elon Musk FRS.

#RoyalSociety

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Original post on fediscience.org

Update. @StephenCurry just wrote an excellent piece reminding the #RoyalSociety of the many ways that #ElonMusk violated its code of ethics. Expelling him would not have to be based on political disagreements. Citing the principle that fellows should be free to disagree about politics willfully […]

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Has the #RoyalSociety said #Elon has let his membership lapse yet?
@nature.com

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🍏 #OTD in the #History of #Science 8 February 1672, #IsaacNewton read his first optics paper, "New Theory about Light and Colours," before the #RoyalSociety in London.

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@jmbecologist
And even London's #RoyalSociety have published on this
royalsocietypublishing.org/rsos/article/11/7/240411...

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‰PNG IHDR ð¼Ô

⚓The Gilded Golems Shall Not Seize the Helm: Nobel Lords Decree Machines Lack the Salt for True Mutiny

📜Read: thescallywag.online/go/ce292d44

#pirate #imperialpolitics #NobelLaureates #RoyalSociety #ArtificialIntelligence #MechanicalMariners #SiliconValley #IronInk

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‰PNG IHDR ð¼Ô

⚓The Sorcerer of Silicon Snags the Golden Medallion

📜Read: thescallywag.online/go/45e52c93

#pirate #imperialpolitics #SirDemisHassabis #NobelPrize #Deepmind #Bosun'binaryBill #RoyalSociety #BritishEmpire

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When will the #RoyalSociety decide Musk has to go?

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#RoyalSociety
#UKpolitics

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🎉📸🎉 Winners of the Royal Society Photography Competition,2025 🎉📸🎉 #royalsociety #photography #winners #nature #animals #cosmos #science

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Original post on fediscience.org

Update. In a new open letter, UCambridge prof #RachelOliver criticizes #PaulNurse, president of the #RoyalSociety, for proposing to change the society's code of conduct so that Fellows (like #ElonMusk and #TimHunt) could only be expelled for scientific misconduct, and not (e.g.) for sexual […]

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However, other fellows have disagreed. One told the Guardian Nurse’s
comments brought discredit on the society and made a mockery of its code
of conduct.

“The most Nurse has been willing to do has been to write a gently worded
letter to Musk suggesting that maybe he would like to reconsider whether his
activities are consistent with continued fellowship,” they said. “That
shouldn’t be for Musk to decide.”

Another fellow said: “If his activities at Doge and, most recently, allowing his
Al to undress women for all to see isn’t bringing science into disrepute I don’t
know what is. In short, evil prospers when good men do nothing”

However, other fellows have disagreed. One told the Guardian Nurse’s comments brought discredit on the society and made a mockery of its code of conduct. “The most Nurse has been willing to do has been to write a gently worded letter to Musk suggesting that maybe he would like to reconsider whether his activities are consistent with continued fellowship,” they said. “That shouldn’t be for Musk to decide.” Another fellow said: “If his activities at Doge and, most recently, allowing his Al to undress women for all to see isn’t bringing science into disrepute I don’t know what is. In short, evil prospers when good men do nothing”

"Evil Prospers When Good Men (People?) Do Nothing

The inherent misogyny of the Royal Society is quite something, isn't it? "WE'RE MEN OF SCIENCE!"

#RoyalSociety #ElonMusk #Musk #Misogyny

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Some fellows have told the Guardian they support Nurse’s view, with the
chemist and Nobel laureate Prof Andre Geim adding that he would go
further.

“The Royal Society should not expel anyone, full stop. Why? Because
expulsion is theatre. The people you want to punish usually do not care,” he
said, adding that humans were messy and even brilliant scientists could be
awful people.

Geim added that the Musk “obsession” was a perfect example of misplaced
effort.

“Is this really the best use of the society’s oxygen? Musk will not notice. His
fans will not care. His critics will simply demand the next scalp. Meanwhile,
the Royal Society’s actual job, defending the conditions for science in Britain,
gets sidelined by a glossy, low-impact row;” he said.

Some fellows have told the Guardian they support Nurse’s view, with the chemist and Nobel laureate Prof Andre Geim adding that he would go further. “The Royal Society should not expel anyone, full stop. Why? Because expulsion is theatre. The people you want to punish usually do not care,” he said, adding that humans were messy and even brilliant scientists could be awful people. Geim added that the Musk “obsession” was a perfect example of misplaced effort. “Is this really the best use of the society’s oxygen? Musk will not notice. His fans will not care. His critics will simply demand the next scalp. Meanwhile, the Royal Society’s actual job, defending the conditions for science in Britain, gets sidelined by a glossy, low-impact row;” he said.

"Please, our Boys Club is far more important than all your petty troubles, we're MEN OF SCIENCE!"

Fucking cowards with dodgy search histories....

#RoyalSociety #Patriarchy #Misogyny #ElonMusk #Musk

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Original post on mastodon.social

The Royal Society turns a blind eye to Elon Musk so we should turn a blind eye to the Royal Society

Stale, pale and male.

www.theguardian.com/science/2026/jan/14/roya...

#RoyalSociety #ElonMusk #Musk #GrokAI #CSAM […]

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Original post on mastodon.green

Perverse, contradictory self-justification: "...the Royal Society’s actual job, defending the conditions for science in Britain" is being undermined not by the row, but by the actions of the man in question - quite apart from his continued Fellowship.
#RoyalSociety #Musk
And good to see quote […]

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Royal Society president reignites Elon Musk row by defending lack of action Society should only eject fellows for fraud or other defects in their research, says Paul Nurse

#RoyalSociety president reignites Elon #Musk row by defending lack of action - www.theguardian.com/science/2026... #nurse is clueless; he should go

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I have huge respect for Sir Paul Nurse #RoyalSociety but he’s definitely wrong on this one.

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