Eric J Ma's Website

Scientists: Eliminate Link Rot!

written by Eric J. Ma on 2016-09-08


Reading up on Bayesian methods for analysis of high throughput measurement data, I saw this very promising paper by Johnson & Li.

In the abstract, there was a link. It looked awesome! There's software that accompanies this paper - I'm going to be able to try it out!

I entered the URL into Chrome, and got a DNS error. The link was not active. Bummer.


Scientists, it's time to archive your software properly. Put it on a digital repository that has a higher probability of being maintained long-term, and not on individual lab websites. Link rot is an issue that we have to deal with in the scientific literature.

(Granted, Johnson & Li published this in 2007, in which the issue of storing data and software on repositories was not widely recognized. I think the reader should be forgiving in this case.)

There's a ton of places we can put our work:

I did it with my own papers, and I'm encouraging my colleagues to do so as well. I'd encourage you to do so too.


Cite this blog post:
@article{
    ericmjl-2016-scientists-rot,
    author = {Eric J. Ma},
    title = {Scientists: Eliminate Link Rot!},
    year = {2016},
    month = {09},
    day = {08},
    howpublished = {\url{https://ericmjl.github.io}},
    journal = {Eric J. Ma's Blog},
    url = {https://ericmjl.github.io/blog/2016/9/8/scientists-eliminate-link-rot},
}
  

I send out a newsletter with tips and tools for data scientists. Come check it out at Substack.

If you would like to sponsor the coffee that goes into making my posts, please consider GitHub Sponsors!

Finally, I do free 30-minute GenAI strategy calls for teams that are looking to leverage GenAI for maximum impact. Consider booking a call on Calendly if you're interested!