fitness

The Alarming Trend of Buying Strava Miles and Academic Citations

Really?! I was shocked to see this story come across my newsfeed, The citation black market: schemes selling fake references alarm scientists. Sure, as academics we all want high impact, highly cited articles. Presumably though we want to get that by doing high impact research and writing excellent papers, not by paying for citations.

Here’s a quote from the story linked above, “Research-integrity watchers are concerned about the growing ways in which scientists can fake or manipulate the citation counts of their studies. In recent months, increasingly bold practices have surfaced. One approach was revealed through a sting operation in which a group of researchers bought 50 citations to pad the Google Scholar profile of a fake scientist they had created. The scientists bought the citations for US$300 from a firm that seems to sell bogus citations in bulk. This confirms the existence of a black market for faked references that research-integrity sleuths have long speculated about, says the team.”

And if paying for citations wasn’t bad enough, there’s also another way to game performance metrics in running and cycling as well. See A Sketchy New Trend—Buying Strava Miles—Would Really Suck for Cyclists.

Again, quoting from the article, “Want to make some money on your next ride? If the questionable side hustle of one Indonesian teenager—who logs runs on Strava for other runners, for a fee—is any indication, this might someday be a reality. Wahyu Wicaksono, 17, has become what’s known in Indonesia as a “Strava jockey,” completing running achievements for others on the app for a fee. “I am active on X and it is booming there,” Wahya told Channel News Asia. He charges 10,000 rupiah (about 62 cents) per kilometer for running at a “Pace 4” (one kilometer in four minutes). For a more leisurely “Pace 8” (one kilometer in eight minutes), the fee is 5,000 rupiah per kilometer. Clients pay upfront, and Wahyu tracks his runs by logging in to the buyer’s account.”

silhouette of boy running in body of water during sunset
Photo by TMS Sam on Pexels.com

I just can’t get my head around faking citation data and miles logged on the bike. They’re both the kind of thing,  that for me,  unless they’re real they have no value. The whole point is that they track something that matters.

I want people to actually read my papers and cite them lots because my ideas make a significant contribution to the literature. I want to record my kilometers ridden on my bike because I care about getting out lots on my bike.  Other people pretending to me and riding their bike isn’t the same thing at all.  It’s not even close.

How do you feel about it?

athletes · competition · fitness

Beckie Scott and my anti-doping sunglasses

I’m in Ottawa right now at a conference hosted by the Canadian Centre for Ethics in Sport in partnership with the World Anti-Doping Agency.  The focus is values-based education, “bringing together researchers and experts to examine how anti-doping organizations can enhance education programs to strengthen the global fight against doping in sport.”

I joked on Facebook that as a cyclist at an anti-doping conference I feel a bit guilty by association. Almost all of the powerpoint presentations about doping have images of my people on bikes!

But it’s exciting to be at a conference with anti-doping officials and educators from all over the world. It’s making me rethink, a bit, how I’ll teach the topic next week in my sports ethics class.

Along with ideas, I plan on sharing my conference loot with my students. So much conference swag.

I’ve got World Anti-Doping Agency sunglasses, a rubik’s cube, playing cards, and even a True Sport frisbee. (Philosophy conferences don’t usually ever have conference goodies.)

stuff glasses

One of the highlights was the keynote address by Beckie Scott, a Canadian athlete whose name is also the answer to a Trivial Pursuit question.  She’s the only athlete that’s had all three Olympic medals in only one race.

Here’s her bio from the Canadian Encyclopedia:

Beckie Scott, cross-country skier (b at Vegreville, Alta 1 Aug 1974). An ardent and public advocate for drug-free sport, Scott holds Canada’s only medal in CROSS-COUNTRY SKIING, and is the only Olympian to win gold, silver and bronze medals in the same event. Scott began skiing at age 5 when her parents enrolled her in the local Jackrabbit League in Vermilion. She began racing at age 7. At age 13, under the tutelage of coach Len Parsons, she won her first Junior National competition at 110 Mile House in British Columbia. By age 16, she was a regular competitor at world junior competitions.

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Anyway, just a quick hello from our lunch break! Maybe I’ll blog more about the conference themes later. Back to my table…