The Paper is a Lie: Practical Data Forensics for Scientific Data (eh23)

The Paper is a Lie: Practical Data Forensics for Scientific Data (eh23)

Author: CCC media team April 5, 2026 Duration: 1:00:08
Recent high-profile cases of scientific fraud have demonstrated that scientists are only human too and sometimes individual scientists falsify their data. Since science is the basis of decision- and policy-making, we all should be able to scrutinise scientific studies. Here, we provide practical guidance and concrete tools for forensically examining scientific data and identifying potential cases of data manipulation. These approaches will enable and empower audience members to independently perform forensic plausibility checks on scientific data, as well as provide a starting point for their further, independent study. Limitations and ethical considerations when performing such analyses will also be discussed. Science is the basis of decision- and policy-making, and it is generally a good idea to "trust the science." Recent high-profile cases of scientific fraud, however, have demonstrated that scientists are only human too, and sometimes, for various reasons, individual scientists falsify their research. Accordingly, we all should be able to scrutinise and independently assess scientific studies, spotting potential cases of manipulation. Perhaps surprisingly, this is often significantly easier to do for the layperson than one may suspect. In this talk, we'll focus on a core aspect of checking scientific studies: the raw data, and their forensic examination. To get started, we begin with a brief introduction to the structure of a typical scientific study and the process of modern scientific publishing. Afterwards, we will take a look at a number of recent high-profile cases of scientific fraud together in a hands-on manner. We will thereby establish practical guidance and concrete statistical tools for identifying potential cases of data manipulation which may warrant further examination. These approaches will enable and empower audience members to independently perform forensic plausibility checks on scientific data, as well as provide a starting point for their further, independent study of additionally provided resources. Since no tool or technique is perfect, we will also talk about the limitations of the presented approaches, as well as ethical considerations when performing such analyses. This talk is directed at everyone with an interest in scientific research and everyone who enjoys critically assessing datasets for plausibility. Prior knowledge in statistics, data science and data visualisation are certainly advantageous, but not required, as all necessary theoretical foundations will be introduced during the talk. This work is licensed under CC BY-NC 4.0. To view a copy of this license, visit https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/ about this event: https://pretalx.eh23.easterhegg.eu/eh23/talk/XLDNUG/

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Author: Episodes: 100

Chaos Computer Club - recent events feed
Podcast Episodes
Elektronische Schlüssel Profilfräsen (eh23) [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 56:51
Der Schlüsselkopierschutz von Schließanlagen basiert darauf, das man die entsprechenden Schlüsselrohlinge nicht bekommt. Wie fräst man einen passenden Schlüssel aus einem Vollbart Rohling, von dem ersten modifizierten Or…
Gotta Hack 'Em All! Pokémon (eh23) [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 30:49
Viele kennen ja einige Hacks oder Glitches in Pokémon Rot und Blau. Wie aber funktionieren diese genau? Was passiert da eigentlich im Code? Was macht das ganze überhaupt möglich? Schauen wir uns das Ganze doch mal genaue…
How NOT to IPv6 (eh23) [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 30:01
Ein buntes Potpourri an Worst-Practices wie man die IPv6 Einführung nicht schafft. Die Transition des Internets von IPv4 zu IPv6 dauert jetzt schon weit über 20 Jahre, trotzdem geht sie in einigen Bereichen nur schleppen…
The commit history is a lie (eh23) [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 31:42
Bei diesem Talk gebe ich eine Einführung in Conventional Commits und was diese mit Semantic Versioning - also Versionierung im Stil "v1.6.1" - zu tun haben. Damit eure Git Historie nicht lästig, sondern hilfreich ist, un…
No Magic, Just Modbus (eh23) [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 27:24
OT (Operational Technology) ist nicht nur IT mit dickeren Kabeln. Dieser Talk führt in das Thema Sicherheit in industriellen Steuerungssystemen ein und zeigt, wie man Angriffe mit Frameworks strukturiert analysieren und…
Public-Public Data-DNA (eh23) [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 27:13
_Hier werden **offene Daten aus den Fachverfahren** unserer Verwaltungen mit **unseren öffentlichen Datenquellen** (OSM, WikiData, ..) verzahnt!_ Ähnlich eine DNA die beiden Stränge verbindet, synchronisiert p2d2 offene…
Open Source Lizenzen (eh23) [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 48:26
Wir erzählen euch etwas über Open-Source-Lizenzen, ob sie so funktionieren wie gedacht und andere Absurditäten. Alle reden von Open Source. Wir nicht. Wir reden über Open-Source-Lizenzen! GPL haben alle wohl schonmal geh…
Ghost in the stochastic parrot (eh23) [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 58:47
Sci-fi started merging with the real world around 2022. That's when I started paying attention. Are LLMs definitely persons? Are they definitely not persons? What can we prove? (What about animals?) Machines indistinguis…
A decade of certificate transparency and what may come next (eh23) [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 1:00:45
Certificate Transparency (RFC 6962) is a protocol that aims to provide additional security to the WebPKI ecosystem, which is used as the root of trust in TLS connections of the browsers. The idea is that issued certifica…