Will SETI@home users receive recognition if the mothership returns?

  • Thread starter Thread starter eNtRopY
  • Start date Start date
AI Thread Summary
The discussion centers on whether SETI@home users will receive recognition if humanity makes contact with alien life. Participants express a desire for acknowledgment of their contributions, highlighting the extensive work done through the project. Concerns about data integrity and the motives behind SETI@home are raised, questioning the scientific credibility of the initiative. The mechanics of SETI@home are explained, emphasizing its role in analyzing signals from space using distributed computing. Ultimately, the conversation reflects a mix of hope for recognition and skepticism about the project's transparency and effectiveness.
eNtRopY
When the mothership returns...

So if we ever make contact with alien life, is there anything in it for us SETI@home dudes? I mean I've already completed hundreds of units; I feel like I should get some credit for all that hard work my computer did.

eNtRopY
 
Engineering news on Phys.org
never heard of it. what do you guys do?
 
So if we ever make contact with alien life, is there anything in it for us SETI@home dudes? I mean I've already completed hundreds of units; I feel like I should get some credit for all that hard work my computer did.

I really don't think so, as the integrity of the data is not really that well protected, it makes you wonder the real motives or scientific capability of this institution.

Whatever its all good stuff, as long as did not spend to much money on it ;)
 


Originally posted by eNtRopY
So if we ever make contact with alien life, is there anything in it for us SETI@home dudes? I mean I've already completed hundreds of units; I feel like I should get some credit for all that hard work my computer did.

I wondered that too. I think a visit to Arecibo would be cool ... for me or my computer
 
Originally posted by maximus
never heard of it. what do you guys do?
Have you ever see the film Contact? Well, in reality, you don't quite listen to signals from outer space on earphones. You send them either to an expensive supercomputer or use the Seti@Home system.

Seti@Home is the world's most successful loose parallel computing project. The data from the telescopes are broken up into 100kb chunks and downloaded onto millions of normal PC and each individually analysed to find signals. Then you upload the completed "work unit" to the central computer. This saves years of supercomputer time. Join today!
 
My guess is at least a few hackers enjoy trying to make fake alien signals but I guess the way they decipher the data takes that into account?
 
Yeah. The same packet gets sent to several different client computers, and positive results are simply passed on to the supercomputer for additional analysis.
 

Similar threads

Replies
14
Views
3K
Replies
33
Views
4K
Replies
11
Views
3K
Replies
20
Views
3K
Replies
6
Views
3K
Replies
18
Views
721
Back
Top