Findings: Your lab notebook, reinvented(findingsapp.com) |
Findings: Your lab notebook, reinvented(findingsapp.com) |
There's always the honor code, but my understanding was the lack of paper trail is one of the big issues with switching to computational means for keeping track of scientific results.
Yes, the 'first to file' thing is still new enough that many scientists still think it is useful to sign their notebooks for that purpose. There are still subtleties to those rules, though, that we need to investigate a bit.
By keeping local data in a local DB, this is avoided. I see on the website that sync is coming soon. If the developer is smart, they'll allow selective sync so that labs can choose what to upload and what to keep local, or will offer some sort of non-cloud p2p sync solution.
And yes, you would need to add some authentication to know it's always the same user, but that's a different, orthogonal issue.
For actual proof e.g. in court, you'd need a third party with a private key used to sign the content. A little more involved... But the main point of that would be patent litigation, and with the new 'first to file' rule in the US, it is much less relevant.