Comment Re:Time to close the doors? (Score 1) 41
There's a middle ground here. Require institutions that have supported too many fraudulent papers to see external confirmation of results as part of the peer review process before allowing publication, and not from sister-institutions under their own umbrella.
Honestly I wouldn't mind seeing an industry of what are essentially escrow services for this sort of thing. Institutions of what essentially are skeptics who nevertheless will look at testing and/or replicating original research while being disinterested in the success or failure of the research itself. The skeptics will both seek replication and will take the 20-foot view to look at why this is happening and if other explanations might exist for the mechanism.
For what it's worth I spent time doing software quality assurance and my job was to act as a foil to developers, who often were too close to their own projects and sometimes missed gigantic red flags because said project was their baby. As a disinterested outsider my job was to try to break their stuff in a realistic, plausible way, even if that way was something of an edge-case. And far too often it took my manager speaking with their manager to speak with them to get them to address the faults or flaws because they were too emotionally invested to be able to be critical about their own work.