Trending Topic on Twitter

#HiggsRumors.

Comments

10 responses to “Trending Topic on Twitter”

  1. Jorge Laris Avatar

    Not in México’s Twitter. =(

  2. […] before 3 p.m. on Wednesday, June 20, 2012, the elusive Higgs boson made science history: it topped the list of trending Twitter topics via the hashtag #HiggsRumors. All this because of a flurry of rumors that began on a handful of […]

  3. Navneeth Avatar
    Navneeth

    A couple of sensible tweets from a few minutes before I clicked the link…

    https://twitter.com/pressichep/status/215708303458697220

    https://twitter.com/exphep/status/215710938073010176

    On the fun side, I’m happy to see the actual tweets are all clearly jokes from people from different walks of life, not HEPs talking about 125 and look-elsewhere.

  4. […] before 3 p.m. on Wednesday, June 20, 2012, the elusive Higgs boson made science history: it topped the list of trending Twitter topics – all because of a flurry of rumors that began on a handful of physics blogs, and quickly […]

  5. […] before 3 p.m. on Wednesday, June 20, 2012, the elusive Higgs boson made science history: it topped the list of trending Twitter topics — all because of a flurry of rumors that began on a handful of physics blogs, and quickly […]

  6. Chris Avatar
    Chris

    It apparently broke twitter today 🙂

  7. OMF Avatar
    OMF

    Apparently Peter Woit started all of this by publishing data smuggled out of Geneva in a modified Thermos flask in the dead of night by a resistance operative in an adventure worthy of an Ian Fleming novel.

  8. Christian Takacs Avatar
    Christian Takacs

    I’ve been reading “Not Even Wrong” for years now, they are almost ALWAYS talking about the Higgs at the LHC. The argument so far has been, “Does the blogosphere hurt science, and should there be absolute control of the release of information from taxpayer funded research?”… the answer for the most part seems to be “Heck no!” followed by a snort… then maniacal laughter…ok… maybe not the maniacal laugher…not much anyway. “Not Even Wrong” by Peter Woit is also a great read if you want to really want to know why things are getting so uptight and contorted (logically and otherwise) among certain parts of the high energy physics community.

  9. […] been a lot of talking back and forth about the ethics of trafficking in rumors, and I don’t mean the jokey kind. Personally I think it’s pretty simple: if a collaboration of thousands of physicists wants […]