There is representation there of those who are not biased against an XMRV connection.
I don't mind so much if they want to leave her out of the conference as far as speeches. She has gone beyond what normal researchers do, but I think she is well justified for some of it.
And I just don't get this "don't reveal until published" idea when it happens at conferences all the time. It's very elitist to say, "Can reveal it to us in a conferences, but can't tell the public."
Remember, there was a private XMRV meeting before WPI study was published. Lots of info revealed there.
Now, if they give out a Nobel Prize for this discovery and don't give it to her and her co-authors, I will throw out the yellow flag all over the place. "Foul!"
But, preventing her from speaking at a conference is not going to hurt scientific process. As long as it is balanced, with Coffin, Ruscetti, Klein, etc. No big deal to us, since we aren't even invited. As said, this is more about punishing for protocol violations then claiming scientific discovery is false.
Part of this may be peeing contest.
WPI was new kid on the block. And for WPI to be the new kid on the block and then make the winning touchdown at the next football game, the one that put them in the playoffs, has got to upset some egos. With all the girls (patients) swooning as the new kid walks by, surely the other players will forget it is a team effort and some squabbles are inevitable. They will be looking for something to say the new kid did wrong. Ignoring or not speaking to the new kid is minor. You might even expect some locker room brawls.
But they can't take away that the new kid made the touchdown that won the game.
Tina