You're still obstinately missing the point in your nerd rage — letting other people run the same source code does nothing to replicate that part of the experiment — they need an independent implementation to do that! Releasing the source code publicly actively works against that goal because anyone who reads it won't be able to do a black-box implementation.
Besides, the code is almost always worthless compared to collected data. What would actually be most valuable and practicable is for groups to be running their proprietary code on each other's public data for confirmation.
Besides, the code is almost always worthless compared to collected data. What would actually be most valuable and practicable is for groups to be running their proprietary code on each other's public data for confirmation.