I only read the article after seeing all the praise here, so I was a bit disappointed by it. It was still good, and another step in the right direction, but I found it annoying that the 'harassment' stuff didn't include reference to the PACE tribunal ruling, or any of the other things that, at least partially, undermine that harassment narrative that some people are pushing.
Given the context, I'm not sure what I thought of this quote from Reingold: “Both UC Berkeley and the University of Bristol believe strongly in the principles of academic freedom and the ability to engage in robust scientific debate. The two universities are also interested in seeing that such debates occur in a civil manner so that the genuine issues of scientific discovery and research methods are not lost in arguments of a personal nature.” Bristol don't seem to believe that strongly in the importance robust scientific debate.
By far the best parts of the article came from Parker, Crawley and Bishop. Chiver had a big advantage over Tuller with being able to get these people to speak to him, and they all make SMILE sound worse than any critic can!
All the bits from Edwards were great, as is to be expected. I can be surprised how little detail articles like this go into, so having an 'authority figure' able to make some very simple points like that is really useful and important.
I'm not really sure how other will judge this article. Compared to the BBC's coverage of SMILE, it was amazing, but was short of a vindication for the patients who'd been raising concerns about SMILE years ago, and had been accused of running a campaign of anti-science because of that.