Yes, it's useful for communicating within your group, but as soon as you step outside that circle jargon becomes a problem.
That's true even for scientists trying to communicate between disciplines and sub-disciplines of a field.
At Ars Technica, John Timmer talks about jargon acronyms that look the
same, but mean totally different things depending on what science you
do. One of his examples: CTL. If you study flies, this can refer to a
specific gene. For people who work with mice, it's a reference to curly
tails. For immunologists, it's a type of white blood cell — cytotoxic T
lymphocyte.
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