The math stays the same, even if the numbers change: with your number of 110% of the original project price for reproduction by others we get the following price hike 110% * 1/10 = 11%
big deal, 11% more expensive science, but 1 out of 10 results get reproduced, stoichiocratically, so you don't know if it will be reproduced until after publication...
Also: your comment about reproducibility details being scattered over the previous work of the original authors... as I said, in a world where we use my system, you are incentivized to put all details for reproduction within the paper, since you wouldn't want to risk possible reproduction by others to fail simply because they didn't read your previous papers...
big deal, 11% more expensive science, but 1 out of 10 results get reproduced, stoichiocratically, so you don't know if it will be reproduced until after publication...
Also: your comment about reproducibility details being scattered over the previous work of the original authors... as I said, in a world where we use my system, you are incentivized to put all details for reproduction within the paper, since you wouldn't want to risk possible reproduction by others to fail simply because they didn't read your previous papers...