FightAIDS@Home is a volunteer computing project operated by the Olson Laboratory at The Scripps Research Institute.
The Olson Laboratory is using computational methods to identify new candidate drugs that have the right shape and chemical characteristics to block HIV protease.
[4] Scripps Research Institute published its first peer-reviewed scientific paper about the results of FightAIDS@Home on April 21, 2007.
[5] This paper explains that the results up to that point will primarily be used to improve the efficiency of future FightAIDS@Home calculations.
A March 2022 research paper details the results of the screening of over 1.6 million ZINC compounds at World Community Grid.