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" ... Although it’s a challenge to regulate our hair-trigger reactions, it’s possible to douse those primitive firestorms and stay chill under pressure. During these uncertain election times, when you get overwhelmed or frustrated or it looks like things might not turn out the way you hoped, it’s important to get in the habit of bringing your awareness to the present moment through a stress-reduction plan that fits into your daily life. Here are a 8 tips to get your self-care plan fired up: ... "
" ... It’s hard to shake a way of life lived for almost 30 years. In the agency world, your working hours belong to clients. You have to juggle calls (that don’t stop coming) while extinguishing flames of crisis (that spring up like wildfires). Only when those calls stop coming and you’ve doused the firestorms does the real day start—when you’re using your runner’s high (and sooo much caffeine; for me in the form of iced teas and occasional iced coffees) to stay ahead of the game. ... "
" ... Sixty-six million years ago, the Yucatan Peninsula was home to a colossal, powerful asteroid impact, one that created an instantaneous, transient mountain range, massive firestorms, and catastrophic tsunamis. Far from merely cracking the crust, it essentially liquidized part of it, and left behind a crater 180 kilometers (around 112 miles) across, scar tissue that brought about a time of dramatic climate change and the final years of the time of the dinosaurs. ... "
" ... The paper notes that a hypothetical exchange of a hundred 15-kiloton warheads between India and Pakistan could cause firestorms whose soot would eventually spew as high as 80 km into earth's atmospheric mesosphere, near the edge of space. An estimated 5 Teragrams of this black carbon would both absorb and block sunlight; heating the stratosphere, while at least temporarily destroying much of earth’s protective ozone layer. ... "
" ... What we see here is that the OkCupid study was not a simple case of two students going off the deep end, but rather an endemic reflection of the state of “big data” research ethics in academia today. Indeed, one could point to any number of other studies published in the literature by faculty members at prestigious universities under the complete approval of their IRB panels that largely follow the same template. One could also find many parallels between their data release and the 2008 Harvard study, which was even funded by NSF using taxpayer funds to box it up into a public access dataset. Yet, from the responses of Harvard, Cornell, Facebook, PNAS and NSF, it is clear that even the highest profile ethical firestorms generate little lasting change in how academics conduct big data research. Perhaps most clear is that IRBs appear to play little useful role in balancing the competing needs of ethics and discovery when it comes to big data research, with a myriad of loopholes and workarounds. The fact that NSF would not go on the record to say that it would never fund a proposal using stolen data or using the public data exemption to conduct sensitive research that would otherwise be prohibited is a powerful reminder of how the funding agencies and publishers that support the academic big data enterprise have played a critical role in enabling the current state of ethical conduct. The considerable differences among disciplines and the largely absent role of IRBs and ethical review in technical fields helps further this. Perhaps most concerning, the marked difference in views towards ethics by older versus younger researchers bears further investigation to see if this perhaps reflects a broader generational shift in how data is viewed and, as these faculty serve on IRB panels themselves, whether the very notion of IRB-approved research will undergo a ground shift. ... "