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Even the smallest mistake in the testing procedure could mean an expensive lawsuit from an athlete who sees his or her future earnings at risk.
ECONOMIST: Does the end justify the means?
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To clarify: not everyone who sees her point of view or agrees with the video is blindly following her.
FORBES: Gears of War's Cliff Bleszinski Pushes Back Against Anita Sarkeesian Critics
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Popularity, for example, is largely dictated by a constantly changing algorithm that determines what posts a user sees in his or her Facebook feed, which developers and others have dubbed EdgeRank.
WSJ: Tensions Rise Between Facebook, Developers
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Facebook says its goal in making the changes was to ensure that everything a user sees in his or her Newsfeed is, as much as possible, something he or she might want to engage with.
FORBES: Facebook Sends Mixed Messages On Spam With Recent Moves
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She sees nothing unusual or incongruous in combining her modern lifestyle with 2, 000-year-old remedies.
CNN: SPECIAL REPORT: HEALTH
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What responsibility does a scientist have to address the public about his or her work, or what she sees about the consequences of that work in the real world?
FORBES: Asymmetric Climate Warfare
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Can you talk a little bit more about what it says about how he sees her role both in Burma or Myanmar and also more broadly in the region that the meeting is happening?
WHITEHOUSE: Press Briefing
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Whenever Ms. Crenn sees a new idea from her staff, or creates one herself, she snaps a picture with her iPhone and emails it to members of her staff or to friends to gather their input.
WSJ: Chef Dominique Crenn Finds Poetry in Food (and Vice Versa) | Creating
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Such a leader sees opportunity in organizational and human complexity, including his or her own while also recognizing the time for transformational change when it arrives.
FORBES: Leading at Your Limits
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That's because Weis logs onto a website, Mint.com, where she sees in close to real time what her husband puts onto credit or debit cards or withdraws from his bank.
FORBES
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The unreliable narrator of the novel, a governess charged with caring for two children who may or may not see the ghosts she sees, invites the reader to flip-flop between thinking her a lone protector against unspeakable evil and a greater threat to the children than any spirit.
WSJ: Andrew Pyper, Author of The Demonologist, on Horror | Word Craft