That’s right, the mad dash to protect climate change data has been on since late 2016 and the means of doing so have been as impressive as they have been necessary. From guerrilla archiving events to downloading meetups, people around the world are doing what they can to make sure this world-saving data is protected from anyone that might be interested in getting rid of it. Check out three different ways scientists are trying to keep this information safe:
Open Climate Change Data Website
The main concern with the new administration is that a whole lot of climate change data is exclusively stored on federal servers. In an effort to change that, Climate Mirror was created. As a distributed effort conducted by volunteers, in conjunction with efforts from institutions such as University of Pennsylvania, University of Toronto, and the Internet Archive, the website hopes to mirror and back up U.S. Federal Climate Data, just in case.
Guerilla Archiving Event
Americans aren’t the only ones worried about losing climate change data. In mid-December, a mere month before the president would take office, an event was held in Toronto (along with many other cities) for the sole purpose of archiving climate change data. Organized by two professors at the University of Toronto, this event called on everyday citizens to come and help archive every nook and cranny of climate change data possible.
Hackers and European Servers
A group of IT specialists, scientists, and hackers met at the University of California-Los Angeles to archive as much climate change data as they felt necessary. While Canada sounds like a safe place to store potentially compromised data, these climate data protectors decided that across the pond was even safer. They are storing all this climate data in European servers to make sure this information stays out of the wrong, tiny hands.