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We should just start arming them, let nature take its course.


It was a victim impact statement made post-verdict, during the sentencing phase of the trial.

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Victim_impact_statement


It's not a victim impact statement, as the victim can no longer speak. It's effectively a lawyer writing one in place of the victim, and then using a fancy puppet show to portray the victim as saying it.

The family, in some cases friends, coworkers, etc, are also considered victims of this crime, for the intent of these statements. This was their statement on behalf of his sister, not a posthumous statement by the deceased.

Then let them make it in their own names.

And not, as nitwit005 aptly puts it, speaking through a puppet.


>"Hello. Just to be clear for everyone seeing this, I'm a version of Chris Pelkey recreated through AI that uses my picture and my voice profile,"

They did make it in their own names, there was never any implication that it wasn’t.


You would be hard pressed to find many examples of actual starvation in the US due to a lack of food availability.

IIRC there are around 20-30 cases, yearly, mostly the product of abuse by a caretaker/guardian.


What is the purpose of this pedantry? Plenty of children do not get the appropriate nutrition during the day due to food insecurity, and for many the only consistent meal they get is at school. Why argue over technical definitions of starvation?

What is the purpose of using a word that means something different than what is currently being discussed? Why not say that children are suffering from malnutrition or food insecurity, rather than using a term used to describe a cause of death?

You wouldn't say that someone who choked on a glass of water to have drowned, or someone who received a momentary shock from frayed cord to have been electrocuted.

Words have meaning, it's not pedantic to comment on the usage of a word that has a different meaning entirely from manner in which it is being used, in what I suspect is an attempt at an appeal to emotion.


I think most (all?) people would understand "starve" to mean to suffer from hunger, rather than to literally die from hunger. Especially from the context.

One would think that the actual dictionary definition of a word, rather than hyperbole, would be the most widely (all?) accepted and understood meaning of a word. Being defined, in a dictionary, and all.

What is the outcome of a flame starved of oxygen? A plant starved of light? A person starved of food?


Share the link to the conversation.


Share the link or it didn't happen. And if it happened, you used an older model. And if you used the most up-to-date one, you didn't prompt it correctly.


So.. “trust me bro” is what you’re proposing? No thanks.

Make a claim, prove it, especially one so easily proven.


Can confirm, Paul is one of the few people I still pay attention to on Twitter.


Good stuff. You might find more interesting data by implementing Frida [0] into your process to snoop on encrypted traffic normally not visible due to pinned certificates.

[0] https://frida.re/docs/home/


And more specifically just use the maintained scripts from HTTP Toolkit.

https://github.com/httptoolkit/frida-interception-and-unpinn...


Excellent, thank you. There’s a lot to Frida.

HTTP Toolkit only mentions using jailbroken iOS devices, but you can also use unjailbroken devices running v13+ via injection [0]

[0] https://frida.re/docs/ios/


If booking.com is malicious then it wouldn’t matter how you connected. This is a different problem entirely unrelated to the implementation of MCP.

Like, what if google decided to blow their multibillion dollar company to steal my banking cookies?!?!


Right? I don’t doodle as much as I used to, but I’m still a wild beast well into my 40’s.

I used to be a wild beast, I still am, but I used to be too.


That’s awesome, also I’m pretty sure that’s Kate Mulgrew (Captain Janeway from Star Trek: Voyager) narrating, which is also awesome.


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