I didn't mean it in a bad way. If you are gay be gay!
![https://media-cldnry.s-nbcnews.com/image/upload/newscms/2019_49/2084896/170726-lgbt-trump-flag-ew-1019a.jpg](https://media-cldnry.s-nbcnews.com/image/upload/newscms/2019_49/2084896/170726-lgbt-trump-flag-ew-1019a.jpg)
![https://i.imgur.com/xsoGn9X.jpg](https://i.imgur.com/xsoGn9X.jpg)
I mean, sure. I don't think anyone has ever spoken in defense of golf's overall ecological impact. It's definitely a manifest symptom of well-to-do wastefulness. How are we going to ban these greens in areas not climatologically suited for it, though? Wealthy or ambitious politicians and their donors, who play golf, "let's bring the hammer down on or own thing." Unlikely.uziq wrote:
the thing is with golf courses is that it’s a no brainer. the game existed before on diverse wild lands. there’s no reason at all to create artificial oases in nevada.
OkayJay wrote:
It doesn't need to have a public good. If there is a demand for this service then investors have a right to make it.
Very arrogant company in a pond of other very arrogant companies. Too much power, too prone to being breached or otherwise compromised. Very critiquable fallback on how their company is entitled to certain rights as if it were an individual. This stuff needs to be heavily regulated and hamstrung.After discovering Clearview AI was scraping images from their site, Twitter sent a cease-and-desist letter, insisting that they remove all images as it is against Twitter's policies.[34][35] Facebook has said they are reviewing the situation, and Venmo also stated it is against their policies.[35][36][37] On February 5 and 6, 2020, Google, YouTube, Facebook, and Venmo sent cease and desist letters as it is against their policies. Ton-That responded in an interview with Errol Barnett of CBS This Morning that there's a first amendment right to the information, results were 99.6% accurate, and they have 3 billion scraped images.[38][39]
In February 2020, multiple sources reported that Clearview AI had experienced a data breach, exposing its list of customers. Clearview's attorney, Tor Ekeland stated the flaw has been patched.[40][41]