I was at IBM for several years, can agree that ServiceNow is a steaming pile, like most of IBM. I spent the majority of my time fighting tooling over actually helping customers, lol.
And sadly, no. False child abuse allegations have a 50%+ incarceration rate and nearly the same suicide rate. If anything goes in front of a jury, depend on your life basically being over. Lookup how Google's CSAM detection ruined a family's life for a year due to sending photos to their tele doctor during the pandemic.
I been through a case of my own during a divorce.. luckily mine was so absurd it was immediately dismissed from court and other party was held in contempt..
I had my google maps tracks history printed out, photos, conversations, etc. I did this exact thing. Maybe it helped.. not sure. I often dreamed of using a camera that took a photo every second and uploaded it, every day, forever.
Trying to put cameras everywhere in the home would lead to very expensive data storage as it would need to be stored forever. You also may be questioned about putting a camera in a bedroom or other area and such accusation could occur in an area where you can't, and don't want a camera, such as a bathroom. Cameras would need to be hidden for this tactical advantage as you are relying on disproving a specific lie. Otherwise, one was groped for 0.5 seconds in a car, in public, etc.
The long term solution was to simply no longer be a parent. It's sad, but the liability is too great.
All of your carefully curated and collected data could also be thrown out easily without a clear chain of custody, such as immediate upload in such a way that the data could not be modified and accurately timestamped. Such datastore would need to never have a data. breach or later platform flaw that would break the chain of custody.
Sleep data, etc would need to come from a certified device with possible calibration, just as people get out of traffic tickets by uncalibrated radar equipment by police. Also, just about all commercially available devices to track sleep aren't 100% accurate. GPS isn't 100% accurate and can be spoofed externally, etc.
You'd also have to prove beyond reasonable doubt that the voice wasn't AI generated, that it's your voice and so on and so on.
If one has to be this paranoid, it's likely the amount of pinholes and effort you'd have to jump through for the data to be accepted in court at all is gonna be a real pain.
> You'd also have to prove beyond reasonable doubt that the voice wasn't AI generated, that it's your voice and so on and so on.
If you are a defendant in criminal court, you don't need to prove anything. Just to raise doubt and poke holes on any unjust accusation. Innocent until proven guilty implies the accusation are the ones that have to worry about being able to prove something beyond reasonable doubt, ideally.
That's a nice catch phrase. You're presumed innocent until accused. Then you're jailed until proven innocent. The burden of proof is dependent on how often your attorney plays golf with the judge.
What's the best self hosted for ingesting a local codebase and wiki to ask questions of it? Some of the projects linked here have ingest scripts for doc, pdf files; but it'd be cool to ingest a whole git repo and wiki, have a little chat interface to ask questions about the code.
I installed my own Heat Pump (Pioneer) setup in my RV. I evacuated my system using a vacuum pump myself, total cost was around 3k. Got Home Assistant working through a hacked Local Tuya script.
This unit is 22 SEER.
+1 for a LOCAL API that doesn't require the cloud and +1 for a self install. I can buy two whole higher efficiency Pioneer units for your $6k install fee
Well, that was a complete waste of time. I requested a refund or credit for Dash as I paid $29 for it.
Chat and Phone T1 and T2 Advisors all said there is nothing they can do and kept suggesting I restore a backup. Too bad "Transfer Purchases" was removed in iOS 9 with App Slimming - meaning that there is no way to backup/extract an ipk file from iOS using native tools. They also couldn't offer any sort of iTunes Store credit or refund.
Long story short, if Apple decides to remove an App from their platform, it's gone - period and they don't give a sh*t how much you paid for it.