How the cat doesn’t even know it’s his birthday, what a waste of time, who does that, etc etc. He spent a couple hours watching ducks and warming his old bones in the sun.
For his 16th, I loaded him into the car (which he doesn’t mind at all) and took him to a park by the lake. “I’ve had my cat since he was 6 months old. Got mad at me because I took my cat (16M) to a park for the cat’s birthday. Now I’m confused and lost and I don’t know what to do or think.” Things didn’t add up and I messaged the girl listed as his sister who bluntly responded telling me that her brother wasn’t sick with anything that they were aware of and advising me to try and catch an earlier flight back home. In the hotel I used the Wifi and my laptop to search him on google and found his Facebook, Linkedin, Instagram, and his Tumblr.
What started out as a trip to a new city to help care for someone turned into pretty hard sex, and afterwards he put me in a hotel because his family was making a ‘last minute appearance’ out of concern before he started treatment and he didn’t want them to think he was ordering people off the internet to care for him without asking them for help first. “Tl DR: I had sex with a man who told me he was terminally ill. In a weird place emotionally and not sure what to do. I flew out to “care” for him and he basically kicked me out of his house after I slept with him. 16-05158.Me with my “almost boyfriend” 3 months. 16-04453 and Force et al v Facebook Inc in the same court, No. District Court, Eastern District of New York, No. The Brooklyn lawsuits drew notice after Facebook's law firm Kirkland & Ellis initially assigned a junior associate to represent the Palo Alto, California-based company, prompting Garaufis to ask if it took the matter seriously.įacebook quickly flew its deputy general counsel, Paul Grewal, a former federal judge, from California to Brooklyn, where he assured Garaufis that the company had "a very serious interest in keeping terrorism content off" its platform. Garaufis said applications of that law in other contexts have arguably undermined incentives for internet service providers to remove content, but that it was enough for now to show that Congress' "focus" was to limit liability. We sympathize with the victims and their families."Ĭongress passed the Communications Decency Act of 1996 to regulate online pornography.
In an email, Facebook said "there is no place on Facebook for groups that engage in terrorist activity or for content that expresses support for such activity, and we take swift action to remove this content when it's reported to us. "We are planning to appeal because we see major errors in the decision." "There is a clash between statutes that the court needed to reconcile but ignored," Tolchin said in an interview. Robert Tolchin, a lawyer for both sets of the plaintiffs, said Garaufis appeared to sidestep limits under the federal Anti-Terrorism Act on aiding groups such as Hamas, a Palestinian group that the Department of State designates a foreign terrorist organization. The decision is a setback to efforts to hold companies such as Facebook and Twitter Inc liable for failing to better police users' online speech. He said they had no legal right to demand changes to Facebook's platform because they could not show any "actual or imminent" injury. Garaufis also dismissed a lawsuit by roughly 20,000 Israeli citizens who feared harm from future violence. That law "prevents courts from entertaining civil actions that seek to impose liability on defendants like Facebook for allowing third parties to post offensive or harmful content or failing to remove such content once posted," Garaufis wrote. District Judge Nicholas Garaufis in Brooklyn dismissed a $3 billion damages lawsuit by relatives of American victims of Hamas attacks, saying the federal Communications Decency Act regulating internet content immunizes Facebook from liability.