diamondsandphoenixfire:

mariacallous:

“Gisele Pelicot has been revered in France and around the world for insisting the trial be held open to the public – which is not, by default, how sexual assault cases are handled in France.”

“Dominique Pelicot has admitted to drugging his wife regularly between 2011 and 2020 so that he and dozens of other men could rape her.”

“The youngest of the other 49 defendants, Joan K., who was 22 at the time, was absent for the birth of his daughter when one of his alleged assaults was said to have taken place, the French news agency AFP cited prosecutors as saying during the trial.”

“An adult having sex with anyone under the age of 15 has been viewed as non-consensual since that law was changed. Unlike many European countries, however, French law still does not refer to consent in cases involving older victims.”

“French law defines rape as penetration or oral sex using “violence, coercion, threat or surprise,” according to the Reuters news agency, but does not take consent into account. Prosecutors must, therefore, prove an intention to rape, legal experts told Reuters.”

“According to a study by the Institute of Public Policies, just 14% of rape accusations in France lead to formal investigations.”

clouds-of-wings:

epersonae:

why-ai:

Google AI Overview

Yes, some universities have a tradition of including a “snake fight” portion in thesis defenses, where students fight one of the university’s snakes. The quality of the student’s thesis determines the size of the snake they must fight, with better theses resulting in smaller snakes. After the committee reads the thesis, they tell the snake master how good it is, who then chooses the snake. In some northern European countries, an external examiner called the “opponent” fights the snake on the student’s behalf, with the opponent’s skill level based on the thesis’s quality.

I have seen this posted here about 87 times, but in case you have not seen it:

And this is where the part about Northern Europe is from:

If you speak in an authoritative voice, the AI will believe it. So much like humans. I asked Google too.

Google search results for "are there snakes at thesis defenses?". The site says: People also ask
Are there snake fights in thesis defenses?
In many northern European countries, an external examiner known as the 'opponent' fights the snake on behalf of the student. In such cases, the quality of your thesis determines, not the size of the snake you have to fight, but rather the snake-fighting skill level of the opponent. 15 Mar 2012ALT