Character counts
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@George-K said in Character counts:
Interesting. Does seem counterintuitive, indeed.
That wouldn’t track with the ways those words are used by anybody. There is no common word to distinguish an accused person after being found guilty but before being sentenced. Any attempt to use a careful word, will make it sound like the trial hasn’t happened yet and a verdict has not been returned. So, anybody interested in clarity, should disregard this bit of technical accuracy.
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Do not take ChatGPT’s words (including “citations,” “publications,” “quotes,” “references,” “case texts,” “examples,” “precedents,” etc.) for it. Factcheck with resources outside of generative AI tools/platforms.
ChatGPT is known to have cited “publications” and “case laws” that are non-existent.
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I didn’t know I was Chat GPT. Where are my royalties?
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@George-K said in Character counts:
So this is already incoherent. “Sentencing is a separate phase that follows conviction”. There’s that word “conviction”. Indicating a person is a convicted felon before sentencing. I suggest this distinction between “convicted” and “guilty but not yet sentenced” is against any common usage, and might even be difficult to track down to any agreed upon source of truth.
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@Horace said in Character counts:
@George-K said in Character counts:
So this is already incoherent. “Sentencing is a separate phase that follows conviction”. There’s that word “conviction”. Indicating a person is a convicted felon before sentencing. I suggest this distinction between “convicted” and “guilty but not yet sentenced” is against any common usage, and might even be difficult to track down to any agreed upon source of truth.
At this point in time the case is still active. The jury has voted to convict but it is not technically finished until sentencing.
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@LuFins-Dad said in Character counts:
@Horace said in Character counts:
@George-K said in Character counts:
So this is already incoherent. “Sentencing is a separate phase that follows conviction”. There’s that word “conviction”. Indicating a person is a convicted felon before sentencing. I suggest this distinction between “convicted” and “guilty but not yet sentenced” is against any common usage, and might even be difficult to track down to any agreed upon source of truth.
At this point in time the case is still active. The jury has voted to convict but it is not technically finished until sentencing.
Then we have no common word to describe someone after a jury convicts and before they are sentenced. The suggested common words like “accused” would all imply that the trial hasn’t happened yet. So we would sacrifice clarity if we cared about this distinction.
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In a country that no longer cares about justice or equal protection under the law, semantics are such a trivial thing...
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Is somebody considered a wanker before they actually finish?
How many wankers can dance on the head of....er, never mind.
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@George-K said in Character counts:
@Mik said in Character counts:
It's a distinction without a difference.
I dunno… What if DJT decided to file slander suits against all the outlets calling him a convicted felon?