Summary
Aubrey Vanlandingham, a 17-year-old Texas student, was charged with animal cruelty after poisoning a classmate’s show goat, Willie, with pesticide, allegedly because she “does not like cheaters.”
Surveillance footage captured her force-feeding the goat with a syringe on October 23, leading to its death the following day.
Investigators found searches on her phone related to poisoning animals. The Texas Future Farmers of America condemned her actions, emphasizing ethical behavior and animal welfare.
Vanlandingham faces up to two years in jail and a $10,000 fine, with a court date set for January 15.
You can delete your google search history:
https://support.google.com/websearch/answer/6096136
They implemented these controls worldwide when GDPR went into effect.
You can also set it to not save at all in the same menu, or set it to auto delete after a set period.
So they say.
I’m sure they’ve already passed the data along to 5 eyes to save on their servers.
Did a random teenager in Texas know that?
Based on them having her search history about committing a crime, I assume not.
ISP still has it
Google is https only. All data sent to the site will be encrypted.
There isn’t anyway for an ISP to capture search data from it.
I stand corrected.