Receiving a cease and desist email from your ISP on behalf of rights holders for something you have torrented is almost a right of passage for a young person imo.
Makes you learn to always use a VPN, especially on popular torrents (all it takes is one snooper in the seeds).
Reading your source, it sure sounds like genocide.
That said, it seems like a summary rather than a detailed report and I can't find the source in the page.
The other people responding to you are saying "did you read the statement by the perpetrators of the genocide denying it?" Sounds like a rather silly statement.
Can't really weigh in on this but on the face of it it does feel like tankie behaviour.
EDIT: I've now skimmed the UN Human Rights report and it's definitely genocide. The only possible claim against this is that all of their information is false, which seems unlikely.
I'll also add that the first response above linking to the UN source I've seen copy pasted elsewhere. That doesn't necessarily mean much but, yeah.
I think there is some rule that you just provide contact details somewhere on your website, though some companies try super hard to hide it.
The problem is sometimes the contact method is 12 layers of FAQ pages and web forms. Trying to reduce load is one thing, actively avoiding resolving issues is another.
As far as I'm concerned, as soon as you're out of office, you are a civilian. You took on a temporary job, and now it's over. Like a group project or task force. You're now mostly irrelevant unless you happen to be running again. At best you might have some insight to give.
In the UK at least, once you stop being Prime Minister you are basically completely irrelevant. Everyone ignores you and you are spoken about in the past tense, if at all.
Victim blaming much? We didn't ask for this. In fact, we specifically asked not for this. Same as how most US folk didn't ask for a dictator to run their country and making fun of them for living in a dystopia is a bit tasteless.
It's not a big huge deal, sure, but I also think it's not a big ask for posters to do things differently.
Receiving a cease and desist email from your ISP on behalf of rights holders for something you have torrented is almost a right of passage for a young person imo.
Makes you learn to always use a VPN, especially on popular torrents (all it takes is one snooper in the seeds).