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The ease and speed with which information can be shared one-to-many and the type and quantity of information we put out there means it can be confusing to decipher what is permissible to pass on and what is not.
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It's confusing to me, very confusing.
Confusing, to say the least.
Sounds confusing to me, too.
Perhaps they were confusing to respondents.
The sizing is confusing to me.
Some words were standard code words for important cities and individuals ("Lincoln" meant Louisville, Ky., and "Adam" meant Gen. Henry Halleck), and some were "nulls" or meaningless words designed to confuse anyone trying to decipher the message.
Western analysts are also trying to decipher the Taliban's confused response to the killing, in which one "spokesman" claimed responsibility but others denied it.
Most were confusing strings of words and numbers that are difficult to decipher.
Larson's logic behind the gag was this: How hideous and apparently useless would a cow's tool set be? Unfortunately for Larson, one of the tools vaguely resembled a saw, causing confused readers to seek out human analogs in the rest of the tool set in order to decipher the gag.
Again this seems confused to me.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com