Auspice in a sentence as a noun

Maybe I'm having a brain fart, but... under what legal auspice could Blizzard force them to shut down the streams?

But those cases get tacked on and divided and put through algorithms under the auspice of nurder.

You've just described the problem of all technical products that are designed under the auspice of producing a profit for its investors.

At the end of the day it's the same work that gets done by the same person, the intermediaries take their cut, and you are stuck upgrading some old software under the auspice of digital transformation.

We were instructed to turn a blind eye and the business model was exfiltrating info to a different lending institution while the auspice is we were only building a product as a service.

Same mechanism for any internet service provider - immunity is granted under the auspice that you are not exerting control over the flow of information as a supposedly neutral provider.

There is a long and documented history of governments and other organizations abusing their power by performing unconsented tests on people under the auspice of a vaccine, which lends credence to people's skepticism.

Certainly inciting violence, advocating ********, or engaging in targeted and repeated harassment does not fall under the auspice of an unalienable and foundational right.

Most people have no idea how far the government is able to stretch the law under the auspice of “safety.” Perhaps naively, I believe people would be outraged if they actually understood how the Patriot Act is used and what a backdoor would allow the government to do.

Certainly inciting violence, advocating ********, or engaging in targeted and repeated harassment does not fall under the auspice of an unalienable and foundational right.> These are also things on which many people radically disagree with you.

The thing is that while they come under apparently "reasonable" auspices, like automating traffic cops, they are still cameras that already have all the fundamental components of a surveillance system; it just has to be hooked up to a database somewhere and the same thing is easily implemented.

There is this auspice of them being used as "productivity tools" but I can only think of rare occasions where I would agree and they're very highly specialized apps where again, a cheap commodity ARM device could be produced, run Linux and run the application just as easily without major costs to the organizations that are paying Apple an arm and a leg to have a flashy device.

Auspice definitions

noun

a favorable omen