Befoul in a sentence as a verb

Yes some edge nodes may get befouled as you would in real life if you would trust an untrustworthy bank or health insurance.

How dare they befoul our pristine public spaces with their benighted culture and their foul customs‽Of course, the victims of your repression might feel a bit differently than you do.

Worse, if you let petty tyrants get away with befouling local government, they go on to become bigger tyrants and befoul state and federal government as well.

One of the richest and largest polities on earth has a large number of mentally-ill people who would befoul basic sanitation facilities were they given access to them.

To destroy this invisible government, to befoul this unholy alliance between corrupt business and corrupt politics is the first task of statesmanship.

>Not sure about the legal framework in the US but over here across the pond, it's enough if you remove the data when restoring the backupsImplementation-wise, is the best approach to do this to store some token for "user XX requested YY data be deleted" and check those tokens whenever you restore a backup?I feel like that'd run befoul of a true solution because, in the event of a leak, it could be used to tie the information in the backup to the user who requested their data be deleted.

As it tries to plug its own holes and find the leakers, he reasons, its component elements will de-synchronize from and turn against each other, de-link from the central processing network, and come undone.... he quotes Theodore Roosevelt’s words from his 1912 Progressive party presidential platform as the epigraph to the first essay; Roosevelt realized a hundred years ago that "Behind the ostensible government sits enthroned an invisible government owing no allegiance and acknowledging no responsibility to the people," and it was true, then too, that "To destroy this invisible government, to befoul this unholy alliance between corrupt business and corrupt politics is the first task of statesmanship.

Befoul definitions

verb

spot, stain, or pollute; "The townspeople defiled the river by emptying raw sewage into it"

See also: foul defile maculate