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If you can't prove with valid information that it was I fact fake, your claim has no hold.
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The burden of proof goes the other way. Here, watch this - I too talked to a Bungie employee recently. Actually it was one of the higher-ups. Real high-up. Dude was wearing a watch that costs more than my car. And I have a nice car. In between lines of coke at a local strip club here in Portland, he told me Bungie is pretty much scrapping plans for Destiny 2. They're going to keep releasing new micro-transactions every three months or so, maybe the occasional sparrow race, and some holiday themed crap ("Red, White and Blue Salvage", I think he mentioned) and see how long they can keep hauling in money from Destiny. They decided that investing in Destiny 2 was cost-prohibitive, as long as that sweet, sweet micro-transaction money kept rolling in. Can you prove me wrong. You can't. You see how silly that is?
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Can you claim it's real? No. But that an employee broke his non-disclosure agreement, agreed to interview some guy in a Starbucks who knew he was a Bungie employee and give away information about himself that could easily identify him and allow him to record it and post it. Not to mention the poster went through all the work of making a transcript instead of uploading an audio file makes this just a little too unbelievable.
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Well, the "fake" interview was deleted by Bungie.