Chewbacca
Another one: 

A four-year-old boy has been left with serious, life-changing injuries after being attacked by a dog in Liverpool.
The child was injured in the face and head by a Bull Mastiff type dog during a visit to a friend's house in Norris Green on Saturday, said police.
www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-merseyside-62539930
I am puzzled why so many seem to like the type / breed of dog that frequently features in these attacks.
Sometimes large, and powerful - what is the attraction? And it seems the victims of such attacks are more often than not, children, sometimes in a friend's house, sometimes in their own. Then the owner is charged with having an 'out of control' dog. Do they understand the nature of the dog they've decided on? Do they even understand the fact that a dog is an animal - you can ascribe as many human characteristics as you like to it, but it's still an animal, descended from a (now extinct) wolf. But, like humans, animals get stressed, irritated and annoyed... and unwell - but they can't really communicate this to humans, except to humans who are well-versed in animal behaviour.
Is it a status symbol - are they 'accessories' to a life-style (like certain celebrities with their hand-bag dogs dressed in cute bows woven into a tuft of fur)? Some people also like to own exotic animals, snakes for example. Why? Unless you have the perfect environment for such a creature - and I don't mean a couple of large tanks in the living room - I personally think it's an abomination to keep them confined in this way.
I'm really not sure the average person is really competent enough to own certain types of dogs. And some, just should not own an animal, full stop.
My neighbour has a greyhound - quite a large one. He and his partner live in a tiny cramped house... the sitting room is so small I doubt the dog can barely turn round in it. The 'garden' is a pocket-handkerchief patch. I hear him barking frequently and can also hear his paws on the steep wooden stairs running up and down whilst his owners are out at work all day. He sounds distressed and that worries me. Or maybe I'm imagining his discomfort, I don't know. Don't greyhounds need a lot of exercise - and not just a quick walk down the road and back after work? Will he one day, just turn round and snap at someone, because he's not living a more natural 'doggy' life?