No Mooching, he barks the flat down and poos in his crate.
Yeah I know Hurtwood but my friend said he is not showing me respect. He is back to biting my hands to shreds with big teeth - yes he's drawn blood again, and he leaps at me biting all the time. I am spending hours trying to train him not to bite but he won't. He just leaps at my hair or face. He's very difficult to train as a result. He's also scared of everything at the moment. He's gone from doing fabulously to being on a mission to get me, so my friend says. I shall keep persisting though.
I can promise you Dave was exactly the same and a real shock after my first very sweet pup that hardly bit at all

I've mentioned it on a number of threads that if I even said 'Ah ah' to him or 'no' he'd properly attack me whilst screaming... and it's because he gets (even today to an extent) very unsure about confrontation with humans - not dogs fortunately his dog to dog skills are pretty top. With a kid in the house I ended up having to keep them separately. I gave up saying anything to him when he bit just quietly and calmly popped him in his 'space' in the kitchen on his own and eventually he learnt that he enjoyed time with us, we weren't a threat to him and to get time with us, he had to behave in a certain way - he learnt this because when he was being how we perceive 'nice' he stayed with us and when he bit or attacked he was quickly and quietly removed without any conflict... it took nearly a year before he was left loose with us all the time but it REALLY paid off. He's now very confident with all humans (although still doesn't like raised or harsh voices) and a really really loving, sweet, funny little dog that's always wrapped purring around my legs

. If I'd gone head to head with him or even carried on with verbal scolds for biting, I
think know it could have ended very differently... with a dog that doesn't trust and reacts when worried.
Tali is challenging you or maybe defending himself but not in the way your friend describes, you don't need to show him who's in charge you just have to consistently manage him as you would a baby - he is a baby right now and work on quietly gaining his trust and respect over time with clear, regular and consistent procedures and lots of positive training and rewards.... promise
