• @[email protected]
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    1915 days ago

    So they’ll overturn their own Citizen’s United decision which pretty much explicitly allows TikTok to do what is being banned?

    …right?

    • @[email protected]
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      1715 days ago

      The law in question bans social media (of a sufficient size) being owned by an entity in a geopolitical rival nation.

      Its relation to Citizens’ United is pretty thin, really only sharing the concept of a corporation’s First Amendment rights. But there’s a lot of reason to doubt Bytedance’s First Amendment argument holds legal water here, as the law is regulating business operation — not speech.

      • @[email protected]
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        115 days ago

        They’re being named for their speech as a business operation, the exact think Cit Un dealt with

        • @[email protected]
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          615 days ago

          The only freedom restricted in the law is that of Bytedance to own a social media platform in the US. I find it difficult to define that freedom as “speech”. Citizens’ United dealt with a company’s freedom to fund political campaigns — which is at least easier to define as “speech”.

          • @[email protected]
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            015 days ago

            … the reasoning why they’re taking away that freedom is the important part you’re purposely ignoring.

            You can handwave away any right the same way you’re doing by ignoring how this is government singling out a company for a behavior based on perceived political messaging

            • @[email protected]
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              715 days ago

              It’s not perceived political messaging that’s at issue, but the potential for sensitive national security data collection by an adversary. That’s what made TikTok an explicit target of the law.

              For the record, I don’t have a strong opinion either way on whether the law is good or bad (if you think it’s bad, vote against your congresspeople that supported it). I just don’t see TikTok’s legal argument against it as very strong, constitutionally speaking.