• @dx1
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    1 month ago

    Wow, any kind of proof behind that? TikTok was one of the few places I could actually watch live journalism from Gaza documenting the genocide, which sure seemed to provoke a propaganda campaign against it and pretty blatantly unconstitutional ban.

    • @[email protected]
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      191 month ago

      Exactly. Yeah, there’s a whole lot of things wrong with TikTok, but banning it is censorship veiled as ‘protecting the children’ and shit.

    • @UnderpantsWeevil
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      130 days ago

      TikTok was one of the few places I could actually watch live journalism from Gaza documenting the genocide

      Undermining your trust in the US media and political leadership. Ergo, Evil Chinese Propaganda.

      • @dx1
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        61 month ago

        Random anonymous reddit user who didn’t compile his findings into a report pointing to the places in the app binary where these things happen. OK.

        • @[email protected]
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          128 days ago

          I wouldn’t generally require people to “compile their findings into a report”, but in this case the messages are weirdly devoid of any checkable information and then the reddit user in question mysteriously lost a laptop full of findings, so, yeah, these claims are not compelling. I don’t think the reverse engineer in question was lying, per se, but I do think they were very wrong at first by random chance, the story gained traction, and then they were too embarrassed to admit they fucked up.

          • @dx1
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            128 days ago

            If he’s a professional security analyst, his findings would be compiled into a report. Demonstration of where code is in the binary, even network sniffing results - something. An article saying “this guy said so and he knows what he’s talking about” is literally crazy.