• @affiliate
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    659 months ago

    Many users called lawmakers’ offices to complain, congressional staffers told Politico. “It’s so so bad. Our phones have not stopped ringing. They’re teenagers and old people saying they spend their whole day on the app and we can’t take it away,” one House GOP staffer was quoted as saying.

    and they still voted 50-0. really tells you something about how much these politicians are willing to listen to their constituents.

    • @[email protected]
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      9 months ago

      It was a 50-0 to pass the commission and then go to the House floor for a vote and then the Senate for a vote and finally signed into law by the president unless he vetoes it, which is possible imo.

      Honestly, teenagers and old people are the sorts of folks that need to be protected from themselves, I might just call in to my local representative to voice my support of forced sale, operating restrictions, or even outright ban.

      EDIT: I sent him an email.

      • @ikidd
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        489 months ago

        Now do Facebook.

        • @[email protected]
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          9 months ago

          Love to, I think the 5 Bn USD FTC fine was a little light considering no jailtime was given. I hope their recent lawsuits lead to breaking the company up again.

      • @affiliate
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        9 months ago

        what are you even trying to say here? that it’s okay for politicians to ignore entire demographics? or that it’s only okay for them to ignore entire demographics if, ultimately, it’s left up to a different group of politicians to pass the law?

        i don’t use tiktok or have any interest in the app itself, but it’s still very alarming to see a vote go through 50-0 despite a “nonstop” flood of calls opposing it.

          • @affiliate
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            199 months ago

            “protect them from themselves” is what you said. which carries the connotation that they don’t know what’s best for themselves and aren’t qualified to make judgments about those things. this is different from simply “protecting them”.

            • prole
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              199 months ago

              To be fair, a big part of a functioning society is a government with proper regulations in place so that people are not expected to be experts in literally every field before making a purchase or performing some kind of action. Obviously, calling it “protect[ing] them from themselves,” is dismissive and patronizing, but it’s pretty much why we need government in the first place.

              For example, the EPA recently issued a recall for ground cinnamon from certain specific (dollar store) brands due to unacceptably high levels of lead. Without the career scientists (and yes, bureaucrats) working for that regulatory agency, millions of people would have continued consuming the product and feeding it to their kids (low-income folks too in this case, given the brands) literally indefinitely.

              Without the EPA, every person who buys cinnamon is what, expected to use mass spectrometry to determine the exact molecular make-up of every spice (or in the case of the EPA, literally any food or prescription drugs you may ever consume) before using?

              If they didn’t do their cinnamon research, then they deserved it, and the government should have no involvement? What happens in cases where companies hide dangerous issues in their products to avoid losing profits?

              What if there’s literally no way for anyone but a scientist, with extensive lab access and at least 4+ years of university to know that there is an issue with a product (or a construction site, or a drug, or water treatment, etc)? They’re the only ones who should be able to properly avoid using a product that may kill them and their children? And even then, only when it’s a product they’re an expert in?

              Not saying you’re a libertarian, just like pointing out the obvious things that make it so so stupid.

              • @affiliate
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                9 months ago

                i agree with everything you’ve said here. and i liked the EPA example. sorry if what i said came across as libertarian, that was not my intention.

                i was just trying to push back against the “young people don’t know what’s best for themselves” mentality in the other post.

                although, to be clear, i think the current state of social media does have quite a few problems that need addressing, and more regulation on that would certainly be welcome.

              • @[email protected]
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                29 months ago

                Ok, sure. Show me what research you or they have done to justify “protecting them from themselves”. Already they’re telling lies by insinuating that only teenagers and old people are calling. And you all just believe it? Wild how biased people can be when presented with information they want to believe.

              • @[email protected]
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                19 months ago

                Would love to see the science or other expert opinions that is being used to justify this ban then.

                I haven’t heard anything except politicians making vague references to spying or other things we allow from domestic services.

                It’s just politics.

          • @[email protected]
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            69 months ago

            You’re not doing it to protect people. It’s ridiculous that you’d even pretend to be.

            • @[email protected]
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              -59 months ago

              What other reason could I possibly have? You think there is some massive anti-tiktok cabal out there trying to profit by… uh… fucking how?

              • @Gabu
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                29 months ago

                By banning anything except the few 'murican tech giants doing the exact same shit as TikTok. Even a blind person can see how cancerous american companies are, yet this does nothing to address that.

                • @[email protected]
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                  09 months ago

                  Actually, they’re not doing that at all, they’re forcing a compromised unethical American to sell to a different unethical American to do exactly the same thing. At no point was a ban even discussed. So, literally everything you just said was wrong.

                  • @Gabu
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                    19 months ago

                    Are you literally incapable of textual interpretation?

      • @[email protected]
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        169 months ago

        Yeah honestly if a bunch of addicted teens and old people were calling me screaming that I can’t take away their drug of choice when that’s not even what’s happening, and it’s not being taken away just moved to where there can be more control on quality… Then I would be really considering the damage this is doing to them.

        I don’t know if supporting the junkies being taken advantage of is the altruistic take that these “absolute freedom” supporters think it is.

        • @[email protected]
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          79 months ago

          The fact that you guys just ate up that rhetoric without any hesitation… Like, you just happily believe it’s a bunch of “addicted old people and teenagers”? Is this reddit? Did I make a wrong turn at common sense and critical thinking?

          • @[email protected]
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            09 months ago

            Uh dude… I know people addicted that got the email to message their representative. They will stop talking in a conversation and pull out their phone and just scroll through a few videos.

            I struggle to believe so many would be messaging just out of laziness but don’t question that being the age groups that would respond most to that kind of targeted messaging into action.

            • @[email protected]
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              19 months ago

              Nobody got an email. You don’t know shit.

              I never denied they sent a notification to people in the app. It offered to help get in touch with local reps. Why would people exercising their rights to communicate with politicians bother you in any way? That’s weird.

              Messaging out of laziness? What does that even mean? They were calling their local reps to voice their discontent.

              The people addicted comment just makes you look petty and ignorant. It might be time for you to graduate to Facebook.

      • @[email protected]
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        9 months ago

        It’s not just teenagers and old people. That’s just some bullshit rhetoric that you ate right up without question. Because of course you did. Millennials/middle age folk are abundant on TikTok as well as young adults.

        The audacity of some of you to jump into action just to spite “teenagers and old people” is shameful. So easily manipulated.

        • @[email protected]
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          9 months ago

          Right, sorry, it’s fine to let teenagers and old people be harmed as long as the company can continue to profit off consenting adults as well. /sarcasm

          • @[email protected]
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            09 months ago

            How are they being harmed? Why was it so easy for them to make you believe this? Also, who asked you to protect anyone with your one petty little email lmao

            • @[email protected]
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              19 months ago

              A foreign dictatorship gathering face and voice id, entiry photo library and message history, contacts, and location tracking precise enough to pinpoint nearby devices and tell which floor of a building you’re on regardless of if the app is in use, to me equates to harm. If you disagree, well, I don’t give a fuck what you think tbh.

      • @[email protected]
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        -59 months ago

        teenagers and old people are the sorts of folks that need to be protected from themselves

        Please, big daddy government, protect me from the freedom of choice. I cannot be trusted to consume without your permission.

      • @Clent
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        -149 months ago

        Nanny State.

        • @[email protected]
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          59 months ago

          “Mr. Legislator I am 84 and I need my Heroin but the federal government keeps cracking down on my supplier, please stop taking away all my Heroin Mr. Legislator. Also, force my bank to let me transfer 85,000 USD to India, it’s really important that I do that before the 27th.”

          • @Clent
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            09 months ago

            Yes. This is called Nanny State.

            Rather than educate the populace, take away the tools. Of course, another tool will just rise to the surface but it will make a lot of people feel really good that they did something.

            I do appreciate all of the reactionary statements. I don’t use TikTok but I do believe in freedom. Reducing freedoms, no matter how well intentioned does not solve societies problems.

            • @[email protected]
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              9 months ago

              You can’t educate dementia away. You can educate youth away, but that takes years, which would effectively be a ban for them. TikTok is not a tool for its users, it is a tool for a for profit corporation and by extension their associated foreign dictatorship.

              Absolute freedom should not extend to harming each other.

              • @[email protected]
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                49 months ago

                TikTok is not a tool for its users, it is a tool for a for profit corporation

                That pretty much describes every corporation in existence.

                • @[email protected]
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                  29 months ago

                  Some of them provide utility and some don’t, which is why we don’t allow children to drink, smoke, or gamble. If a company providing those goods and services targets those demographics it gets political action.

                  Welcome to the nuance of society and the modern world.

                  • @[email protected]
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                    39 months ago

                    But they’re not disallowing children smoking, drinking, or gambling here. It’s more akin to disallowing children from drinking Smirnoff, smoking Marlboros, or playing blackjack and nothing else.

              • @Clent
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                9 months ago

                TikTok is one of hundreds of vectors to swindle the senile and I doubt it’s even in the top 10.

                Grandpa needs to have someone else handling his finances. It’s not the governments job and let’s not pretend this bill is about keeping grandpas money safe.

    • @[email protected]
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      59 months ago

      It also tells you something about all the supposed gridlock in Washington that can magically evaporate when there’s money and power to be gained from it.

    • @[email protected]
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      9 months ago

      From what I read, the calls actually evaporated opposition to the bill.

      Which, I’m NGL, if you’re worried about an app being used by a foreign adversary to encourage anti-social behavior in your youth, a bunch of people calling in acting like drug addicts getting their drugs taken away is only going to erase doubts.

      It doesn’t help that they’d even be more justified when it’s known that it was caused by users getting pushed notified by Tik Tok to do it.

      • @[email protected]
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        19 months ago

        Encouraging people to contact their representatives and demand action? Congress clearly can’t have this. How will they do their jobs if they are constantly forced to engage with their constituents?

        • @nialv7
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          9 months ago

          Call to action from, say, activist groups is very different from call to action from a billion-dollar company. This does make me really worried about how much influencer TikTok has on people ngl

        • @[email protected]
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          29 months ago

          In my opinion, considering Tiktok’s algo they had the best circumstance to notify a mix of their users more aligned with the actual electorate. The fact they ended up with the worst representation of their user base when it came to confirming the suspicions of politicians says everything.

    • @[email protected]
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      9 months ago

      Are they “taking it away” though? Do normal people care about who owns it? Are they just worried about an unlikely ban?

      • @affiliate
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        49 months ago

        you’re taking it as a given that bytedance will sell the app if this law passes. there is a chance that they won’t want to sell and then the app will be banned. (but i think this unlikely.)

        also, if i’m understanding things correctly, there’s the possibility that they do sell and the app still gets banned. the article says

        An app would be allowed to stay in the US market after a divestiture if the president determines that the sale “would result in the relevant covered company no longer being controlled by a foreign adversary.”

        depending on who the next president is, there’s no guarantee that they’ll say any sale will result in the company not being controlled by a foreign adversary. (although this past is just speculation.)

        anyways. this bill will certainly raise the chances that the app will be banned in the US. (and it opens the door for other apps to get banned if the US doesn’t like the country they were developed in.)

        • @[email protected]
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          9 months ago

          I also just noticed in the article:

          TikTok urged its users to protest the bill, sending a notification that said, “Congress is planning a total ban of TikTok… Let Congress know what TikTok means to you and tell them to vote NO.”

          Also from a BBC article about the same thing:

          Earlier, users of the app had received a notification urging them to act to “stop a TikTok shutdown.”

          So they were literally sending out misleading notifications (because a forced sale is not a total ban), and then the users wrote to Congress based on that…

          The probability that they will sell seems really high to me, as the same thing almost happened back in 2020.

          • @Delta_V
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            29 months ago

            There’s no guarantee that making the sale will prevent the ban.

            • shastaxc
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              29 months ago

              Yeah but if they sell then it’s someone else stuck holding the bags so why wouldn’t they?

              • @Delta_V
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                29 months ago

                because its not in the corporation’s interest to incur the expense and organizational disruption if they’re still going to get banned anyway - profit is maximized by continuing with business as usual instead of spending resources attempting to reach compliance

          • @[email protected]
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            9 months ago

            They also claimed that it was only “old people and teenagers” who were calling in and objecting which wasn’t true. One rep stood up and straight up lied claiming that TikTok users were “forced” to call. How would that even work? TikTok possibly being banned isn’t a lie but all that other shit sure was. It was just a popup offering to help locate local reps to call and make their voices heard. The fact that any of you are pretending that people taking this democratic action is a bad thing is appalling and your bias is blatantly obvious. The absolute ego on all of you to act like you just know better than all of those other people because… Reasons? Ridiculous.

            • @[email protected]
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              9 months ago

              Do you have the full text of the notification that you could post here? Kinda hard discussing the specifics otherwise.

              If it really contains the quote “Congress is planning a total ban of TikTok”, I do consider that misleading.

              People here are often making a lot of noise about disinformation campaigns on sites like Facebook and Twitter and YouTube (and that’s just from user-posted content that the sites fail to moderate, not posted by the sites themselves), so I don’t see why this would get a pass.