Victoria Raverna wrote: Tue May 07, 2024 1:53 pm
LordMortis wrote: Tue May 07, 2024 1:40 pm
It's not censorship if TikTok was given the chance to divest from Chinese authority. That's just you inserting your bias. Factually speaking that was a way to safeguard and prevent spying without banning it.
OtOH, finding a buyer at a reasonable valuation with China holding back the IP behind TicTok would have been a challenge. But with the way China respects IP rights, TikTok valuation can tank or be banned. TikTok was already demonstrably directly tying to influence elections as a foreign entity. Flush them down the drain.
Is tik tok the only company owned by China that operated in US? What is so special about tik tok that it need to be forced to divest?
Why not Riot Games? Why not Epic? Why not Discord?
This may help you understand why.
In short: Tik Tok has a HUGE audience in the United States that far outstrips the majority of other social media platforms. It also has a history of being used to influence elections, promoting Chinese propaganda, etc..
And again: trying to tie this to censorship of complaints against Israel is ridiculous considering the time frame. And there's just as much evidence supporting a theory that it's being banned because Israeli Americans are complaining about Hamas. Since I don't believe that, I find it hard to believe the other side.
p.s. And we're hardly the only ones who don't trust Tik Tok. Here's a short list of countries already banning it at the government level (like we do).
Regions with partial bans and the devices they're banned on include the following:
Australia -- on devices issued by some individual government agencies.
Belgium -- on federal government work devices.
Canada -- on government-issued devices.
Denmark -- on Defense Ministry staff devices.
European Union -- on Parliament, Commission and EU Council staff devices.
France -- on professional phones of civil servants.
Latvia -- on work devices at the Latvian Ministry of Foreign Affairs.
New Zealand -- on Parliament members' and lawmakers' work devices.
Norway -- on government work devices.
Taiwan -- on government devices.
United Kingdom -- on government devices.
United States -- on federal government devices and systems
Master of his domain.