But content discovery algorithms work much better on tiktok than ig or youtube shorts. I follow couple of twitch indie gamedevs and they have gotten much more wishlists from tiktok than alternatives.
If the goal here is really about foreign spying and data privacy, then it's pointless in light of the complete lack of regulation we have on data harvesting and selling. China can simply buy all the data they need, they don't need TikTok.
I suspect the issue here is more to do with the bills it's packaged with and the threat that alternative information spheres play in shaping American opinion on foreign policy affairs.
Oh… and more:“House votes to reapprove law allowing warrantless surveillance of US citizens”
House votes to reapprove law allowing warrantless surveillance of US citizens
Fisa allows for monitoring of foreign communications, as well as collection of citizens’ messages and callswww.theguardian.com
You were saying? Lots of American do not trust their government at all and yet they give it powers under the “oh but they will self-regulate on their own for sure”. Cognitive dissonance at work :/.
Elizabeth Goitein:
Buried in the Section 702 reauthorization bill (RISAA) passed by the House on Friday is the biggest expansion of domestic surveillance since the Patriot Act.
[…]
If the bill becomes law, any company or individual that provides ANY service whatsoever may be forced to assist in NSA surveillance, as long as they have access to equipment on which communications are transmitted or stored—such as routers, servers, cell towers, etc.
That sweeps in an enormous range of U.S. businesses that provide wifi to their customers and therefore have access to equipment on which communications transit. Barber shops, laundromats, fitness centers, hardware stores, dentist’s offices… the list goes on and on.
[…]
None of these people or businesses would be allowed to tell anyone about the assistance they were compelled to provide.
[…]
The NSA, having wholesale access to domestic communications on an unprecedented scale, would then be on the “honor system” to pull out and retain only the communications of approved foreign targets.
It's some of that, but also influence.
People are getting their news from TikTok and their opinins are therefore formed by it. That can end up a national security issue, especially if some of them end up in positions of power and influence.
Anyone worth $30 million is doing something right I thought he seemed nice enough on rogan recently. Weird and far-fetched in some places....but not bad.My dad gets most of his info from Tiktok and the suggested Youtube videos from the first screen on the smart TV. The other day, he commented that Tucker Carlson is a "smart person".
Yes, this is the torturous reality I live in.
Anyone worth $30 million is doing something right I thought he seemed nice enough on rogan recently. Weird and far-fetched in some places....but not bad.
But yeah, those are terrible sources for info. I try to diversify so I hit all angles. Occasionally I log out of platforms so I'm not so curated
If you made your money telling people what they want to hear, I wouldn't disparage you for it. It simply means you're filling a gap that wasn't filled before. Identifying these things and why it was needed can help lead to a more common understanding between each other.Well by the net worth metric those dudes who upped theirs by stonewalling Ukrainian aid must be doing something right too.
BTW my dads comment came about a week after his interview with Putin lol
If you made your money telling people what they want to hear, I wouldn't disparage you for it. It simply means you're filling a gap that wasn't filled before. Identifying these things and why it was needed can help lead to a more common understanding between each other.
Anyway, I'm just glad corporate news is dying out, but tiktok certainly isn't a good replacement
Of course, there's a difference between reporting on a thing and crafting a narrative. It's the biggest reason why mainstream media is dying. People are sick of the bs and finger pointingThe objections to some news networks and personalities revolve around the belief that they lay the groundwork to those gaps themselves by selecting information to present that creates that need, that they prepare their viewers over a period of time to be receptive to certain ideas and proposals and then fill that gap themselves. It's not filling a gap between left and right politically (not that news should be doing that to begin with) - It's creating your own ditch on the political spectrum and hoovering people in for political warfare.
Much of what is said is not immediately objectionable on its own but typically fractures whenever an attempt is made at reconciling with other information. Reconciliations often reveal critically relevant information to stories was just missing.
If you made your money telling people what they want to hear, I wouldn't disparage you for it. It simply means you're filling a gap that wasn't filled before. Identifying these things and why it was needed can help lead to a more common understanding between each other.
How original. So sorry I don't share your hate boner
How original. So sorry I don't share your hate boner
However, TikTok is not facing an immediate ban in the US.
The new law gives ByteDance nine months to sell the business, and an additional three-month grace period, before a potential ban can be enforced.
That means the sale deadline would most likely come some time in 2025, after the winner of the 2024 presidential election takes office.
1. One country giving another country an ultimatum about how to run its own company feels just plain wrong. They have no legal right to do that.
2. in terms of blocking internet content sent from another country, there is a dividing line between blocking content for viewing vs providing mechanisms to preventing that site capturing viewers data without their permission or capturing consent to do so. However blocking everything without refinement is reducing the internet and feels like a slippery slope for "freedom"
Tiktok ?as it's a very powerful propaganda machine for them
Government censorship isn't going to stop that, so if thats the goal its a non starter.It's some of that, but also influence.
People are getting their news from TikTok and their opinions are therefore formed by it. That can end up a national security issue, especially if some of them end up in positions of power and influence.
Not to stray into forbidden territory too much, but if you only get your information from TikTok, you'd think the ethnic minorities in the PRC are all very happy and love the CCP.