• @dephyre@lemmy.world
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    2361 year ago

    Can the US Lawmakers do anything about the US companies harvesting my data and selling it off… please?

  • dohpaz42
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    1811 year ago

    So when do they plan to do something about those domestic businesses trying to manipulate citizens of America?

    • Neato
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      1061 year ago

      Capitalism abusing citizens? Just fine.

      “Communism” abusing citizens? Avengers, assemble!

      • 👍Maximum Derek👍
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        1 year ago

        They’re prospective communists. Supposedly they’re going to get there by 2050, but they just built a new massive luxury tower for their ultra wealthy so…

        • @bionicjoey@lemmy.ca
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          401 year ago

          It’s just like Marx said: “If you do an oppressive oligarchy for 100 years, it magically transforms into communism”

      • @Kusimulkku@lemm.ee
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        191 year ago

        I think they’re more worried that it’s a foreign corporation going after their citizens and not a domestic corporation.

    • @boatswain@infosec.pub
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      511 year ago

      I mean, the domestic businesses are the ones who own Congress and are using it to get rid of a competitor.

      • @kalkulat@lemmy.world
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        231 year ago

        After the thousands of years of human history I’ve read about, getting rid of competitors seems to have been the primary concern of most of the ruling classes all over the world. Way back to Ur.

    • @krashmo@lemmy.world
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      01 year ago

      While you’re not wrong about double standards, anything that discourages the use of vapid social media platforms is a win in my book. Use whatever backwards logic you like to make it happen so long as it’s effective.

        • Aniki 🌱🌿
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          1 year ago

          Lemmy is a message board, not social media. Like fark or something awful. You have no idea who the duck i am. How is that social?

          • @webadict@lemmy.world
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            51 year ago

            Users create and/or share content, check. Users discuss content, check.

            Unless you think something is missing from that definition, Lemmy is social media. It is pseudonymous, but it is still social because of the users.

            • Aniki 🌱🌿
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              1 year ago

              Since when did that define social media? That’s the same thing as IRC. is IRC social media?

              ICQ had message boards where people would chat about the news. Was that social media?

              Again, fark is a place where people share content and discuss the news. Is that social media?

          • @SmilingSolaris@lemmy.world
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            31 year ago

            It is social media, just because your talking anonymously doesn’t mean you aren’t interacting socially. Jesus Christ your talking to people. Right now. Your being social media’d. Stop acting like your above it.

          • dohpaz42
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            21 year ago

            Bruh.

            forms of electronic communication (such as websites for social networking and microblogging) through which users create online communities to share information, ideas, personal messages, and other content (such as videos)

              • @Vespair@lemm.ee
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                1 year ago

                Undoubtedly, especially since I haven’t taken particular steps to obfuscate my identity here.

                But as I said in a comment below, I’m more worried about some unhinged nutbag online randomly targeting me than being a person of interest by any nefarious groups or organizations.

            • @spacecowboy@sh.itjust.works
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              11 year ago

              No it isn’t.

              When you download the app you let them have the following information/data about you:

              Purchases, location, contacts, search history, identifiers (!!), diagnostics, financial info, contact info, user content, browsing history, and usage data.

              Please tell us how any of that is “anonymous”.

              • @Vespair@lemm.ee
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                -21 year ago

                Cool dude, you’ve identified that big corporations data farm.

                Random bloke user with a vendetta still doesn’t know who I am, and that’s who I’m more worried about on the personal scale.

  • Hildegarde
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    1271 year ago

    Whatever Tiktok is doing, the correct response is to write enforcable laws to prevent ANY company from doing what Tiktok is doing.

    This is bad governance.

    • @Devccoon@lemmy.world
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      -181 year ago

      That’s what they did. The “correct response” is described in the article as the law 50/50 signed here.

      • Hildegarde
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        531 year ago

        Did you read the article? The bill bans tiktok for being foreign. There is nothing in this article that describes a bill that outlaws any practices, conventions, or actions that tiktok has done.

        Being afraid of foreigners for being foreign is not effective regulation.

      • BreakDecks
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        01 year ago

        I’ve read this comment over 10 times now and I have no idea what the words “the law 50/50 signed here” means, so I can’t be sure I understand the argument you are trying to make. My best guess is that you are using circular logic to suggest that every democratically decided upon decision is always the right decision, which is nonsense because democracy is demonstrably fallible.

        • @Devccoon@lemmy.world
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          21 year ago

          My point might be a little Covid brain fogged but I’m just pointing out that they did exactly what the guy asked for, if they bothered to click past the title which makes it sound like a targeted “ban Tiktok” law.

          • Hildegarde
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            11 year ago

            I am not a guy. I read the entire article before commenting. The law did not do what I asked for. You would know if you read my comment all the way through.

            • @Devccoon@lemmy.world
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              11 year ago

              I think you’re making assumptions that I can read into what exactly you find wrong with Tiktok. That context is not there in the original comment.

              • Hildegarde
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                01 year ago

                Being chinese by definition can’t effect any company. There is enough context.

  • @Maggoty@lemmy.world
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    861 year ago

    This was a committee vote. The bill now must advance to the floor, pass a vote there, then go through the same process in the Senate.

    Many bills are passed out of committee but are never given an actual vote.

  • @affiliate@lemmy.world
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    571 year 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.

    • @ShepherdPie@midwest.social
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      41 year 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.

    • @realharo@lemm.ee
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      1 year ago

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

      • @affiliate@lemmy.world
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        21 year 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.)

        • @realharo@lemm.ee
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          1 year 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.

          • @Misconduct@startrek.website
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            1 year 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.

            • @realharo@lemm.ee
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              1 year 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.

            • shastaxc
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              21 year ago

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

              • @Delta_V@lemmy.world
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                21 year 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

  • Nakedmole
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    451 year ago

    Tik Tok pushes so much toxic content towards children and teenagers it should be shut down in my opinion.

  • @jaschen@lemm.ee
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    411 year ago

    Good. Fuck them and all social media controlled by any big mega corp. But fuck the CCP especially.

    • @TheFriar@lemm.ee
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      161 year ago

      The fucked up thing is they don’t seem to have a problem with rich 1%ers owning and manipulating millions of people. Only when it’s the Chinese. Facebook, Twitter, instagram are just as harmful. Although the delivery method of the content isn’t exactly “tailored” on those services like TikTok. I dunno how I feel about this. I mean, I think all social media services should die out. This just seems like an uneven hand.

        • @TheFriar@lemm.ee
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          31 year ago

          This is a really great way of putting it. I’d never heard that before, but it’s a truly apt way of summarizing one of the biggest problems I have with fellow leftists. However, I think I’d argue this is a slightly different situation.

          Yeah, it’s a start toward something good. But it’s still sticky in its spirit.

          It’s sort of similar to the complaint against incrementalism. It’s true, incrementalism is not a healthy solution to the problems we face. But fighting against good steps forward because you’re against the concept of incrementalism is…foolish…right? Or is it? Because sinking our efforts into incrementalism takes away effort from broad advancement. And incrementalism has been our MO since forever. And it’s only brought us further down the road to ruin.

          But, again, fighting good incremental changes is nonsense. I dunno, it’s a nuanced issue and I’m not even sure how I feel about it. It’s interesting. And as someone who doesn’t use the more “standard” social media and never has, I’m all for erasing social media from existence. I’ve seen what it did to everyone in my life, and I was the perfect age for every step of social media’s growth: xanga/livejournal in middle school, MySpace in middle school/early high school, and then Facebook came about in my senior year, instagram in college and while i traveled in my early 20s…but I was an anti-anything-popular emo kid and goddamn I’m glad I was. But I also saw first hand how much social media changed my interactions with everyone in my life. It wasn’t pretty. People were addicted, constantly being just floored that I wasn’t on FB, countless people threatening to make me a Facebook page? It was severely strange behavior. And now tiktok is like all of that on goddamn super steroids. But it’s less people shoving it down my throat, and more just completely sucked in by it. Which is honestly scarier.

  • Flying Squid
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    381 year ago

    Bytedance needs to figure out which congresspeople Meta has been bribing.

      • @Serinus@lemmy.world
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        51 year ago

        Oh man, is this a game? Are we supposed to name all the reasons this is dumb? The first two are obvious.

        • @PsychedSy@sh.itjust.works
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          31 year ago

          MSFT was famous for not taking lobbying seriously until they started getting anti-trust action against them. They quickly became good at it.

  • Margot Robbie
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    361 year ago

    So TikTok is sending out app notifications that they are at risk of being shut down and urging their users to call their representatives right now. They are not going down without a fight.

    The 165 days time limit would land the deadline in August-ish, right before the most intense phase of election season in the States, and I do think TikTok would be a very influential part of the election strategy this year.

    • @Buttons@programming.dev
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      81 year ago

      On this particular topic, I think “both sides” is true. Both sides want to proceed down this “ban websites by name” road.

  • @agitatedpotato@lemmy.world
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    351 year ago

    Bold move. Who are they going to blame all the online privacy issues once they cant yell about the Chinese? Or are we going to start pretending everythings fine then?

    • @ItsMeSpez@lemmy.world
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      151 year ago

      Why do you think that they give a shit about online privacy? This isn’t a privacy bill, it’s a bill stopping another government from doing exactly the same shit that the US government does through domestic apps. They aren’t looking out for people, they’re afraid of the competition.

      • @filister@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        I think here the point is that the US government seems to be not bothered by Meta’s data collection which by the way has already been used by Cambridge Analytica to swing elections in favour of one of the opponents and most likely used on countless more occasions but it is now super worried about Tiktok.

        And what did they do against Meta? To the best of my knowledge nothing effective.

        If they do this they should apply the same measures against Meta and other companies but they don’t. Which is disturbing.

        Same with Gaza and Israel. Hamas kills around less than 1 K civilians (mind you a lot of the killed on that first day were military), it is utter tragedy. Israel kills 30+K people, starves the local population, destroys almost completely the infrastructure and their homes and it is business as usual. And every now and then they are scorned to please their voting base while weapon sales to Israel are continuing. Replace Israel with Russia/NK/China or any other country the US considers hostile and they will have them sanctioned to hell, but since it is Israel, nothing of this is happening.

        At least have the fucking decency not to have double standards, because the rest of the world isn’t blind or stupid.

        • @Zorsith@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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          111 year ago

          As I recall they got Zuckerberg on stand and did their best “rabble rablle rabble” at him, with a few decent questions mixed in, then nothing.

        • @NateNate60@lemmy.world
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          71 year ago

          Yes, you have pointed out the subtext that was there all along and pretended like it’s some new argument.

          It is about the data sharing. The US doesn’t like companies sharing data with countries that it views as its geopolitical rivals. Big surprise, am I right?

          • @MinorLaceration@lemmy.world
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            81 year ago

            Seriously. Don’t cover your eyes and pretend you can’t see why the government treats US companies different than companies that are directly in the hands of adversaries. They might not care if Meta uses it to profit off of us, but they certainly do care if China will use it to achieve an advantage over us, militarily or otherwise.

        • @fuzzyspudkiss@midwest.social
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          341 year ago

          I can’t order Jimmy John’s on my work computer anymore. Why? Because tiktok is blocked on our work network. What does tiktok have to do with Jimmy John’s? Well I would have thought nothing expect it won’t let you set your delivery option unless it’s allowed to send data to analytics.tiktok.com.

          Why is a God damn sandwich shop sending my location to tiktok? No idea, but it’s definitely not just the video app that’s the problem.

        • @rebelsimile@sh.itjust.works
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          251 year ago

          I dunno what hill you’re trying to die on here. A stupid dancing app that provides a data collection platform by a foreign surveillance state is a plot on the Orville. Nobody is concerned with it competing with Google, Apple orYouTube. It’s so off-base. Google sucks anyway. If people are searching on TikTok it’s because it’s giving better results for them than Google. It’s about who is collecting the data.

            • @rebelsimile@sh.itjust.works
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              71 year ago

              No, I think it sets a bad precedent. I don’t think TikTok should be allowed in the US (if the US decides it doesn’t want it as they’re seeming to). Taking the property is going to cause a bunch of what you mentioned.

            • @pycorax@lemmy.world
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              71 year ago

              Isn’t this in some way the same as how China bans a number of foreign companies from operating? I don’t think doing the exact same thing is entirely fair but when others aren’t playing by the same rules, it’s a lot less black and white.

    • @NateNate60@lemmy.world
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      141 year ago

      Ah yes, the US, where no foreign company is allowed to be successful.

      Such unsuccessful or banned foreign companies include Samsung, LG, Sony, Toyota, Nissan, Honda, Aldi, Shell, Siemens…

    • @Goronmon@lemmy.world
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      141 year ago

      I’m surprised that people are surprised that a country would favor it’s own businesses versus foreign ones.

      I’m also unsure of which countries act differently from this.

      • @trolololol@lemmy.world
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        51 year ago

        I’m not surprised but I’m still outraged at the amount of hypocrisy they are pulling off out of this one.

    • @trolololol@lemmy.world
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      11 year ago

      And if foreign politics won’t take care of it call the CIA and tell it they’re hiding oil under the presidents house.

    • RedFox
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      1 year ago

      Yes. 🤷

      Nobody wants to be spied on by their perceived enemies. Also, how do you expect us to maintain an appropriate level of hypocrisy if we don’t constantly do hypocritical things?

      I wish we would go after foreign investment, ownership, and political meddling as much as tiktok

      • @hark@lemmy.world
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        21 year ago

        I would be more afraid of being spied on by the government of the country I live in than by a government from a foreign country. Who do you think is more capable of doing something to you?

        • RedFox
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          11 year ago

          being spied on by the government of the country I live in than by a government from a foreign country

          Ha, that’s a decent point. I don’t really care for either. I think about these things among others:

          • China has proved they are interested in conflict. They haven’t used any kinetic/traditional warfare against anyone lately, though they seriously want to with Tiwan.
          • China has been using nonstop cyber related warfare to conduct espionage, steal trade secrets, position themselves for assisting kinetic warfare with cyber warfare, etc.

          I am not a direct target of these, but China killing the power grid or disabling telecommunications does have the potential to have a huge impact on my life.

          • The US government has used nonstop kinetic and cyber warfare over the last 20+ years.

          The US playing world police doesn’t directly threaten my safety, but I definitely would be more worried about the US than China if I wasn’t a US citizen.

          The US government spying on me:

          • Super annoying mostly due to the principle of a lack of privacy, regardless of whether I do anything bad or not
          • Becomes a serious problem if I was an active opponent of government policy and elected officials, and the government/leadership deems me a terrorist/insurrectionist/etc.

          Their discretion of what’s my free speech and right to criticize the government vs leading insurrection would be more complicated if they were using the NSA to own my life and try to use any excuse to lock me up.

          I guess I weigh what’s more likely to be a problem in my current/future life.

          I don’t like either of these scenarios.

    • @nialv7@lemmy.world
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      91 year ago

      Yes, governmental surveillance is always bad. But let’s not pretend being surveilled by NSA is as bad as being surveilled by the authoritarian government of China.

    • @jeremyparker@programming.dev
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      71 year ago

      I mean, it’s not one or the other. No interference from Congress means we get surveilled by China and the US. Congress can cut that number in half.

  • @Alpha71@lemmy.world
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    271 year ago

    Sooo… How do Republican’s square being the party of “Small Govt” and then interfering in a private business?