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Social Networks China Government

TikTok is Banned in China, Notes X User Community - Along With Most US Social Media (newsweek.com) 148

Newsweek points out that a Chinese government post arguing the bill is "on the wrong side of fair competition" was flagged by users on X. "TikTok is banned in the People's Republic of China," the X community note read. (The BBC reports that "Instead, Chinese users use a similar app, Douyin, which is only available in China and subject to monitoring and censorship by the government.")

Newsweek adds that China "has also blocked access to YouTube, Facebook, Instagram, and Google services. X itself is also banned — though Chinese diplomats use the microblogging app to deliver Beijing's messaging to the wider world."

From the Wall Street Journal: Among the top concerns for [U.S.] intelligence leaders is that they wouldn't even necessarily be able to detect a Chinese influence operation if one were taking place [on TikTok] due to the opacity of the platform and how its algorithm surfaces content to users. Such operations, FBI director Christopher Wray said this week in congressional testimony, "are extraordinarily difficult to detect, which is part of what makes the national-security concerns represented by TikTok so significant...."

Critics of the bill include libertarian-leaning lawmakers, such as Sen. Rand Paul (R., Ky.), who have decried it as a form of government censorship. "The Constitution says that you have a First Amendment right to express yourself," Paul told reporters Thursday. TikTok's users "express themselves through dancing or whatever else they do on TikTok. You can't just tell them they can't do that." In the House, a bloc of 50 Democrats voted against the bill, citing concerns about curtailing free speech and the impact on people who earn income on the app. Some Senate Democrats have raised similar worries, as well as an interest in looking at a range of social-media issues at rival companies such as Meta Platforms.

"The basic idea should be to put curbs on all social media, not just one," Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D., Mass.) said Thursday. "If there's a problem with privacy, with how our children are treated, then we need to curb that behavior wherever it occurs."

Some context from the Columbia Journalism Review: Roughly one-third of Americans aged 18-29 regularly get their news from TikTok, the Pew Research Center found in a late 2023 survey. Nearly half of all TikTok users say they regularly get news from the app, a higher percentage than for any other social media platform aside from Twitter.

Almost 40 percent of young adults were using TikTok and Instagram for their primary Web search instead of the traditional search engines, a Google senior vice president said in mid-2022 — a number that's almost certainly grown since then. Overall, TikTok claims 150 million American users, almost half the US population; two-thirds of Americans aged 18-29 use the app.

Some U.S. politicians believe TikTok "radicalized" some of their supporters "with disinformation or biased reporting," according to the article.

Meanwhile in the Guardian, a Duke University law professor argues "this saga demands a broader conversation about safeguarding democracy in the digital age." The European Union's newly enacted AI act provides a blueprint for a more holistic approach, using an evidence- and risk-based system that could be used to classify platforms like TikTok as high-risk AI systems subject to more stringent regulatory oversight, with measures that demand transparency, accountability and defensive measures against misuse.
Open source advocate Evan Prodromou argues that the TikTok controversy raises a larger issue: If algorithmic curation is so powerful, "who's making the decisions on how they're used?" And he also proposes a solution.

"If there is concern about algorithms being manipulated by foreign governments, using Fediverse-enabled domestic software prevents the problem."
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TikTok is Banned in China, Notes X User Community - Along With Most US Social Media

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  • by Anonymous Coward

    Wait until they find out about Tik Tok!

  • by locater16 ( 2326718 ) on Saturday March 16, 2024 @05:41PM (#64320777)
    Humans aren't smart enough for social media, ban it all. Everyone should go back to playing Pokemon Go, we'd have 100x less "civil war" nonsense and have lower healthcare bills from everyone walking around all the time.
    • Everyone should go back to playing Pokemon Go

      We were at war with Japan once, too. Are we really sure Pokemon are not actually an espionage tool of the Japanese government? Better ban that too, just to be certain.

      In case anyone gets the wrong idea, that was intended to be satire, but it certainly seems to be the slippery slope we're heading towards in this country.

      • Well, the USA still hasn't acknowledged & apologised for nuking two harmless & strategically unimportant cities during WWII.
        • Maybe they were strategic. I mean it brought an abrupt end to the war.
          • Re: "I mean it brought an abrupt end to the war." - It brought or it was followed by? One implies a causal relationship, the other does not. There's a lot of post-hoc rationalisations following arguably one of the worst war crimes in world history. The US military chiefs of staff at the time were against nuking Japanese cities, BTW. So what stories do US politicians & nationalists need to tell themselves so that they feel better about it?
            • It makes about as much sense as Obama standing up in public & giving the "This is not who we are!" speech after the umpteenth school mass-shooting. It's exactly who they are by the glaring evidence of school shootings & political responses to them.
            • So, are you telling me the Japanese were on the verge of surrendering and by coincidence the Americans dropped the bomb? If that were the case I think they would have surrendered immediately after the first bomb was dropped.
              • Nothing to do with Russia declaring war on Japan two days earlier then?
                • The Allies had an agreement the Russians would enter the Pacific theatre after cessation of the war in Germany. It was not unexpected they would declare war on Japan. The Allies were pushing them to.

                  Obviously this factored in and I have no doubt part of the calculus was a show of force but you don't just put the resources in place to drop the world's first nuke in short order. In hindsight the Japanese should thank us. They undoubtedly would have suffered far worse if any of their territories fell under
                  • You do realise that the Soviet Union & China were allies, right?

                    Re: "...but you don't just put the resources in place to drop the world's first nuke in short order." - Oh, the USA has done all kinds of things that most would find highly questionable, e.g. Starting wars under false pretences (Vietnam), doing lethal medical experiments on its own citizens without their knowledge or consent (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unethical_human_experimentation_in_the_United_States), recruiting known war crimina
                    • I am no fan of the US govt and could easily add additional questionable tactics.

                      I am however focused on this topic. I have some skin in the game here. My grandfather was fighting in Germany when they surrendered. He was slated to be transferred to the Pacific. Very similar story for my wife's grandpa and thousands of others. Many people, maybe even yourself might not be here if we had to invade Japan.

                      Was the US government a bunch of choir boys here? Probably not. But in this instance I feel the outcom
                    • That's not the question. The question is what nuclear bombing old men, women, & children in the strategically unimportant cities Hiroshima & Nagasaki contributed to the surrender of the Japanese government. As I've already stated, the military chiefs of staff were against it & they argued that it served no strategic military purpose. & yet, you appear to be arguing that not nuclear bombing them would have meant that Japan wouldn't have surrendered down to the last man standing... even with R
                    • Shock and awe most certainly played into it but Hiroshima was home to the 2nd Army Headquarters. I'd say that puts it squarely in play as a military target. Do you have some citation around the military chiefs were against it? I know they did not want to bomb Kyoto and seemingly that was taken off the list of targets. It's my understanding Nagasaki was chosen as the final target due to weather. I'm probably more knowledgeable on the subject than the average American but that does not say much and also wasn'
                    • The meetings & discussions that occurred preceding Truman's decision to bomb Hiroshima & Nagasaki are public knowledge & there are summaries freely available all over the interwebs pipes. The objections are well-known & only a wilful amnesiac would claim otherwise. Maybe US education around WWII needs a review?
  • That's why I'm on Tok Tok, so I can Tok to all my friends anywhere in the world!

    • Tok all you want, but I prefer to Tik my friends. Specifically, tik them off about politics, especially when it's an election year.

  • by TwistedGreen ( 80055 ) on Saturday March 16, 2024 @05:45PM (#64320791)

    I thought this was about a copycat app called Tiktik.

    It's a shame that the youth get their "news" from Tiktok though, but what's the alternative? Getting "news" from any other 60-second social media echo chamber is not going to be any better.

    • My friends mock me for consuming content via TikTok at my age, but I mostly do it to know wtf my kids are seeing online and in the real world. That said, I have seen quite a variety of viewpoints on many subjects. Some of them are obviously complete nonsense or vanity or complete idiocy, but every now and then you actually see some really good reporting on topics that the traditional media typically glosses over.
      • to know wtf my kids are seeing online

        These sort of sites show you different content than them. Some sort of algorithm based on what you watch/skip/upvote etc.

      • My friends mock me for consuming content via TikTok at my age

        Spoiler alert: It's that "oh no no no no no" song that they're mocking you for as it plays through your phone on every other video. It's pretty much TikTok's national anthem.

    • TikTok does not contain news.

      It is basically a platform for extrovert people who sent short videos about themselves. Or about other things. Partly artists to promote themselves, or simple people who show their yoga exercise, or "dance funny".

      And of course lots of "gig workers" who tailored 3 items themselves and want to sell them.

      Perhaps there are some self proclaimed news activists that record themselves talking about news, aka influencers or hobby journalists.

      I would estimate 90% of TikTok content is Asia

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      Younger people have realized that the system doesn't bring rewards, and prefer their news commentary to reflect that.

      They also don't like how mainstream media perpetuates these myths, and others. A recent example is the incredible lengths a lot of outlets went to avoid saying that Israeli forces killed anyone.

      Basically it's a failure if mainstream media.

  • And you fucked it up. You are so fired.

  • I find myself unable to make any sense of this "article".

  • I've always personally found it to be a little ironic that most of the gay pride kitsch [alibaba.com] is manufactured in China, yet their country is more than a bit behind the times when it comes to LGBTQ+ rights. Most of those pride shirts that conservatives were getting all miffed about at Target, are made in China. I have one of 'em and just took a picture of the label [postimg.cc] - yep, HECHO EN CHINA.

    • Yeti products are made in China, yet MAGAs don't say a word.

      China produces the special paper used in making Bibles, yet their country is more than a bit behind the times when it comes to religious rights. And yet, Christians make excuses [christianitytoday.com] for why this is okay.

  • Not really (Score:3, Insightful)

    by hackingbear ( 988354 ) on Saturday March 16, 2024 @06:53PM (#64320897)

    TikTok is known as Douyin in China. It is a copy of the Douyin for the international market. The Chinese government does not care about the app; it cares about the contents and data storage. Operators can choose how to compile with the content censoring requirements, just like Toyota has to registered a subsidiary company as Toyota America in the US and obey American labor and environment laws.

    If China does not allow US social networks, how can LinkedIn operate there [linkedin.com] for year? Is LinkedIn a Chinese company? If China does not allow US internet company, why did US lawmakers urge Bing [bloomberg.com] to pull out of China? Is Bing a Chinese search engine? If China bans Google, why did Google waste time and money creating Project Dragonfly [wikipedia.org]?

    It is very important to understand that the same content censoring laws are applied to both Chinese firms and foreign firms, just like both GM and Toyota must obey the same labor laws regardless if Toyota likes those laws or not. If Google and Meta want (*) to operate in China, they can just agree to censor contents and keep data within China, like Microsoft and Apple do. If they don't, then they can't operate there, just like if you don't agree with American laws you can't do business here. Period.

    Oh why does the Chinese government want to censor contents? It is a long story, but maybe because of the bad history of some spy agencies [reuters.com]?

    (*) And in fact, both want to but they are stopped by American populism as shown in the outcome of Project Dragonfly.

    • Oh why does the Chinese government want to censor contents? It is a long story, but maybe because of the bad history of some spy agencies [reuters.com]?

      Of course the CCP is going to tell the citizens that the censorship is for their own good because of foreign misinformation/propaganda. The politicians here in the USA are attempting to use the same justification for the proposed ban of TikTok. Same shit, different country. Main difference is that we ostensibly have a Constitution that is supposed to prevent such government overreach, but compliance isn't some magical thing. Our leaders have to willingly follow it and failing that, the checks and balanc

    • by leonbev ( 111395 )

      I'd be OK with LinkedIn getting banned in China or the US. I really don't care about that guy I knew from three jobs ago getting an "Introduction to AWS" certification, or that his co-worker liked some TED talk from 5 years ago.

    • Nb Slashdot itself is a social media platform of sorts (though I've yet to see anyone use any of those features). It discusses fervently anti-China topics such as this and many others, including the obvious ones. Slashdot isn't blocked by the GFW and anyone in mainland China can take part in the discussions.

      Also, it's perfectly possible to use Google, Facebook, twitter/X or anything else from within mainland China - yes, without a vpn. This is because not all internet connections have the GFW applied to the

    • Oh why does the Chinese government want to censor contents?

      I don't care why. Censorship is evil, bad, terrible, unacceptable, etc etc etc. Can censorship be useful sometimes? Most assuredly. Does having the ability to censor always devolve into the censor seeking to control? Yes, yes it does.

      Censorship is completely unacceptable in any society that would deign to think itself Free. China never claimed Freedom, but the USA has and practices censorship HEAVILY.

  • "Tiktik," you say? That's great, Gramma, we'll get right on that. In the meantime, let's get you to bed.
  • CCP propaganda working like a well oiled machine! :D

  • by christoban ( 3028573 ) on Saturday March 16, 2024 @08:14PM (#64321007)

    This is an obvious propaganda move on the verge of being forced to sell in the U.S., trying to pretend they don't like TikTok and "definitely DON'T OWN OR CONTROL IT!"

    How are you people so fucking gullible?

    • I want to apologize for being a fucking idiot who can't read at all.

    • by Anonymous Coward
      Jumped in with your anti-China propaganda a little too early this time christoban...
      Never mind, you can still post your anti-China propaganda everywhere else, brainwashed masses will lap it up anyway.
    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      Yep. Tiktok isn't banned in China, they just gave a separate network because of different legal jurisdictions, and because if they were mixed it would become a proxy battleground for the US-China trade war. Users would be at each others throats all day.

      • Also you know Westerners might say things that are banned in China, like talking about Tiananmen square, the Ugyhur genocide, and even saying that Xi looks like Pooh (don't see it myself but whatever). So yeah that tiktok, the one that would have sunk without a trace with China levels of control is absolutely banned for a variety of reasons.

        • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

          I'm not sure what to make of this comment.

          Chinese people do know about Tiananmen, because the government got to them with the propaganda first. They were told that foreigners might claim it was a massacre, to undermine China. Same with the Ugyhurs.

          The Pooh thing is only in relation to Xi, they do sell the merch at Disneyland Shanghai etc. I've been there and seen it with my own eyes.

          Apologies if you didn't intend it that way.

          • Chinese people do know about Tiananmen, because the government got to them with the propaganda first

            That means they don't actually know about it. Because talking about the truth about what happened is banned.

            The Pooh thing is only in relation to Xi,

            Yes? That's what I was talking about. Compared to the other things it's pretty inconsequential, but something the dictator in charge is rather sensitive about so comparing him to the bear is forbidden.

            https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]

            Anyway tiktok would not be su

            • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

              Well, yeah, what I mean is that they don't simply wonder why the term is censored, or not realize that it is, they know about it. So all the Westerners thinking that they can help liberate China from communism by spreading the truth about Tiananmen and the Uyghurs are not going to get very far.

              But yes, I agree that TikTok would not succeed in the West if it was censored like it is in China, but that's the point I was making. It's not that they "banned" TikTok in China, it's that TikTok is tailored to Wester

  • "Fair" and "Fairness" have been co-opted into meaning "You're going to get butt-effed to make someone else happy and complaining about it is not ok."

  • >"Paul told reporters Thursday. TikTok's users "express themselves through dancing or whatever else they do on TikTok. You can't just tell them they can't do that.""

    I really like and respect Rand Paul, and very often agree with his stances. However, not this time, this isn't the best reasoning on his part. The bill is not telling users they can't express themselves. It is saying that this one particular platform can't be owned by what is, in many respects, an enemy of the State. One that uses that pl

    • No, if I want to listen to a particular person who is found on tiktok and not anywhere else, then this is an abuse of the 1st Amendment. Why? Because constitutional law has stated that the first amendment extends to the right to listen to a speaker. If I can't listen to what I want to hear, than that's effectively is a violation of the first amendment law if the Brandenburg standard can not be pass.

      Your idea about freeway isn't a good analogy. The freeway analogy would apply if there was a "spatial" iss

    • Okay, so why'd you post this reply here on Slashdot rather than over on your blog? After all, all social platforms are equal and have the same audience according to what you've implied.

      China is being the ultimate hypocrite.

      They certainly are, but the problem with using "turnabout is fair play" as a justification for doing exactly the same thing is that that it makes us no better than China.

      • by christoban ( 3028573 ) on Saturday March 16, 2024 @11:46PM (#64321281)

        I'd agree with you if this affected American citizens, or if it actually stopped TikTok from functioning. It does neither. It only requires Chinese owners (above 20%) to sell their stake in social media companies. They can still use TikTok all they want (in America).

        The problem is that the CCP can (and surely would) use TikTok to push propaganda and control our society from the outside. They are already doing so, by pushing users to call their representatives and pressure them to do what the CCP wants them to do. There have been many reports of TikTok even requiring users to do so before they can continue using TikTok. They can also (and certainly already are) censor news they don't like and push CCP government propaganda directly to our citizens.

        I'm not interested in importing the Great Firewall of China into our democracy, thanks!

        • Perhaps you should install TikTok and use it once?
          Buy a $20 used android phone with no contacts, get a throw gmail address.

          Sorry, what you write is utter nonsense.

          • I've used it. Though, not in the last week.

            I'm a developer. You're clueless.

            • Well, you seem clueless.
              TikTok does nothing of the things you claim.

              At least not mine, lol.

              • Well, you seem clueless.
                TikTok does nothing of the things you claim.

                How the fuck would you know that TikTok was pushing propaganda? Or that they were censoring anti-China stuff?

                How the fuck would you know that that stuff other people are reporting isn't happening based on what's happening to YOUR app?

                At least not mine, lol.

                So what you're saying it, you're clueless.

                • Because the stuff on TikTok is published by real people.
                  And has nothing to do with propaganda etc.

                  A girl dancing in front of you is propaganda?
                  A girl showing shoes for sale is propaganda?
                  5 boys dancing to make a boy groups is Chinese propaganda?

                  Just lolz, idiot.

                  I do not even have anything from China in my TikTok feed.

                  Stupid idiot.

                  • Only an idiot lacks the mental flexibility to see how the CCP could make their OWN videos, too. Or just push the ones that repeat their narratives.

                    • Sure, and those videos would sell shoes, or Hawaii shirts or show a couple dancing.

                      Sorry, if something is wrong with your Tick Tock feed: figure how to fix it.

                      Seems you are a self proclaimed computer expert. If you can not make Tick Tock not show you stuff you do not want to see, I suggest to reconsider your carrier.

                      My Tick Tock does not show me ANYTHING like you claim. And I did not even change any settings at all!!

                    • The CCP pays literally tens of thousands of creators to make propaganda videos. Like straight up propaganda. Their useful idiots just repeat what they hear.

                    • There are plenty of super well known propagandists, check laowhy's YouTube channel, he and his buddy lived there for a decade, married, and were forced to flee. They have tons of awesome contacts, plenty of leakers inside China.

                      They watch the CCP shills for us.

        • The problem is that the CCP can (and surely would) use TikTok to push propaganda and control our society from the outside.

          You must be on a different internet than me if you believe it to be filled with easily influenced people when it comes to matters of politics. Politics in America has become like a bizarre twisted religion. China could feature videos all day long on TikTok of Trump making love to a goat and in all likelihood it would actually improve his poll numbers. It's a total crapshoot whether China could even achieve their desired result without it backfiring in some unforeseen way.

          • The problem is that the CCP can (and surely would) use TikTok to push propaganda and control our society from the outside.

            You must be on a different internet than me if you believe it to be filled with easily influenced people when it comes to matters of politics.

            At first when I read this, I was expecting a hard /s. But after reading the rest, you actually believe this!!

        • The problem is that the CCP can (and surely would) use TikTok to push propaganda and control our society from the outside.

          They can use Facebook and Slashdot to push propaganda too. Those are American owned (I think?). Let's force all Internet companies to stop allowing any sort of individual interaction regardless of the location of the owners. That WILL stop propaganda... from moving via the Internet. It will not stop propaganda at all.

    • Their citizens have ZERO freedom of expression/speech.
      That is nonsense.
      They might have less than an american, but that is not zero.

    • Were you alive during covid? Let's remind everyone how much "disinformation" was surpressed about covid by the U.S. How many social media posts were removed/banned/dropped down for suggesting lab leak? That's just one of so many "misinformation" campaigns the U.S. government went on. While the only thing said here that is true, most people weren't executed for their views, they were definitiely censored in the "free speech" U.S.
    • > Their citizens have ZERO freedom of expression/speech

      Be careful. Your ignorance is showing. You clearly know nothing about what living in China is like and the freedoms in the country.

      • >"Be careful. Your ignorance is showing. You clearly know nothing about what living in China is like and the freedoms in the country."

        I, personally, have no first-hand experience with China's great firewall, social credit score, secret police, single-party system, re-education camps, surveillance state, control over business and economy, suppression of dissent, state media, school indoctrination, etc. But I have read many articles and testimonials from those who have and escaped.

  • by Canberra1 ( 3475749 ) on Sunday March 17, 2024 @01:30AM (#64321415)
    Do NOT ban it. But have them modify it, like movie ratings, say Level1 for all G rated material - all you can eat. Level 2 for under 18's. Level 3 for might hurt your feelings stuff, and level 4 for stuff that got moderation whines. Level 5 for by country censorship rules, like Tiamen Square or Gaza footage. To get elevated levels user must earn a token by taking a test of some sort. Asking about tax deductions, stocks, finance, property taxes , and a specialty section should be good enough. Show a list of 10 names and ask which ones were Presidents or PM's. Don't worry about age, as any smart 11 year old could easily pass many dumb adults. The bad thing for the USA, is even levels 1 and 2 free speech may still influence last minute swinging voters.
    • If you are so concerned with what they are doing over at Tik Tok, open your own "social network". Good information can be damaged by bad information, but good information wins out if contextualizing information is available.

      The implication of not starting your own is that you are not interested in assuring that good information has a place to be shared.

      • There is NO issue with the platform. It is only USA politician's having a whine and hoping to kill off competition to amplify the monopoly position of the others. Those who are not ignorant, know that Singapore is OK with TiKToK. Worse still was one ignorant person who thought Singapore was China. If you look at a cross ownership of US media, you will see it has very few top level owners. People over 18 do not need 'filters' as they are adults. I have seen what happens to AI when it is contextualized.
  • Roughly one-third of Americans aged 18-29 regularly get their news from TikTok,

    We may as well just shut down the country and turn the lights off anyway then ...

  • by uncoveror ( 570620 ) on Sunday March 17, 2024 @09:53AM (#64321997) Homepage
    Everything TIkTok is doing, so is Facebook and every other social media site. The reason TikTok is getting crucified while Facebook gets a free pass is the connection to China. Bytedance divesting would change absolutely nothing.
  • by sinkskinkshrieks ( 6952954 ) on Sunday March 17, 2024 @07:36PM (#64323297)
    Freedom means allowing apps and speech you don't agree with. Censorship is the government deciding which apps and speech are permitted. Fuck that.

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