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marketrent OP t1_j6ckwca wrote

Excerpt:

>TikTok is grappling with an increasingly real prospect of being banned in the United States. This wouldn’t just be a mostly performative prohibition of installing the app on federal or state government-owned devices.

>The ban TikTok is now facing would forbid its China-based parent company, ByteDance, from doing business in the United States, which would block Apple and Google from hosting the TikTok app in their app stores.

>It wouldn’t make it illegal for you, the consumer, to use TikTok. It would just make it much harder to do so.

>ByteDance is spending a lot of money trying to convince detractors that it doesn’t take marching orders from China and that it wouldn’t give the Chinese government US user data or influence US users.

> 

>The company has spent millions building up and expanding its Washington, DC, presence, and more than $1 billion on “Project Texas,” an effort to rebuild the app on US servers in order to wall it off from ByteDance and China as much as possible, while also promising several layers of independent oversight and transparency.

>Accordingly, TikTok is getting more aggressive about making Project Texas’s case to politicians, public interest groups, academics, and the media after years of lying low and quietly trying to work out a deal that CFIUS [Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States] still has yet to officially agree to.

>The company briefed think tanks in late January, while TikTok’s lobbyists have also “swarmed” lawmakers’ offices, and the company is currently hiring several people for communications and policy positions on a state and federal level, according to the New York Times.

>The only thing that may have grown faster than TikTok’s popularity in the US is the company’s DC presence.

> 

>ByteDance spent just $270,000 on federal lobbyists in 2019, a year when TikTok agreed to a settlement with the FTC over children’s privacy law violations for a then-record fine of $5.7 million and when lawmakers started to raise concerns over its ties to China.

>ByteDance and TikTok spent $2.61 million on federal lobbyists in 2020, hiring people with connections to Republican and Democratic lawmakers alike (some were former lawmakers themselves).

>That spending nearly doubled to $5.18 million in 2021, and grew again to about $5.5 million in 2022, according to publicly available data. In late 2021, TikTok signed a lease for its first DC office. In April 2022, it grabbed an additional floor.

>That October, it hired Jamal Brown, who was the press secretary for Biden’s presidential campaign and then the deputy press secretary for the Pentagon, as a policy communications director.

>While ByteDance has spent a lot on federal lobbying, some of its peers — Meta and Amazon, for instance — still spend a lot more. Meta, for instance, spent over $19.15 million on lobbying in 2022, and Amazon spent $21.38 million.

Sara Morrison, 26 Jan. 2023, Vox.com (Vox Media)

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RollingTater t1_j6cng1s wrote

This whole thing is just dancing around the true issue, which is why not make actual privacy laws? Like Google/Amazon/Facebook doing the sideeye monkey meme right now.

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Boo_Guy t1_j6crekz wrote

Politicians are usually pretty cheap.

They'll have to toss some extra in because 'China-Ooga-Booga' but they're still buyable.

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wart365 t1_j6cvhf8 wrote

IMO the real issue isn't so much privacy but that Americans failed to build social media Americans want to use. In the marketplace of ideas a Chinese company is winning. Their formula resonates with a generation of American teenagers and is the voice of their generation. This speaks to a profound failure by older generations to create media zoomers want to consume. It also highlights why privacy is dead - young people know Tik-Tok is owned by China and that anything they post is public but don't beilive in privacy as a concept anymore, even if it's privacy against an invasive, manipulative, evil foreign power.

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fortfive t1_j6d0cb4 wrote

It’s possible that zoomers have reconfigured their ideas of privacy. A lack of privacy on frivolous matters might dazzle eyes prying into more important matters.

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tickleMyBigPoop t1_j6dabld wrote

Funny.

Remember the 1990s, congress was talking about (read harassing) Microsoft. Most tech firms then wanted to stay far away from DC so DC came to them…..and once tech stated ‘lobbying’ and opening up bullshit offices in certain districts the harassment stopped.

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Badtrainwreck t1_j6eeyds wrote

TikTok recently got called out for the fact that it gives almost all of its employees the ability to manually increase the reach a video makes, obviously they want this for building brand relations but the fact that they don’t have more controls and a better outline for when it can be utilized shows that they aren’t really in the business to do this the right way.

But, I’m sure you if you at any of the other competitors you’ll find they are just as bad. Corporate greed is at the forefront and nothing else

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monchota t1_j6efly4 wrote

The grassroots campaign yo try and make people think it was about the content has been crazy. Its a national security threat pure and simple.

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emkoemko t1_j6ew2tv wrote

why are people saying this is about competition and not about the security threat from the CCCP? what competition? all US social media is banned in China so i don't understand this argument at all.

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littleMAS t1_j6fsu8i wrote

As the article points out, ByteDance may be flashing some cash but not nearly in the same league as other major tech companies. Frugality is a vulnerability in politics. If China got behind ByteDance and laid down some very serious PAC money, say nine figures, Congress would make TikTok the nation's video game.

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emkoemko t1_j6g2vdg wrote

how do you compete against over a billion people that are only allowed to have their state approved social media...? you do know social media is global? if over a billion people are removed from your market while your competitor has access to everyone in the world is that fair competition?

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sixtoe72 t1_j6gn42k wrote

The security concerns (but not the security risks) will quickly dissipate with a few well-placed political donations.

Those donations will be paid for with your child’s privacy.

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w3bCraw1er t1_j6gxihk wrote

Sure. Buying politicians is the way.

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nubsauce87 t1_j6gylmv wrote

Please let us keep our spy software on your people's phones! Here's some money! PLEASE?!

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[deleted] t1_j6h0nj1 wrote

They do though. The nation they reside in. Beyond this the ability for a state to reach out and grab someone has never been better. So your notion of tech billionaire being out of danger is nothing but a Hollywood fiction.

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doncastiglionejr t1_j6h711h wrote

False . This is like the whoever Russian influencing elections and other nefarious acts. But bury the lede when you wanna be on china's balls becauae they're cornered and scared of big ol United States

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doncastiglionejr t1_j6h78pa wrote

False again (man, are you guys 18?!)..if that was the case they wouldn't of let Tik Tok start up here in the first place..and there are lots of examples of this happening in the past where companies had to conform to US law or they cannot operate on US internet providers

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JockstrapCummies t1_j6h9veh wrote

>They do when you fine their ass and can possibly break them up like they did Microsoft back in the day.

That was back in the day when the technology sector wasn't the biggest constituent of the American oligarchy.

As we see the political class and some of the old families bow to them now.

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neolobe t1_j6iga5o wrote

The big US tech companies have lobbyists working on politicians and using the privacy as a smoke screen.

The true issue is not privacy. The true issue is TikTok is eating these other companies for lunch. It's newer, it's fresher, it has more active users. Youtube, Facebook, and Insta have blatant short-format ripoffs of Tiktok on their sites trying to stay relevant. And their versions with such low-level content are an embarrassment. People actually make content for TikTok. FB and YT just rip it off. TikTok is a major player in the entertainment industries now.

That is the true issue.

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