briffle a day ago

Still have no good answer on why its bad for a company that is supposedly under Chineese influence to collect this kind of information on us, and adjust and tweak an 'algorith' for displaying content. But its perfectly fine for a US company to do it? Wouldn't the right solution be to protect the citizens from all threats, foreign and domestic?

  • insane_dreamer a day ago

    Plenty of good answers have already been put forward. But in case you're asking in good faith, here are the two main ones:

    1- It's in the interest of the US government to protect its interests and citizens from governments that are considered adversarial, which China is. And unlike other countries, the Chinese government exercises a great deal of direct control over major companies (like ByteDance). If TikTok was controlled by the Russian government would we even be having this conversation? (Ironically most Americans are freaked out about Russia, but when it comes to global politics, China is the much greater threat to the U.S.)

    I think social media in general - including by US companies - does more harm than good to society and concentrates too much power and influence in the hands of a few (Musk, Zuck, etc.) So this isn't to say that "US social media is good". But from a national security standpoint, Congress' decision makes sense.

    2- If China allowed free access to US social media apps to its citizens then it might have a leg to stand on. But those are blocked (along with much of the Western internet) or heavily filtered/censored. TikTok itself is banned in China. So there's a strong tit-for-tat element here, which also is reasonable.

    • pjc50 a day ago

      > If TikTok was controlled by the Russian government would we even be having this conversation?

      Yandex got fragmented into EU bits and Russian bits. https://www.theguardian.com/world/2022/aug/23/russia-yandex-...

      The head of VK is subject to sanctions https://www.theverge.com/2022/2/26/22951307/us-sanctions-rus... (but it appears that Americans are still free to use VK if they want to?)

      > (Ironically most Americans are freaked out about Russia, but when it comes to global politics, China is the much greater threat to the U.S.)

      American-backed forces are fighting the Russian army itself in Ukraine. Implied in all of that is a desire to not have US forces fight them directly in Poland.

    • bryanlarsen a day ago

      > Ironically most Americans are freaked out about Russia, but when it comes to global politics, China is the much greater threat to the U.S.

      China benefits greatly from the rules based order that America spends considerable effort to maintain and uphold. They would prefer a different rules based order than the one America would prefer, but they're better off with than without and recognize that.

      OTOH, Russia does not. They prefer chaos.

      China is definitely the stronger threat. But Russia is a greater immediate threat because they're only interested in tearing things down. It's easier to tear things down than to build them up, especially if you don't care about the consequences.

      • insane_dreamer a day ago

        > But Russia is a greater immediate threat

        I disagree; and it's the dismissal for the past 13-14 years of China as an immediate threat which is what has in part allowed China to become such a large longer-term threat.

        > They would prefer a different rules based order than the one America would prefer

        I would put it differently: China wants its own global hegemony instead of the U.S.' -- and that's understandable (everyone wants to rule the world). But if the U.S. doesn't want that to happen then it has to take steps to counter it.

    • e_i_pi_2 a day ago

      I agree with point #1, but then this ban should also include the US controlled sites - having the main office in the US doesn't mean the data is any more secure, or that the products do less harm socially.

      For point #2, this seems like you're saying "they don't have a leg to stand on, and we want to do the same thing". If we don't support the way they control the internet, we shouldn't be doing adopting the same policies. I don't think governments should have any ability to control communication on the internet, so this feels like a huge overstep regardless of the reasons given for it

      • insane_dreamer a day ago

        Re #2 -- while there is a tit-for-tat element here, forcing a sale of TikTok or removing it from the App stores, is still worlds apart from the type of censoring of information that the Chinese government engages in. So it's not a case of "we want to do the same thing". If you've lived in China (I have) you'll know what I'm talking about.

    • hedora a day ago

      Those are answers to a different question.

      The US companies continue to feed the same information to the Chinese, even though the Federal government has been trying to get them to stop for almost a decade (I cite sources elsewhere in this thread).

      So, all of your arguments apply equally to the big US owned social media companies.

      Since the ban won’t stop the Chinese from mining centralized social media databases, the important part of the question is:

      > Wouldn't the right solution be to protect the citizens from all threats, foreign and domestic?

      • insane_dreamer a day ago

        > won’t stop the Chinese from mining centralized social media databases

        that's not the issue; the issue is control of the network

        > Wouldn't the right solution be to protect the citizens from all threats, foreign and domestic?

        No. In the US government's view, its responsibility is to counter potential foreign threats -- and not just foreign, but adversarial (this wouldn't be an issue for a social network controlled by the UK or Japan, for example) -- which would include a highly pervasive social network controlled by a foreign government that is the US' largest adversary.

        As for whether social media companies in general are good or bad for American society, that's a completely separate question. (I tend to think they do more harm then good, but it's still a separate question.)

    • walls a day ago

      > If China allowed free access to US social media apps to its citizens then it might have a leg to stand on.

      So now the US should just do everything China does? What happened to American ideals protecting themselves? If free speech really works, it shouldn't matter that TikTok exists.

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    • est a day ago

      > government to protect its interests and citizens from governments that are considered adversarial

      That's the exact reason why Communist China setup the firewall in the first place. Good luck.

      • insane_dreamer a day ago

        The two are vastly different.

        The GFW doesn't just block websites/networks/content that is controlled by adversarial foreign governments, but all websites/networks/content which the CCP is unable to censor. The GFW is about controlling the flow of information to its citizens from __any__ party not under the CCP's control.

        • est 14 hours ago

          The bill introduced by the Supreme Court doesn't just block Tiktok that is controlled by Bytedance, but all websites/networks/content which the POTUS deems "adversarial". The law is about controlling the flow of information to its citizens from __any__ party not under the government control.

          Am I rephrasing this correctly?

  • tptacek a day ago

    The whole case turns on foreign adversary control of the data.

    • muglug a day ago

      Right, Congress was shown some pretty convincing evidence that execs in China pull the strings, and those execs are vulnerable to Chinese government interference.

      As we’ve seen in the past couple of weeks, social media companies based in the US are also vulnerable to US government interference — but that’s the way they like it.

      • ok123456 a day ago

        They have?

        They released a Marty Rimm-level report citing that pro-Palestinian was mentioned more than pro-Israeli content in ratios that differed from Meta products. This was the 'smoking gun' of manipulation when it's more of a sign Meta was the one doing the manipulation.

      • yard2010 a day ago

        That's the way I like it for my children. Pardon the demagogue. The US, being the awful mess it is is still 100x better IMHO than the chinese government. It's the lesser evil kind of thing and honestly the reason I believe that democracy is 100% THE way to go. Things can only get US level nefarious with democracy. Far from perfect but much less evil.

        The only problem with democracy is that it's so fragile and susceptible to bad non-democrat actors intervention, which is more of an awareness problem.

      • navi0 a day ago

        Is X vulnerable to Chinese government interference because its American executive has other business interests in China at stake?

        I’d argue the TikTok remedy should be applied to X, too.

      • Zigurd a day ago

        You are assuming a lot about supposed evidence nobody has said anything specific about. One shouldn't also assume people in Congress know how to evaluate any evidence. Nor justices, based on the questions they asked.

      • eptcyka a day ago

        Good thing Mr Zuckerberg is a shining beacon of independence from the US government.

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    • benreesman a day ago

      That may be true in a legal sense (and my reading of that is the same as yours).

      My interpretation of the parent’s comment is that we have pretty serious (and dubiously legal) overreach on this in a purely domestic setting as well.

      As someone who has worked a lot on products very much like TikTok, I’d certainly argue that we do.

      • tptacek a day ago

        The short answer here is that directly addressing a threat from a foreign adversary formally designated by both the legislative and executive branches long before the particular controversy before the court affords the government a lot more latitude than they would have in other cases.

        • benreesman a day ago

          I’m not sure anyone is disputing that, certainly I’m not.

          There is an adjacent point that many of us feel is just as important, which is that there is evidence in the public record (see Snowden disclosures among others) that there is lawbreaking or at least abuse of clearly stated constitutional liberties taking place domestically in the consumer internet space and has been for a long time.

          Both things can be true, and both are squarely on topic for this debate whether on HN or in the Senate Chambers.

    • mjmsmith a day ago

      Exactly, these are hostile political actors interfering in our country. This is also why Facebook and X should be banned everywhere except the USA.

      • johnnyanmac a day ago

        Meanwhile, it's perfectly fine for foreign adversaries to use American social media to interfere with American events. Anything for that GDP.

        • mjmsmith a day ago

          Good point. Social media accounts should only be available to people who live in the country where the company is based. Then there's no need to ban Facebook and X elsewhere.

    • mindslight a day ago

      Yes, there is a distinction there. The issue is that it's a small part of the overall problem when looked at the larger scale. The overarching issues of political influence at odds with individual citizens, hostile engagement-maximizing algorithms, adversarial locked-down client apps, and selling influence to the highest bidder are all there with domestically-incorporated companies. The government's argument basically hinges on "but when these companies do something really bad we can force domestic companies to change but we can't do the same for TikTok". That's disingenuous to American individuals who have been on the receiving end of hostile influence campaigns for over a decade, disingenuous to foreign citizens not in the US or China who can't control any of this, and disingenuous to our societal principles as we're still ultimately talking about speech.

    • echelon a day ago

      [flagged]

      • doug_durham a day ago

        China can benefit without doing any influencing. It can simply mine the vast amount of data it gets for sentiment analysis. Say they want to be more aggressive against the Philippines. They can do an analysis to gauge the potential outrage on the part of the American people. If it's low they can go ahead.

      • bloomingkales a day ago

        China can show favorable political content to America and American youth.

        American culture has been such an influencing force on the world due to our conduits, movies and music. TikTok is a Chinese conduit, and I do believe this is happening. Our culture can be co-opted, the Chinese had John Cena apologize to ALL of China. They can easily pay to have American influencers spin in a certain way, influencing everything.

      • rusty_venture a day ago

        Thank you for this concise and comprehensive summary. The DDoS threat had never occurred to me.

      • o999 a day ago

        So China blocking US social media is justified for the very same reasons?

        • likpok a day ago

          China has blocked US social media for years (decades perhaps?). I don't know if they've explicitly said all the reasons, but "social stability" is a big one.

          As an aside, TikTok itself is banned in China.

    • hedora a day ago

      That can’t be it. Facebook sells the same data to foreign adversaries including China and Russia. The most famous incident involved the British company Cambridge Analytica, which used it to manipulate election outcomes in multiple countries:

      https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Facebook–Cambridge_Analytica...

      Edit: Apparently it’s not common knowledge that this is still happening. Here’s a story about a congressional investigation from 2023:

      https://www.scworld.com/analysis/developers-in-china-russia-...

      And here’s a story about an executive order from Biden the next year. Apparently the White House concluded that the investigation wasn’t enough to fix the behavior:

      https://www.thedailyupside.com/technology/biden-wants-to-sto...

      https://edition.cnn.com/2024/02/28/politics/americans-person...

      Edit 2: Here’s a detailed article from the EFF from this month explaining how the market operates: https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2025/01/online-behavioral-ads-...

      • tptacek a day ago

        I assure you, if you read the opinion, that is indeed it, and the objection you raise about other instances of data collection not being targeted is addressed directly.

      • bloodandiron a day ago

        I think you would be hard pressed to come up with any evidence for your assertion. First of all the UK is not a foreign adversary (quite the opposite). Secondly Facebook didn't sell data in that case, it was collected by Cambridge Analytica via Facebook's platform APIs (as described in your own link). In general Facebook doesn't sell data, their entire business model is based on having exclusive access to data from its platforms.

      • scarface_74 a day ago

        And the difference is that the US government can tell them to stop doing it.

      • zeroonetwothree a day ago

        CA wasn’t data being “sold”

        • hedora a day ago

          This is arguing technical definitions. As of this week, foreign intelligence agencies transfers money that eventually ends up at Facebook, and they get the data in return.

          They can claim this is not a sale if they want, but it’s still a sale. Drug dealers make similar arguments about similar shell games where you hand a random dude some cash, then later some other random dude drops a bag on the ground and you pick it up.

          Since Facebook was first caught doing this during the Obama administration, it’s hard to argue they are not intentionally selling the data at this point.

      • paganel a day ago

        > That can’t be it. Facebook sells the same data to foreign adversaries including China and Russia.

        I'm not sure they do that anymore, not in the current geopolitical climate and not with the DC ghouls having taken over the most sensitive parts of Meta the company (there were many posts on this web-forum about former CIA people and not only working at the highest levels inside of Meta).

      • zo1 a day ago

        This whole Cambridge Analytica thing is such a nothing burger - I have yet to be given a concise reason how it was anything other than targeted advertising. Something that happens day-in, day-out a billion times over on all our "western" platforms in the form of ads. And no, the fact that this data wasn't "consented to" doesn't mean anything other than being a technicality. If anything, I'd chalk the whole thing up to anti-Trump hysteria that happened around that time.

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    • josefritzishere a day ago

      It's still completely legal for Meta to sell that user data to Chinese owned companies. So no security is provided by this change. I see it as theatre.

      • tptacek a day ago

        People keep coming up with other avenues by which China could get this information, but the court addresses that directly: the legislature is not required to address every instance of a compelling threat in one fell swoop.

      • xnx a day ago

        I thought this too, but I think there's a new law for this as well: "In a bipartisan measure, the House of Representatives unanimously pass a bill designed to protect the private information of all Americans by prohibiting data brokers from transferring that information to foreign adversaries such as China" https://allen.house.gov/news/documentsingle.aspx?DocumentID=...

    • ternnoburn a day ago

      It seems pretty bold to assume that Google, Facebook, Amazon, X, etc aren't adversaries. Foreign or otherwise.

      • tptacek a day ago

        The case turns on the fact that China is formally designated a foreign adversary. The statute doesn't allow the government to simply make up who its adversaries are on the fly, or derive them from some fixed set of first principles. There's a list, and it long predates this case.

        • ternnoburn 18 hours ago

          Your mistake is assuming I'm thinking about any sort of legal definition. Adversarial nature doesn't require or government to declare it for it to exist.

  • myrmidon a day ago

    1) You can not protect users from being influenced by the media they consume-- that is basically the very nature of the thing.

    2) This is not about protecting users of the app, this is about preventing a foreign state from having direct influence on public opinion.

    It is obvious to me why this is necessary. If you allow significant foreign influence on public opinion, then this can be leveraged. Just imagine Russia being in control of a lot of US media in 2022. Or 1940's Japan. That is a very serious problem, because it can easily lead to outcomes that are against the interests of ALL US citizens in the longer term...

    • plorg a day ago

      SCOTUS explicitly avoided ruling on this justification, and it seemed at argument that even some of the conservative justices were uncomfortable with the free speech implications of it.

      • perbu a day ago

        I think the question "What is Tiktoks speech?" was raised. And the answer, "the algorithm" didn't really strike home.

        So I read it like they didn't interpret this as a free speech issue at all.

      • DudeOpotomus a day ago

        It's not a top down broadcast and the SCOTUS has a hard time wrapping their head around 250 individual people receiving individualized content with no oversight or necessity for accuracy.

      • redserk a day ago

        That justification also seems like it quickly can be used to shutdown access to VPN services hosted elsewhere like Mullvad.

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    • kjkjadksj a day ago

      Isn’t that already happening? Fox news parroting russian talking points to sow division among the working class population of this country? Why is that fine? Because they get Rs in power in the process?

  • zeroonetwothree a day ago

    It’s bad because China has different interests than the US. Imagine if a war breaks out in Taiwan and they send targeted propaganda to members of the US military.

    • Zigurd a day ago

      US-made missiles are blowing stuff up inside Russia because Russia invaded a treaty partner who gave up their nukes in exchange for a security alliance with the US. And yet Russian apps are in our app stores. Nobody needs to imagine.

      • JumpCrisscross a day ago

        > yet Russian apps are in our app stores

        Major social media apps? Chinese apps are still in our app stores, just not TikTok (as of Sunday).

      • secondcoming a day ago

        The only Russian app I'm aware of is Telegram. What other Russian apps might people be unwittingly running?

      • orangecat a day ago

        And yet Russian apps are in our app stores.

        There are no Russian apps that collect extensive data on hundreds of millions of Americans. (And if I'm wrong about that, the US should absolutely force divestiture of those apps or ban them).

      • HideousKojima a day ago

        >a treaty partner who gave up their nukes in exchange for a security alliance with the US

        If it wasn't ratified by the senate then we didn't enter into a treaty, I really don't understand why this is so hard for people to understand.

    • kelseyfrog a day ago

      I hate to be the bearer of bad news, but everyone has different interests from everyone else. That's not a sufficient reason.

      • zeroonetwothree a day ago

        You are free to have that our opinion but our elected government disagrees with you. It’s not the job of the court to adjust laws based on personal preference of HN commenters.

      • yard2010 a day ago

        Yes but there are Reagan's interests and Hitler's interests. You have no choice but to pick the lesser evil.

        • kelseyfrog a day ago

          Sorry, While I understand that there are degrees of interest misalignment, I'm not sure what Hitler's interests refers to in this context. Hitler is deceased so it's unlikely his interests are relevant in a discussion about TikTok.

    • cmiles74 a day ago

      Wouldn't banning the collection of this confidential data provide a better solution? Meta could still turnaround and sell this information to Chinese companies.

      • JumpCrisscross a day ago

        > Meta could still turnaround and sell this information to Chinese companies

        Let them collect and ban this. Difference between Meta and TikTok is you can prosecute the former’s top leadership.

    • ossobuco a day ago

      > China has different interests than the US

      Define the US here. Is it the government, the people, the business interests of the private sector?

      Each one of those has different interests, often competing ones.

      In any functional nation the people's interests should prevail, and it seems to me that any information capable of swaying the public's opinion is informing them that their interests are being harmed in favor of other ones.

      • derektank a day ago

        Your question is irrelevant because none of the parties you've listed have interests that are aligned with the CCP, assuming you're referring to the people as a whole. Obviously there are specific individuals whose interests are aligned with China's government but laws in a democracy aren't meant to make everyone happy, they're meant to meet the interests of the majority of people

    • spencerflem a day ago

      Crazy take, More likely the US or it's allies goes to war and they try to play up sympathy with the target.

      Nobody wants China to take Taiwan, that's not something its possible to convince people of

      • r_klancer a day ago

        > Nobody wants China to take Taiwan, that's not something its possible to convince people of

        It's not about convincing them to want it but rather about sowing doubt and confusion at the critical moment.

        David French's NYT column last week starts with what one might call a "just-plausible-enough" scenario: https://www.nytimes.com/2025/01/09/opinion/tiktok-supreme-co... (gift link, yw).

      • s1artibartfast a day ago

        Im not so confident about that. Attenuating isolationist policy in the face of Taiwan is the easiest, but I can see anti-ROC propaganda in the mix.

    • njovin a day ago

      Then China would just fall back to bombarding them with propaganda on one of the other large social media platforms that are prone to both known and unknown influence.

      • zeroonetwothree a day ago

        They would be within their rights to do that. But then they would have to compete with other participants in the discussion. On TikTok they can ensure there is no such competition.

      • alonsonic a day ago

        The magnitude of the attack is not comparable. One thing is being a bad actor in a network owned by someone else where you can get monitored, caught and banned. Versus owning the network completely and amplifying messages with ease at scale. The effort needed and effectiveness of the attack is extremely different.

      • Aunche a day ago

        Domestic based social media platforms can be pressured to comply with demands such as the DOJ's investigation into Russia's 2016 disinformation campaign on Facebook. Likewise social media platforms based in a foreign adversary would be pressured to comply with demands of that foreign adversary.

    • ramon156 a day ago

      Aka because we're the "good" guys

  • DrScientist a day ago

    Indeed - if the US is this afraid of a popular social network under foreign control then every country outside the US should be petrified.

    And domestically in the US - citizens should be demanding the dismantling of the big powerful players - which ironically the US government is against because of it's usefulness abroad..... ( let's assume for one moment, despite evidence to the contrary, that the US government doesn't use these tools of persuasion on it's own population ).

    • mbrumlow a day ago

      > if the US is this afraid of a popular social network under foreign control then every country outside the US should be petrified.

      They are and have been.

      • alonsonic a day ago

        This is exactly why China controls the internet and any company with a presence there.

    • realusername a day ago

      I have no horses in the race but if you justify a Tiktok ban in the US because of a foreign influence, you also do justify a Facebook ban in the EU on the same arguments.

      • mplanchard a day ago

        Thus why Facebook is blocked in China, but not in the EU, since we have a much less adversarial relationship with them.

  • chpatrick a day ago

    For the same reason you're okay with the US military being present in the US and not the Chinese one.

  • jack_pp a day ago

    Check out the scandal in Romania, some guy that had less than 5% in polls got 30% because of tiktok. Other candidates had tiktok campaigns too but probably didn't use bots.

    Social media is a legitimate threat to any countries democracy if used wisely. It is dangerous to have one of the biggest ones in the hands of your enemy when they can influence your own countries narrative to such an extent.

    • Al-Khwarizmi a day ago

      For me the biggest scandal in Romania is that they threw the people's choice to the trash just because he didn't show up in polls... a few months after banning another candidate, Sosoaca, for, and I cite textually, "calling for the removal of fundamental state values and choices, namely EU and NATO membership".

      Note that from the little I know about both Sosaca and Georgescu, they both look like dangerous nutjobs that should not rule, but if I were a Romanian I would be more worried about a democracy that removes candidates it doesn't like for purely political reasons (not for having commited a felony or anything like that) than about them.

      • jack_pp a day ago

        I'm no lawyer and can't be arsed to do the proper research but for Georgescu to be able to declare he had 0 campaign spending while everyone knows that the tiktok campaign cost 20-50 million euros is insane to me.

        If they aren't already prosecuting him on this I guess technically it's legal but such a weird loophole in the law. Any spending towards promoting a candidate should be public knowledge imo. EDIT: he was claiming bullshit like GOD chose him and that's how he got that good of a result. I guess his God is the people in the shadows that made his tiktok campaign lol

        > For me the biggest scandal in Romania is that they threw the people's choice to the trash just because he didn't show up in polls

        I think they did it for many reasons but not because he didn't show up in polls.

        Top ones are:

        - PSD didn't advance in the second round and they had the leverage to pull it off

        - Georgescu was clearly anti-NATO so maybe the US pulled strings

        - Danger of having a president with Russian sympathies

        - He was claiming that he didn't spend a single dime on the election while everyone in the know knows that his tiktok campaign cost sever million euros

  • mbrumlow a day ago

    I thought it was less about the data and more about the control China had on what Americans saw, and how that could influence Americans.

    If China could effectively influence the American populations opinions, how would that not be bad?

    • spencerflem a day ago

      Specifically, US citizens can see what's happening in Palestine

    • ossobuco a day ago

      If the reality of things, the simple truth, is able to "influence" Americans does it really matter who brought that truth up?

      Do you prefer Americans to be ignorant about certain topics, or to be informed even if that comes at the cost of reduced approval for the government?

      • BobaFloutist a day ago

        What if, and hear me out, China didn't limit its propaganda to the truth?

  • alberth a day ago

    This is being positioned as a national security issue that a foreign government has so much influence over the US public (and data on people if they want, like geolocation, interests, your contacts, etc).

    Note: I'm not saying I either agree or disagree ... just pointing out the dynamics in the case being made.

    • ellisv a day ago

      Legally, the national security component is relatively minor to the case. It's played up to be the justification for the law but SCOTUS doesn't really get to decide whether that is good justification or even correct.

      • alberth a day ago

        > The nation’s highest court said in the opinion that while “data collection and analysis is a common practice in this digital age,” the sheer size of TikTok and its “susceptibility to foreign adversary control, together with the vast swaths of sensitive data the platform collects” poses a National Security Concern.

        FTA

      • orangecat a day ago

        SCOTUS doesn't really get to decide whether that is good justification or even correct

        They do, and they did. From the ruling:

        The Act’s prohibitions and divestiture requirement are designed to prevent China—a designated foreign adver- sary—from leveraging its control over ByteDance Ltd. to capture the personal data of U. S. TikTok users. This ob- jective qualifies as an important Government interest un- der intermediate scrutiny.

        • ellisv a day ago

          My point was that SCOTUS didn't review whether there was a compelling national security interest or not – they didn't review any of the classified material, etc. SCOTUS didn't consider whether or not it was good or meaningful policy, they simply accepted the national security argument which more-or-less required them to uphold the DC court's application of intermediate scrutiny.

  • kube-system a day ago

    The concern isn't broadly that "social media companies have data". The concern is the governing environment that those companies operate in, which can be coopted for competing national security purposes.

    This isn't a consumer data privacy protection.

    The concerns here are obvious: For example, it would be trivial for the Chinese military to use TikTok data to find US service members, and serve them propaganda. Or track their locations, etc.

  • ryandvm a day ago

    Two extremely obvious reasons:

    First, it's a national security issue for a company controlled by the CCP to have intimate data access for hundreds of millions of US citizens. Not only can they glean a great deal of sensitive information, but they have the ability to control the algorithm in ways that benefit the CCP.

    Second, China does not reciprocate this level of vulnerability. US companies do not have the same access or control over Chinese users. If you want to allow nation states to diddle around with your citizens, then it ought to be a reciprocal arrangement and then it all averages out.

    • flybarrel a day ago

      Back in the early stage of social media, US companies had the choice to operate in China as long as they comply with the censorship and local laws. Had they chosen not to quit China market at the point, they would have been probably huge in China holding major access over Chinese users too. (How would Chinese government react to that is something we never get to see now...)

      I keep seeing argument regarding "China bans social medias from other countries". It's not an outright ban saying that "Facebook cannot operate in China", but more like "Comply with the censorship rules or you cannot operate in China". It's not targeting "ownership" or "nation states". e.g. Google chose to leave, while Microsoft continues to operate Bing in China.

      • ryandvm a day ago

        Good point, but still that's not reciprocity. Allowing the CCP to fine tune their propaganda at American citizens while US companies have to comply with heavy handed censorship is not a fair trade.

  • rwarfield a day ago

    Because for all of Mark Zuckerburg's flaws (or Elon, or whoever), America is unlikely to go to war with him?

    • johnnyanmac a day ago

      Of course not. He's already winning the war and "The People" have no voice in that matter.

  • amelius a day ago

    In addition:

    • US data brokers can still sell data to foreign companies (out of control of US and thus indirectly to Chinese companies).

    • Chinese companies can buy US companies (thereby obtaining lots of data).

    If we killed user-tracking, then that would solve a LOT of problems.

    • mplanchard a day ago

      > US data brokers can still sell data to foreign companies (out of control of US and thus indirectly to Chinese companies).

      This is false. It was made illegal in April, 2024: https://www.congress.gov/bill/118th-congress/house-bill/7520

      • amelius a day ago

        > (...) to North Korea, China, Russia, or Iran or an entity controlled by such a country

        This is very limited and will not prevent indirect sales (like we now see happening with Russian oil for example).

        It is also why I said "indirectly".

  • o999 a day ago

    Because US is not really a free country.

    It is obviously way better on this matter than China, but in principle, liberties are selectively granted in US and in China.

    The TikTok ban topic has been stale for long time before it became the main harbor for Pro-Palestine content after it became under censorship by US social media thus depriving anti-Palestine from controling the narrative, effectively becoming a major concern for AIPAC et al.

    Data collection is more of a plausible pretext at this point.

    • tmnvdb a day ago

      Every country has "selective liberties", that is not a very meaningful criterion.

      • o999 a day ago

        Liberties are not granted to everyone equaly ≠ Some liberties are [equally] denied.

  • zug_zug a day ago

    > But its perfectly fine for a US company to do it?

    China blocks facebook/twitter/instagram/pinterest/gmail/wikipedia/twitch and even US newspapers.

    So clearly they don't think it's okay for a US-company to do it (and are at least an order magnitude stricter about it)...

    • mrtksn a day ago

      If US wants to imitate China, they should imitate its industry not its restrictions to freedoms.

      The ideal world order isn't the one where Chinese can't find out what happened on Tiananmen square and Americans can't find out what happened in Gaza. That's a very shitty arrangement and I am shocked that the Americans are picking that as their future.

      • SonicScrub a day ago

        > The ideal world order isn't the one where Chinese can't find out what happened on Tiananmen square and Americans can't find out what happened in Gaza.

        I don't see how this law banning a social media site brings us at all closer to a world where Americans cannot get access to accurate information about major global conflicts. This is so far down the imagined "slippery slope" as to be absurd. In fact, I'd strongly argue that this law would achieve the opposite. If you're relying on Tik Tok for accurate information like this, then you are opening yourself to echo chambers, biased takes, and outright propaganda. There are many excellent sources out there in America freely available and easily accessible.

      • airstrike a day ago

        Luckily nobody needs TikTok to find out what happened in Gaza.

    • RobotToaster a day ago

      FWIW facebook was blocked in 2009, after ETIM (East Turkistan Islamic Movement) (allegedly) used it to organise the July Urumqi riots, and facebook refused to follow Chinese law and cooperate with the police to identify the perpetrators.

      Whatever you think of the law of the PRC, they applied it consistently, Facebook was blocked for doing something that would get any Chinese company shut down.

      Tiktok is getting blocked in America for doing what American companies do.

      • JumpCrisscross a day ago

        > Whatever you think of the law of the PRC, they applied it consistently

        Chinese courts are explicitly subservient to the party.

    • colejohnson66 a day ago

      China doesn't have a constitution like America's.

      Edit:

      Obviously, China has a constitution, but the freedoms enumerated there are not the same as those in America's. And those that are enumerated are pointless (like North Korea's constitution).

      My point is that there's an inherent hypocrisy in saying we're more free than them, but then doing a tit-for-tat retaliatory measure. How can we be more free when we're doing the same things the other side is?

      • seanmcdirmid a day ago

        China has a constitution mostly like America’s, freedom of speech, religion, press are enshrined even more strongly than in the American constitution. What China lacks is judicial review and an independent judiciary, so the constitution has no enforcement mechanism, and so is meaningless. The Chinese government as formed has no interest in rule of law.

      • ok123456 a day ago

        So what? If you believe in liberal values (with a small l), like freedom of speech, you lead by example.

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      • salviati a day ago

        Are you aware of this Wikipedia page? [0] I think you should motivate why you believe that what is described in that page should not be called "constitution". Or articulate why you believe that thing does not exist. Or at least motivate your statement. Where does it come from?

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

    • horrible-hilde a day ago

      I agree with this sentiment. tit-for-tat, also anyone who slams into our infrastructure should pay up for the repairs and the inconvenience.

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  • lvl155 a day ago

    Why do we need a good answer? Does US need to be a good guy on some made up rules? Post Soviet collapse, US could have just taken over a bunch of territories. We don’t alway need to be some faithful country when the rest of the world is always messing up asking for millions of Americans to spill blood. I think RoW take US goodwill for granted. We don’t need to play nice. That’s not how competition works.

  • trothamel a day ago

    There is a rule of law issue here.

    Say, for example, congress passes and the president signs a law that says that product sponsorships in videos need to be disclosed. If a US company (or a European, Australian, Japanese, etc) country violates that law, we're pretty sure that a judgement against them can change that behavior.

    China? Not so much, given their history.

  • ajkjk a day ago

    It sounds like you have ignored all the answers and then you're saying there's no good answers?

    If you want to convince someone they're not good answers you would have to at least engage with them and show how they fail to be correct/moral/legal or something. Pretending they don't exist does nothing.

  • caseysoftware a day ago

    Yes, all of them should be stopped from doing it. And end Third Party Doctrine. I 100% agree.

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  • fumar a day ago

    Why would you want an outside nation to have an outsized influence America's social fabric? https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BQXsPU25B60 Chomsky laid out manufacturing consent decades ago and while his thesis revolves around traditional media heavily influencing thought-in-America, the influencing now happens from algorithmic based feeds. Tik Tok controls the feed for many young American minds.

  • timcobb a day ago

    > But its perfectly fine for a US company to do it?

    It's not perfectly fine, but you need to start with companies of foreign adversaries first.

  • gspencley a day ago

    While I agree with you about domestic policy, I'm not sure why it's inconsistent or hypocritical to deal with an external threat posed from those who want to destroy or harm you.

    The details specific to China and TikTok are kind of moot when talking about broad principles. And there is a valid discussion to be had regarding whether or not it does pose a legitimate national security threat. You would be absolutely correct in pointing out all of the trade that happens between China and the USA as a rebuttal to what I'm about to offer.

    To put where I'm coming from into perspective, I'm one of those whacko Ayn Rand loving objectivists who wants a complete separation between state and economy just like we have been state and church and for the same reasons. This means that I want nothing shy of absolute laissez-faire capitalism.

    But that actually doesn't mean that blockades, sanctions and trade prohibitions are necessarily inconsistent with this world view. It depends on the context.

    An ideal trade is one in which both parties to that trade benefit. The idea being that both are better off than they were before the trade.

    This means that it is a really stupid idea to trade anything at all at any level with those who want to either destroy or harm you.

    National security is one of the proper roles of government.

    And I don't think you necessarily disagree with me, because you're saying "we should also be protected our citizens from spying and intrusions into our privacy" and yes! Yes we absolutely should be!

    But that's a different role than protecting the nation from external threats. You can do your job with respects to one, and fail at your job with respects to the other, and then it is certainly appropriate to call out that one of the important jobs is not being fulfilled. Does that make it hypocritical? Does it suddenly make it acceptable for enemy states to start spying?

    By all means criticize your government always. That's healthy. But one wrong does not excuse another. We can, and should, debate whether TikTok really represents a national security threat, or whether we should be trading with China at all (my opinion is we shouldn't be). It's just that the answer to "why its bad when China does it but it's right when it's done domestically" is "it's wrong in both cases and each can be dealt with independently from the other without contradiction"

  • disharko a day ago

    optimistically, this is the first step towards banning or at least forcing more transparency for all algorithmic feeds. there's absolutely similar concerns about the leadership of American companies being able to sway public opinion in whatever direction they choose via promotion or demotion of viewpoints. but it's only been possible to convince those with the power to stop them of the danger from China, because while probably none of the companies have "America's best interests" at heart when tuning their algorithms, it's much clearer that China has reason to actively work against American national interests (even just demoting honest critique of China is something to be wary of)

  • GoldenMonkey a day ago

    It's about psychological manipulation of Americans. TikTok is a completely different experience in China. Social media influences us in negative ways. And the Chinese government can and does take advantage of that.

  • drawkward a day ago

    Judging by your karma and registration date, you spend some time here on HN. There have been lots of good answers why; they are the many prior discussions of this topic.

    You are just seeming to ignore them for whatever reason.

  • throw10920 a day ago

    Where in that CNBC article does it say that it's fine for US companies to do that? I don't see that anywhere, yet that's the point you're claiming is being made.

  • bigmattystyles a day ago

    It is, and if this a stepping stone to that conversation, that’s a good thing. Great even. If you expect to have everything at once, you’ll make no progress.

  • x0iii a day ago

    There's no room for equality and fairness when it comes to global political rivals especially when there's stone cold evidence of mischief.

  • Vanclief a day ago

    The comparison isn't even close. TikTok's relationship with the Chinese government is well-documented, not "supposed". They are legally required to share data under China's National Intelligence Law. The Chinese government has also a track record of pushing disinformation and find any way to destabilize Western democracies.

    Douyin (The Chinese Tiktok version) limits users under 14 to 40 minutes per day and primarily serves educational content, while TikTok's algorithm outside China optimizes for maximum engagement regardless of content quality or user wellbeing.

    US tech companies pursuing profit at the expense of user wellbeing is concerning and deserves its own topic. However, there is a fundamental difference between a profit driven company operating under US legal constraints and oversight, versus a platform forced to serve the strategic interests of a foreign government that keeps acting in bad faith.

    • gs17 a day ago

      > Douyin (The Chinese Tiktok version) limits users under 14 to 40 minutes per day and primarily serves educational content, while TikTok's algorithm outside China optimizes for maximum engagement regardless of content quality or user wellbeing.

      This isn't true, at least not for adults' accounts. I've watched my girlfriend use it and the content was exactly what she watched on TikTok, mostly dumb skits, singing, dancing, just all in Chinese instead of half in Chinese. It also never kicked her off for watching too long.

      I was told a similar story about Xiaohongshu, where it was supposedly an app for Chinese citizens to read Mao's quotations (through the lens of Xi Jinping Thought) to prove their loyalty. Then I saw it for real and it's literally Chinese Instagram.

  • bastardoperator a day ago

    It's perfectly fine for a South African immigrant to do it, I really don't understand the problem either.

    • prpl a day ago

      You don't understand the difference between a non-resident corporation under control of an adversary and a naturalized citizen?

      • bastardoperator a day ago

        I do, but there is no data or evidence supporting said non-resident corporation is under control of an adversary, so why should I believe anything the government claims? If you're going to talk about security, just stop, nearly every component in your phone is produced in China, and you still use that everyday.

  • knowitnone a day ago

    same reason China forbids or controls US companies operating in China. This is just tit-for-tat.

    • sudosysgen 19 hours ago

      This isn't true, US companies are allowed to operate in China. They just eventually choose not to because complying with Chinese censorship laws is too much trouble, but in that sense they are not too different from Chinese companies. Facebook for example operated in China for many years until they decline to comply with a ruling on Xinjiang (which may have been the moral decision).

  • legitster a day ago

    > Wouldn't the right solution be to protect the citizens from all threats, foreign and domestic?

    Maybe. But there is a huge constitutional distinction between foreign and domestic threats. And the supreme court was pretty clear that the decision would be different if it didn't reside with a "foreign adversary".

  • llm_nerd a day ago

    The rational for why TikTok should be banned in the United States is precisely the same rational why Xitter, Facebook, Instagram, et al, should be banned in other countries.

    Meta, Musk, and others have no right or grant to operate in the EU, Canada or elsewhere. They should be banned.

    • nthingtohide a day ago

      US benefits from Tiktok ban. US benefits from its social media not being banned in other countries. The calculation is pretty clear to me.

  • jelly a day ago

    Action against Tiktok doesn't preclude action against US companies

  • cmiles74 a day ago

    Clearly the US government would like only US companies to collect this kind of data. Eliminating the biggest competitors for companies like Google, X and Meta is likely just the icing on the cake.

  • ranger_danger a day ago

    I don't think any big business sees protection of its users as a solution to anything.

  • epolanski a day ago

    Not only that, but there's no evidence at all that Tik Tok's been feeding China any data. None.

    Whereas we have proof and evidence that US agencies can access data about citizens from anywhere else in the world without even needing a court order.

    Everybody forgot already US spying on Merkel's phone?

    But that's okay, because America is not bound to any rules I guess. Disgusting foreign policy with a disgusting exceptionalism mentality.

    • afavour a day ago

      > there's no evidence at all that Tik Tok's been feeding China any data.

      Because China's political system applies absolutely no pressure for transparency.

      > Whereas we have proof and evidence that US agencies can access data about citizens from anywhere else in the world without even needing a court order.

      Something we know about because the US political system has levers that can be pulled to apply pressure for transparency.

      You'd have to be very naive not to think that the Chinese government has an interest in controlling what US users of TikTok see. Whether they actually have or not is a somewhat useless question because we'll never know definitively, and even if they haven't today there's nothing saying they won't tomorrow.

      We can say that they have both the motive and capability to do so.

      • epolanski a day ago

        > You'd have to be very naive not to think that the Chinese government has an interest in controlling what US users of TikTok see.

        Just because something has been repeated in the news 20000 times, it doesn't make it true without evidence. Speculation is just it: speculation.

        As far as I've seen, it's not Chinese company spying on me, it's US ones, it's not Chinese companies hacking Wifis in all major airports to track regular citizens, it's US ones, it's not Chinese intelligence spying on European politicians, it's US ones, it's not Chinese diplomacy drawing the line between rebels/protesters, good or bad geopolitically, it's always Washington, it's not Chinese intelligence we know of hacking major European infrastructure and bypassing SCADA, it's US one.

        The elephant in the room is US' fixation for exceptionalism and being self authorized to do whatever it pleases while at the same time making up geopolitical enemies and forcing everybody to follow.

        I don't buy it, I'm sorry. I don't particularly like the Chinese system, I don't particularly love their censorship, and I don't particularly like their socials on our ground when our ones are unable to operate there (unless they abide to Chinese laws, which are restricting and demand user data non stop, something they are very willing to do in US though).

        My beef is with American's exceptionalism and with the average American Joe who cannot see the dangers posed by the foreign policy of its own country. The US should set the example and then pretend the same, instead it does worse than everybody and cries that only it can. It's dangerous.

      • monocasa a day ago

        > Something we know about because the US political system has levers that can be pulled to apply pressure for transparency.

        We know most of it because of whistleblower leaks.

  • DudeOpotomus a day ago

    Because it's not the TWEAKING of the content tho tis the problem. It's the ability to manipulate individuals using fake or altered content.

    Not sure why this is a hard one to understand but with the ability to individualized media, you can easily feed people propaganda and they'd never know. Add in AI and deep fakes, and you have the ability to manipulate the entire discourse in a matter of minutes.

    How do you think Trump was elected? Do you really think the average 20 something would vote for a Republican, let alone a 78 year old charlatan? They were manipulated into the vote. And that is the most innocuous possible use of such a tech.

  • prpl a day ago

    Why do you care if a chinese company is banned from business in the US? All sorts of american companies are banned from doing business in China

    • itishappy a day ago

      I'd prefer neither nation ban companies they don't like but I only have a voice in one.

    • johnnyanmac a day ago

      If we banned all Chinese business with America, America would hurt a lot more than China. Our plutocracy made sure of that fact decades ago.

      I care becsuse I hate hypocrisy. Simple as that. They'll sweep Russian activity under the rug as long as it's done in an American website. This mindset clearly isn't results oriented.

      • prpl a day ago

        Slippery slope fallacy. We aren’t banning all chinese companies just like they haven’t banned all US companies

      • seanmcdirmid a day ago

        Where were you for the last 10+ years when China was blocking all social media from the US but the US wasn’t blocking it? Or does hypocrisy just apply to the USA? It seems like you have some kind of agenda unrelated to the pure concept of hypocrisy.

    • fkyoureadthedoc a day ago

      Why do you care if your car gets stolen when people in China get their cars stolen every day? Well because they are taking something away from me

      • Spunkie a day ago

        Unless you work directly for the US government in some way, you are perfectly free to get on a VPN and continue using tiktok. And unlike your chinese friends, you don't even need to break the law to do it.

        • fkyoureadthedoc a day ago

          I don't have Chinese friends or use TikTok personally, I was just addressing the stupid question

    • [removed] a day ago
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    • taylodl a day ago

      Because we're looking at the Big Picture and seeing how they're figuring out how to dismantle our First Amendment rights.

      • gambiting a day ago

        First Amendment Right is only for American citizens, no? If you're a visitor to the US for example, you don't get the First Amendment protection against anything, you're a guest. Why doesn't the same principle apply to a foreign company? I don't see how banning tik tok affects your first amendment rights or first amendment rights of American companies - maybe you can explain?

      • 7thaccount a day ago

        Also, the oligarchs just want us to use their crappy social media sites. This sets the stage for making competition illegal in some ways.

      • prpl a day ago

        Ridiculous statement. You must believe they should have political speech then? Maybe they should be able to donate to elections or even vote too? Why stop at corporations?

        If they want speech, they should reside in the US, not just own a piece of a company that does.

        The rights enforced inside the US are very generous compared to most countries and many apply to both legal and illegal residents, but restricting some rights, especially political ones, is crucial to have a sovereign state

        • p_j_w a day ago

          The constitution is very clear on which parts apply only to citizens. The first amendment is not one of them.

  • misiti3780 a day ago

    I think you have no good answer to this, you should do some soul searching.

  • 23B1 a day ago

    Because the Chinese are openly hostile towards the United States and its interests, whereas American companies have a vested interest in the U.S. and are beholden to its laws.

    I don't know why realpolitik is so hard for technologists to understand, perhaps too much utopian fantasy scifi?

    • tmnvdb a day ago

      It is really amazing to see so many replies here of people who do not just disagree with the ruling but completely deny the principles at play exist.

      • 23B1 a day ago

        Computer touchers awash in luxury beliefs.

      • Spunkie a day ago

        I've honestly never seen so many stupid people making stupid arguments on HN before.

        Nothing but lazy disingenuous arguments who's only purpose is to bait conversations for replying with even lazier whataboutisms.

        Either the brainrot has really set in for these people or we are being flooded with ai/bots.

    • alonsonic a day ago

      The idealist and optimist part of technologists tend to block the understanding of the rather simple practicalities at play in geo politics.

  • aprilthird2021 a day ago

    The problem is framing information access as a threat. It is not and that's fundamentally not a First Amendment positive stance. If I want to gorge myself on Chinese propaganda it's my right as an American.

  • panki27 a day ago

    Data = Money, the rest is capitalism

  • skirge a day ago

    my wife can yell at me and spend my money and my neighbour can't, because you know different case

  • mschuster91 a day ago

    > Wouldn't the right solution be to protect the citizens from all threats, foreign and domestic?

    Indeed, but at the point we are in history the steps to get that done - aka, copy the EU GDPR and roll it out federally - would take far too long, all while China has a direct path to the brains of our children.

    • johnnyanmac a day ago

      But it's fine for Russia as long as it's through an American corporation.

  • afavour a day ago

    Because China is a rival geopolitical power and the US is... us.

    It's a national security concern. I get that there's a lot of conversation and debate to be had on the topic but the answer here is very straightforward and I don't understand why people are so obtuse about it.

    • bunderbunder a day ago

      The thing is, doing it domestically is also a national security concern. We know that data leaks and breaches don't only happen, they are commonplace. Banning TikTok but continuing to allow domestic social media companies to amass hoards of the same kind of data without any real oversight is like saying, "Sorry, you can't have this on a golden platter, the best we can do is silver."

      • swatcoder a day ago

        It's not leaks and breaches that are the immanent concern here. The concern is deep, adversarial manipulation of public sentiment -- a psyops asset that gives a competing nation significant leverage as they pursue ends that challenge established US interests in the Pacific.

        You don't have to agree that protecting those interests is worth the disruption to the global market, free speech ideology, etc. But to engage in the debate, you need to recognize that this is the core concern.

      • afavour a day ago

        > "Sorry, you can't have this on a golden platter, the best we can do is silver."

        Right, and silver is better than nothing.

        I think many of us on HN would agree that US social media companies having the means to manipulate user sentiment via private algorithms is a bad thing. But it's at least marginally better than a foreign adversary doing so because US companies have a base interest in the US continuing to be a functional country. Plus it's considerably more difficult to pass a law covering this domestically, where US tech giants have vested interests, lobbyists and voters they can manipulate.

        So yes, a targeted ban against a foreign-owned company isn't the ideal outcome. But it's not difficult to see why it's considered a better outcome than doing nothing at all.

      • Workaccount2 a day ago

        Tiktok was banned primarily for influence, secondarily for data.

        The influence is what law makers care far more about. Remember what Russia was doing on facebook in 2016? Now imagine that Russia actually owned facebook at the time.

      • hammock a day ago

        You're not wrong that domestic threats exist as well. But perhaps the biggest thing to know that may help you understand, is that the national security apparatus operates within the paradigm of what is called 5GW, or Fifth Generation Warfare[1]. 5GW is all about information, and a foreign adversary controlling the algorithmic news feed of 170 million Americans for an average 1 hour a day is important in that context.

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

      • [removed] a day ago
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      • owlbite a day ago

        That's not forgetting the ability for them to just straight up 100% legally purchase a lot of this information from data brokers.

    • ryandrake a day ago

      I'm still not sure I understand the national security concerns around 17-year old nobodies publishing videos of themselves doing silly dances. Or the "metadata" those 17 year olds produce. Are people sharing nuclear secrets on TikTok or something (and not doing the same on US services)?

      • philipbjorge a day ago

        I haven't followed this closely, but I assumed it was related to a foreign entity having the ability to hyper-target content towards said 17 year olds (and the entire userbase in general) -- A modern form of psychological warfare.

        • miah_ a day ago

          Like Cambridge Analytica (who used Facebook to do exactly this for the 2016 election).

      • owlbite a day ago

        The concern is they won't be 17 forever. 5/10/20/30 years down the line some small portion of these kids are going to hold important jobs, and some of them will have worthwhile blackmail material in their tiktok history.

        • ryandrake a day ago

          OK, wild. It's farfetched, but at least the "blackmail" angle makes a little bit of sense. Still strangely targeted. There are a lot of other apps where people are making "potential blackmail" material.

      • echoangle a day ago

        You can still push a particular group of those 17-year olds pushing specific views to influence elections. As long as some proportion of the electorate watches stuff on TikTok.

      • afavour a day ago

        > the national security concerns around 17-year old nobodies publishing videos of themselves doing silly dances

        C'mon, we can have a more informed conversation than that.

        TikTok is an entertainment platform the average young American watches for more than an hour a day. Videos cover just about any topic imaginable. We just had an election. Is it really so impossible to imagine a foreign power adjusting the algorithm to show content favorable to one candidate over another? It's entirely within their power and they have every motive.

      • ericd a day ago

        I think this underestimates how popular TikTok is with 20/30 year olds.

      • startupsfail a day ago

        Blackmail. Information. They could be kids of someone with access/high clearance or get it themselves in a few years.

    • enos_feedler a day ago

      I don’t understand why people are so obtuse about national security being an excuse. Do we really believe the Chinese are going to infiltrate by way of tiktok when they can hack into our telecom networks or any significant figures individual machines? This is about neutering our biggest global economic threat.

      • hhjinks a day ago

        This reads like a denial of the existence of hybrid warfare. Why wouldn't China use TikTok to sow negative sentiment about the US?

      • ericd a day ago

        I’d assume the concern is more swaying public opinion, sowing division to make us incapable of unified political effort, or even to destabilize us, things like that, not so much infiltrating networks - they already manufacture much of that equipment.

        If I understand correctly how it works, it’s a propagandist’s dream, building personalized psych profiles on each person. You could imagine that it’d be the perfect place to try generating novel videos to fit specific purposes, as well - the signals from this could feed back directly into the loss functions for the generative models.

        I think politicians’ efforts to regulate tech are generally not great, but I think this one is pretty spot-on.

        • enos_feedler a day ago

          I think we are already cooked on unifying political effort and destabilization. We don’t need help from China on this.

      • echoangle a day ago

        National security doesn't have to mean they use the app to take over the devices it is installed on. It can also be used to spread misinformation or blackmail people.

      • andyjohnson0 a day ago

        > Do we really believe the Chinese are going to infiltrate by way of tiktok when they can hack into our telecom networks or any significant figures individual machines?

        The allegation is that it's used to spread misinformation and affect public sentiment, not for infiltration.

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    • JAlexoid a day ago

      This law is dumb, because in no way does it prevent the exact same data to be collected, processed by a US entity and then transferred to China.

      I suspect that it's not about data being transferred, but the fact that TikTok can shape opinions of Americans... which US companies do a lot, without any oversight.

    • pc86 a day ago

      Because they're trying to ignore the national security aspect to talk about tracking generically. Which is a valid argument and a good discussion to be had, but it's irrelevant in this context.

      If the US was going to get into a legitimate hot "soldiers shooting at soldiers" type of war with any country, China is extremely high on that list. Maybe even #1. Pumping data on tens of millions of Americans directly into the CCP is bad. Putting a CCP-controlled algorithm in front of those tens of millions of Americans is so pants-on-head-retarded in that context it seems crazy to even try to talk about anything more general than that.

    • _Algernon_ a day ago

      Foreign propaganda bots are just as present on US social media, and US social media amplify them just as much.

      So where exactly is the meaningful difference here? I don't see it.

      The actual difference is that US does not see the money from Tiktok, and blocking tiktok is a convenient excuse to give their propaganda platforms a competetive edge.

      Actually doing something about the fundamental problem of foreign influence through the internet would basically destroy sillicon valley, and no politician wants to be responsible for that.

    • Eextra953 a day ago

      Because it's not clear what the national security concern is. With weapons or infrastructure, it's easy to understand how they can be used against the U.S., but with a social media platform, it's harder to see the threat. The concern really seems to lie with the users of TikTok.

      So what's the issue? That people living in the U.S. and using TikTok might be influenced to act differently than how the powers that be want us to act?

    • yibg a day ago

      I think one of the issues is the details of the national security risk hasn't been articulated well. I haven't followed this in detail, but from what I've seen in summaries, news articles etc is just a vague notion of a theoretical risk from an adversary, with no details on exactly what the risk is, or if there is an actual issue here (vs just a theoretical issue that can happen at some point).

    • jjfoooo4 a day ago

      Because personal data about US citizens is up for sale to more or less whoever wants it, and the US government doesn’t seem to have a problem with this otherwise.

      Which makes it seem far more plausible that the real national security capability that is being defended is that of the US gov to influence narratives on social media. And while even that might be constitutional, it’s a lot less compelling.

    • _trampeltier a day ago

      But US companys sale all info about users anyway to anyone (just see today GM) and you accept in between often to over 800 cookies on websites. If thats ok, whats the difference. Why is it ok a website does include over 800 cokies?

    • BlarfMcFlarf a day ago

      X or Facebook isn’t “us”. If we had any reason to believe there were or were even likely to be strong effective democratic controls over their ability to manipulate public sentiment it might be different. But as it stands, it feels more like local oligarchs kicking out competitors in their market: “the US population is our population to manipulate, go back to your own”.

    • dv_dt a day ago

      Because US social media companies have sold data to foreign adversaries when then used it to attempt to influence domestic matters

    • miah_ a day ago

      Surely China can just buy all the data that's being collected by US companies and sold. So whats the difference here?

    • kasey_junk a day ago

      Not only is it straight forward it has long precedent. We’ve long limited broadcast licenses for instance.

    • bryant a day ago

      Yeah it's not even a point of view that requires nuance; it's pretty clearly a matter of US interests v. adversarial interests. Anecdotally, a lot of people that struggle to understand this are also squarely in the camp of assuming that the US is doing data collection solely for nefarious purposes.

      Except:

      • the US performs these activities (data collection, algorithm manipulation allegedly, etc) for US interests, which may not always align with the interests of individuals in the US, whereas

      • adversarial foreign governments perform these activities for their own interests, which a US person would be wise to assume does not align with US interests and thus very likely doesn't align with the interests of US persons.

      If a person's main concern is living in a better United States, start with ensuring that the United States is sticking around for the long run first. Then we can work on improving it.

      • ianmcgowan a day ago

        It seems like two different arguments if you s/US/multi-national-corporations/g in that sentence. I don't have that much faith that multi-national-corporations interests align with US (or China for that matter).

        • bryant a day ago

          They're headquartered in the US with substantial US ownership, which is the same logic applied to Tiktok. Zuckerberg's pretty heavily rooted in the US with no obvious inclination to leave, and you can see the effect that the change in administrations is having on his steering of Meta as a whole.

    • bushbaba a day ago

      Not everyone on HN is a U.S. national. Many are Chinese nationals. So the discussion here has conflict of interest depending on one’s allegiance

      • afavour a day ago

        > no good answer on why its bad for a company that is supposedly under Chineese influence to collect this kind of information on us,

        In the context of a discussion on a US-specific ban on TikTok I'm taking the "us" in OP's post to mean people in the US. If you aren't in the US the ban doesn't apply to you so the discussion is irrelevant.

      • alex_young a day ago

        So a US court should make decisions not in the US interest because people in other countries use some software?

        • bushbaba a day ago

          No. The U.S. court should make decisions in the U.S. interest. But this HN thread represents people from around the world who may not share the U.S. interest at a personal level. Leading to remarks which are trying to sway US opinion.

          In a way, this thread could very well be monitored and commented on by a non US nation state

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    • ep103 a day ago

      Right, its because a law should be passed regulating this sort of data for the good of all citizens, but our congress can't / won't pass that, so they only stepped in when it became an obvious national security concern.

      It'll come back as an issue in a less obvious manner next time, and every time until they pass such a law.

      Which, imho, won't happen while our overall political environment remains conservatively dominant.

  • Aaronstotle a day ago

    Domestic governments shouldn't let hostile foreign governments the ability to exert soft power over 1/2 of their population. Hence why China banned all USA based tech companies from operating there.

    • qwezxcrty a day ago

      As a Chinese grown up within the Great Firewall, now I began to really feel all the hypocrisy around the matter of "freedom of Internet". It seems the block of Facebook and Twitter in China is surely justified at the very begining, for the same "national security" grounds. China have exactly the same amount of reason to believe the US is stealing data or propelling propaganda by social network.

      It seems there are indeed things that can override citizen's free choice even in the "lighthouse of democracy and freedom", and CCP didn't make a mistake for building the firewall. My need to use Shadowsocks to use Google instead of Baidu or some other crap was simply a collateral damage.

      Of course, the Chinese censorship is way more intensive, but this act makes a dangerous precedent.

      • seanmcdirmid a day ago

        TikTok is also blocked by the GFW in China, so this puts the USA on par with blocking it also. Weirdly enough, Douyin isn’t banned, specifically, so you should still be able to use it in the states.

    • thiagoharry a day ago

      And this is why most countries should ban Facebook, Twitter and US social media.

    • tptacek a day ago

      The opinion is mostly not about control over recommendation algorithms; it goes out of its way to say that the data collection is dispositive. Check out Gorsuch's concurrence for some flavor of how much more complicated this would be with respect to the recommender.

    • Al-Khwarizmi a day ago

      The funny thing is that when China did that, it was unanimously condemned in the Western world as an authoritarian move, and often use as an example of why China was a dictatorship with no freedom of speech, etc. But now it's actually the normal thing to do?

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  • Workaccount2 a day ago

    The US occupies a new office downtown. China wants eyes on a specific room, and the choice spot for monitoring it is someone else's apartment. This person happens to own a bakery also in town, and it sort of seems like the apartment is a reach for them as it is.

    Now in your feed you get a short showing some egregious findings in the food from this bakery. More like this crop up from the mystical algorithmic abyss. You won't go there anymore. Their reviews tank and business falls. Mind you those posts were organic, tiktok just stifled good reviews and put the bad ones on blast.

    6 months later the apartment is on the market, and not a single person in town "has ever seen CCP propaganda on tiktok".

    This is the overwhelmingly main reason why Tiktok is getting banned.

    • itishappy a day ago

      Why just TikTok? Are American corporations immune from coveting thy neighbor's possessions?

      • dralley a day ago

        For the same reason Grindr was forced to sell to a non-Chinese parent, the risks of putting some apps / information in the hands of strategic competitors is too high. If a domestic company tried to blackmail people with their sexual history, they face domestic legal accountability. China does not.

      • tmnvdb a day ago

        Why is "The Chinese Communist Part is more dangerous than Meta sharholders" such a hard thing to grasp?

    • cwillu a day ago

      What in the tinfoil hat of god…

    • hb-robo a day ago

      > This is the overwhelmingly main reason why Tiktok is getting banned.

      Because people are writing Orwell fanfiction?

    • thomquaid a day ago

      Do you have any evidence at all or just fear, uncertainty, and doubt?

    • wormlord a day ago

      That's an interesting hypothetical, I have another one.

      Imagine you're a country with natural resources. Private industries want those resources. Suddenly the US media is flooded with fabricated or exaggerated stories about the country written by NGOs and Think Tanks. Suddenly, out of nowhere a coup happens in the country with the stated intention of "liberalization" and "democratic reforms". The country goes through shock therapy and structural adjustments as it takes on mountains of IMF loans to enter the world markets-- it has to sell off control of all its national resources and industries to American companies. The life expectancy plummets.

      Oh wait this isn't a hypothetical this is just actual US foreign policy.

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    • Joker_vD a day ago

      I cannot tell if this comment was made seriously or as a satire of unhinged conspiracy theories.