Comment by zug_zug

Comment by zug_zug a day ago

44 replies

> 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.

    • mrtksn a day ago

      Simple: editorial preferences.

      Remember how Musk decided that after the elections Twitter will prioritize fun instagram of politics?

      • SonicScrub a day ago

        If your concern is editorial preference, then wouldn't a social media application explicitly controlled by a State apparatus be a concern?

        I fail to see how anything going on at Twitter is relevant to what I mentioned. Does Twitter shifting its content priorities somehow make the plethora of excellence sources unavailable?

  • airstrike a day ago

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

    • est a day ago

      The problem is, the world does't need meta/google/twtr either. The bill would eventually backfire US internet companies so bad.

      • mrtksn a day ago

        Exactly how I expect things to pan out. Some 10-15 years ago the countries with dictatorships had the idea that they need to control the discussions on internet, now it is the US. I expect it to have cascading effect as Twitter, FB, Instagram etc are all foreign companies with known associations with the US government and intelligence and ban those everywhere fir national security reasons.

      • airstrike a day ago

        I don't understand what this has to do with US companies at all. It's about foreign companies.

    • mrtksn a day ago

      very true, everything started on the seventh and ended thanks to the strength of the new American president and now it’s all fine again as it was before the seventh. no need for political movements or anything, lets concentrate on the more positive things as Musk said.

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.

    • RobotToaster a day ago

      That doesn't address my point, do you believe the law was applied inconsistently in this case?

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.

    • RobotToaster a day ago

      Not exactly.

      The Chinese constitution, in addition to endowing rights, also endows obligations.

      So while you have things like: > Article 35 Citizens of the People’s Republic of China shall enjoy freedom of speech, the press, assembly, association, procession and demonstration.

      You also have things like: > Article 54 Citizens of the People’s Republic of China shall have the obligation to safeguard the security, honor and interests of the motherland; they must not behave in any way that endangers the motherland’s security, honor or interests.

      • seanmcdirmid a day ago

        It doesn't matter because the law is completely at the mercy of officials to interpret and enforce. A Chinese court was once asked to clarify contradicting interpretation from officials, and they got seriously beat down for it because it isn't the job of the judiciary to tell the officials how to interpret law. The only way an officials ruling is overturned is if their boss (or someone up the hierarchy) disagrees.

        Compare this to the Supreme court, which is supposedly in Trump's hands, ruling against Trump twice on this tiktok ban alone (the first to kill his executive order, and the second to not pause the law to wait for him to take office).

  • ok123456 a day ago

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

    • JumpCrisscross a day ago

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

      America is ridiculously pro free speech. That doesn’t mean we must then tolerate libel, slander, fraud, false advertising, breach of contract, et cetera because someone screams free speech.

      The Bill of Rights exists in balances, and the First Amendment is balanced, among other the things, with the nation’s requirement to exist. That doesn’t mean the Congress can ban speech. But it can certainly regulate media properties, including by mandating maximum foreign ownership fractions.

      • greenavocado a day ago

        > America is ridiculously pro free speech

        Except for one group of people which have made any criticism of them carry legal consequences

    • AlexandrB a day ago

      The "example" being banning things for nebulous reasons? If anything this is the US following China's lead in restricting what software their citizens can access.

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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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