US Bill that could make TikTok unavailable in the US advances quickly in the House - PLEASE PLEASE PLEASE DO IT I'M BEGGING YOU

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Fans at Yankee Stadium sit under a billboard advertising the Chinese psychological warfare program that is currently destroying America.

WASHINGTON (AP) — A bill that could lead to the popular video-sharing app TikTok being unavailable in the United States is quickly gaining traction in the House as lawmakers voice concerns about the potential for the platform to surveil and manipulate Americans.

The measure gained the support of House Speaker Mike Johnson and could soon come up for a full vote in the House. The bill advanced out of committee Thursday in a unanimous bipartisan vote — 50-0.

The White House has provided technical support in the drafting of the bill, though White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said the TikTok legislation “still needs some work” to get to a place where President Joe Biden would endorse it.

The bill takes a two-pronged approach. First, it requires ByteDance Ltd., which is based in Beijing, to divest TikTok and other applications it controls within 180 days of enactment of the bill or those applications will be prohibited in the United States. Second, it creates a narrow process to let the executive branch prohibit access to an app owned by a foreign adversary if it poses a threat to national security.

“It’s an important, bipartisan measure to take on China, our largest geopolitical foe, which is actively undermining our economy and security,” Johnson said Thursday.

Some lawmakers and critics of TikTok have argued the Chinese government could force the company to share data on American users. TikTok says it has never done that and wouldn’t do so if asked. The U.S. government also hasn’t provided evidence of that happening.

Critics also claim the app could be used to spread misinformation beneficial to Beijing.

Former President Donald Trump attempted to ban TikTok through executive order, but the courts blocked the action after TikTok sued, arguing such actions would violate free speech and due process rights.

TikTok raised similar concerns about the legislation gaining momentum in the House.

“This bill is an outright ban of TikTok, no matter how much the authors try to disguise it. This legislation will trample the First Amendment rights of 170 million Americans and deprive 5 million small businesses of a platform they rely on to grow and create jobs,” the company said in a prepared statement.

The bill’s author, Rep. Mike Gallagher, the Republican chairman of a special House committee focused on China, rejected TikTok’s assertion of a ban. Rather, he said it’s an effort to force a change in TikTok’s ownership. He also took issue with TikTok urging some users to call their representatives and urge them to vote no on the bill.

The notification urged TikTok users to “speak up now — before your government strips 170 million Americans of their Constitutional right to free expression.” The notification also warned that the “ban” of TikTok would damage millions of businesses and destroy the lives of countless creators around the country.

“Today, it’s about our bill and it’s about intimidating members considering that bill, but tomorrow it could be misinformation or lies about an election, about a war, about any number of things,” Gallagher said. “This is why we can’t take a chance on having a dominant news platform in America controlled or owned by a company that is behold to the Chinese Communist Party, our foremost adversary.”

The bill comes about one year after TikTok’s CEO was grilled for hours by skeptical lawmakers on the House Energy and Commerce Committee concerned about data security and the distribution of harmful content. That same committee met Thursday to debate and vote on the bill.

Rep. Cathy McMorris Rodgers, the committee’s Republican chair, said TikTok’s access to so many Americans makes it a valuable propaganda tool for the Chinese government to exploit. She also noted that its parent company ByteDance is currently under investigation by the U.S. Department of Justice for surveilling American journalists.

“Through this access, the app is able to collect nearly every data point imaginable, from people’s location, to what they search on their devices, who they are connecting with, and other forms of sensitive information,” Rodgers said.

To assuage concerns from lawmakers, TikTok has promised to wall off U.S. user data from its parent company through a separate entity run independently from ByteDance and monitored by outside observers. TikTok says new user data is currently being stored on servers maintained by the software company Oracle.

The American Civil Liberties Union and other free speech advocacy groups urged lawmakers to reject the TikTok bill, saying in a letter to the Energy and Commerce Committee’s leadership that “passing this legislation would trample on the constitutional right to freedom of speech of millions of people in the United States.”

Biden’s reelection campaign has opened a TikTok account as a way to boost its appeal with young voters, even as his administration continued to raise security concerns about whether the popular social media app might be sharing user data with China’s communist government.

Jean-Pierre said the White House welcomes lawmakers’ efforts on the TikTok legislation, but lawmakers need to continue work on it.

“Once it gets to a place where we think .. it’s on legal standing and it’s in a place where it can get out of Congress, then the president would sign it,” she told reporters on Wednesday during the daily White House briefing.

She also defended the White House’s efforts to limit the dangers of TikTok, even as the president engages with influencers on the social-media platform and his campaign hosts a TikTok account.

“We are going to try to meet the America people where they are,” Jean-Pierre said. “We are trying to reach everyone. The president is the president for all Americans .. it doesn’t mean that we’re not going to try to figure out how to protect our national security.”
 
Second, it creates a narrow process to let the executive branch prohibit access to an app owned by a foreign adversary if it poses a threat to national security.
I'm never going to stop using Strelok, Hornady and its data farming user account requirement can lick my asshole.
 
  • Agree
Reactions: WhatInTheActualFuck
There's probably a better legal case with Temu too. They are price dumping, which the Koreans and Japanese tried to do in the late 80s and early 90s on RAM and other chips, and they got snapped on pretty hard. I imagine Temu is greasing a lot of politicians hard though.
Temu also has some MLM elements.
 
  • Agree
Reactions: mlanguishi
When I read "small businesses" and "grow and create jobs" in reference to TikTok, I'm going to assume they mean "pedophiles" and "groom and molest children."

If Congress wants to JUST ONE THING RIGHT this session, then they need to ban TikTok YESTERDAY.

They mean the idiots that sell useless junk on the stupid TikTok stores that are getting advertised. They don't actually have a buisness. They just make niche shit for other morons. That's my guess. Any legitimate buisness would be retarded to rely on TikTok to promote anything that actually requires bank loans to start up a small buisness. Then again it's 2024 now, so I'm probably just out of the loop. I just want this crap banned to see the salty flow of teras coming from the "influencers" that would now have to rely on an actual job.
It's dropshippers mostly.
 
  • Informative
Reactions: No. 7 cat
Here is a video that shows the differences between what we see in the West, and what the Chinese see:

Here is a video from a year ago, about how it will be banned:

(If you somehow made it into 2024 not knowing what Tik Tok was)
 
I get the feeling the people involved in drafting and voting for this have been having a lot of fancy all expenses paid meals on alphabets dime.

If TikTok gets the options of be sold to muricans or be banned. Then either it gets sold and alphabet gets there first with it's sacks of cash, or it gets blocked and YouTube reels become the new cancer vector.

Either way alphabet wins.
 
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