Law The RESTRICT act aims to tackle TikTok. But it’s overly-broad and has major privacy and free speech implications. - It gives the government more power over ALL forms of communication.

The RESTRICT act aims to tackle TikTok. But it’s overly-broad and has major privacy and free speech implications.
RelcaimTheNet (archive.ph)
By Didi Rankovic
2023-03-27 18:07:40GMT

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Senator Mark Warner's Restricting the Emergence of Security Threats that Risk Information and Communications Technology (“RESTRICT”) Act is currently in Senate procedure, as is widely thought to be targeting China's TikTok in particular.

However, those who bothered to read the text of the proposed act – which will next be considered by the Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation, are warning that it is not merely about TikTok, but aims to grant wide powers over all forms of domestic and foreign communications to the government – such as enforcing “any” mitigating measure to deal with risks to national security.

We obtained a copy of the bill for you here. (archive.org)

And, observers critical of these legislative activities note, there would be no due process in taking these measures, and not much in terms of safeguards.

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The Libertarian Party's Mises Caucus notes that the draft text states that the act's goal is to authorize the US secretary of commerce to review and prohibit “certain transactions between persons in the United States and foreign adversaries, and for other purposes.”
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Observers note that if somebody or something is designated as a threat to national security, under the proposed legislation, the government would be given full access to these entities.

The text of the act singles out several usual suspects as foreign adversaries, such as Russia, China, Iran, etc., but, the director of national intelligence and the secretary of commerce are free to add new “foreign adversaries” to the list, while not under obligation to let Congress know about it.

They would also be given 15 days before notifying the president.

Critics make a point of the fact that US citizens marked as national security threat can also be considered and treated using the provisions of this proposal as “foreign individuals.”

And when this designation is in place, then the threat of “any action deemed necessary” to mitigate it kicks in, which could result in people being ordered to pay a million dollar fine, spend 20 years in prison, or lose all assets (and these forms of punishment would be meted out without due process).

No limits are put on the funding and hiring to enforce the act, and the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) would not apply.

All that just to “ban” TikTok?

Either way, The White House is in favor of passing RESTRICT Act. (archive.ph)
 
The ACLU has condemned the bill. (Archive)

it's worth noting that the bill hasn't actually been introduced yet. One hypothesis I've seen is that they don't expect it to pass, but the threat of it is being used to encourage the sale of TikTok to an American company.
 
My prediction: The "VPN ban" aspect of the bill is a red herring intended to draw fire from the rest of the bill. It'll draw mass criticism as the rest of it is ignored, then they'll "cave" and replace it with a "sane and sensible" corrected bill that does what they actually wanted in the first place. Everyone will cheer as if they accomplished anything.

The part they're likely actually interested in passing is the ability to arbitrarily, with no due process, declare someone an enemy of the state and then have the legal power to do "any action deemed necessary" to "identify, deter, disrupt, prevent, prohibit, investigate, or otherwise mitigate" the "risk" they pose. Notice how that covers basically anything and everything the government might want to do to someone. What constitutes the risk? Who fucking knows. Could be as little as being suspected of being in communication with someone from a country declared as a foreign adversary (which they can change at any time, without letting anyone know.)

I think you are right. They basically threw everything and the kitchen sink into the bill and are hoping people will latch onto only one of the horrendous things on it to bitch about so they can drop it, pretend there was a "compromise" and pass it later while keeping all the other garbage.

Same shit was done with numerous gun control bill. It is the exact same strategy used to pass sweeping surveillance measures after OKC bombing and they kept all the legislation proposed on hold to be used again, and as soon as 9/11 happened it all got into the Patriot Act.
 
I was wondering if a thread like this was going to be made. I saw fucking everyone praising the TikTok ban and I read the fucking bill and it's a complete shitshow from top to bottom. I had no idea what Kiwi Farms' opinions on the TikTok ban initially were, but I was a vehement opponent in spite of the collection of data that CCP was performing because it's an overreach the government is making which could lead to a dangerous path. If you hate TikTok, fine, but allowing the GOVERNMENT to ban it is a fucking awful idea. Trump had the wrong idea at the time then, and it's just as much, if not more wrong now.
 
The ACLU has condemned the bill. (Archive)

it's worth noting that the bill hasn't actually been introduced yet. One hypothesis I've seen is that they don't expect it to pass, but the threat of it is being used to encourage the sale of TikTok to an American company.
This is actually pretty likely. Trump tried to force Bytedance to sell Tiktok to an American company, with no luck.

Also, if Joe Biden signs this bill, it will piss off a lot of zoomers, which are a core voting base for the moden Democratic party.

Is Joe Biden really willing to piss off an age group that votes 90%+ Democrat enough that many of them stay home on Election Day (or, assuming Biden faces a competent primary challenger, vote for his opponent in the primary).

It's not like Tiktok users can migrate to another site either, since Tiktok currently has no competitors. (Instagram, YouTube, and other social media sites have portions of their site that have similar functionality to Tiktok, but all of them are unpopular and clunky as fuck.)
 
The one thing you can always rely on the government is them being corrupt assholes who seek to micromanage people who for the life of them cannot manage anything effectively.

To fill their coffers yes, but nothing that improves the overall quality of life for everyone. Just themselves.

The Patriot Act is an absolute joke, this is that round 2. And it seems the only way out is to unironically outpace the gov technologically.
 
@Null What are your thoughts on this and the implications? Is this a nothingburger and unlikely to pass anyway, or is this something that the average Amerimutt should be concerned about? I'm not very knowledgeable about this stuff but your takes usually puts things in perspective about these types of things well.
 
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If anyone could point me to where they expressly make VPN use illegal in normal contexts, I'd appreciate it. From what I've read it's relevant as an attempt to avoid or disrupt the execution of the bill which is itself a violation. Is that the correct reading?

It doesn't specifically say VPN's / Tor it more talks about obscuring who you are on the internet to access something like tiktok

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So basically if you use it to pirate something or get tiktok you're in shit.
 
The fact is it doesn't mention VPNs but instead uses language that implies any sort of digital communication method which only makes it worse. The way it is worded a glownigger could try and nail you for literally using a ancient BBS run by some Juan in Cuba or connecting to torrent seeds and peers in Belarus.
 
It doesn't specifically say VPN's / Tor it more talks about obscuring who you are on the internet to access something like tiktok

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So basically if you use it to pirate something or get tiktok you're in shit.
Alright yeah it's in the "attempting to evade the law" just making sure I'm not illiterate. Thanks fren
 
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