• pjhenry1216@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    I mean, it’s not just because it’s outside the US. It’s because ByteDance is legally required to collect and hand over data to the Chinese government. And it’s well beyond what any other social media app does plus unnecessary for the functionality of the app. This is not about xenophobia. This is legit about trying to stop the Chinese government from spying on US citizens who are too ignorant to realize what that app is. They just care about stupid videos.

    • wootcrisp@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      And it’s well beyond what any other social media app does plus unnecessary for the functionality of the app.

      I’ll need to rewatch this to remember the specifics, but this privacy YouTuber named Rob Braxman did a comparison of the permissions and terms from Tik Tok and other social media apps, and Tik Tok came out quite favourably: https://youtu.be/VIakTNOhNSE

      Chinese government spying or interference in the algorithm is probably real, but it’s still a far superior product at the end of the day, which tells you something about how bad the competition is. To compare Tik Tok to Instagram reels is completely absurd.

      • pjhenry1216@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        I love that you’re just cool with an oppositional government spying because you like the pretty videos. Please, tell me more intelligent things.

        And please, where did I mention Reels? And what makes it a far superior product behind marketing? What can TikTok do that any other can’t?

    • DonnieDarkmode@lemm.ee
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      1 year ago

      But even if you grant the two premises there, that TikTok’s data collection is beyond that of other apps, and that said data is given to the PRC to access, this draft agreement’s solution to those problems is “let us access that collected data instead of them”. It implements measures that would affect future changes to TOS and policies, but I don’t see anything about scaling back what’s collected now. From what I can tell, this is just trying to replace who’s steering the ship. If the solution that “stops the Chinese government from spying on US citizens” just changes the government that’s doing the spying, I don’t see how that helps said US citizens in any way. The CPC isn’t the one who can put me on a no-fly list on a whim.

      That’s my fundamental issue with this, as well as the relevant proposed legislation; it’s not a good-faith attempt to protect US citizens.

      • pjhenry1216@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        I’m pretty sure access to records doesn’t mean business data. It’s more likely business records. The US government wouldn’t be able to efficiently go through that data anyway. Big Data doesn’t work that way.

        It’s like saying you’re going to copy YouTube videos as they’re uploaded.

    • veloxy@lemm.ee
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      1 year ago

      Because GitHub has load balances that direct traffic occasionally through a server hosted under Chinese jurisdiction.

      Where the hell did you get that from? Do you have a source for that?

      • pjhenry1216@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        The US government as I work for them. The IP in question is blocked for that reason.

        Edit: Slack was also intermittent a few years back due to the same kind of situation. China owns a decent amount of internet infrastructure. It’s fine for normal traffic as TLS and the like, but the US government doesn’t risk it on their administrative or development networks.