Catch up on stories from the past week (and beyond) at the Slashdot story archive

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
United States

Odds of US TikTok Ban Increase After House Fast-Tracks Revised Bill, Picking Up Key Senate Support (variety.com) 63

U.S. lawmakers have moved closer to enacting a countrywide ban on TikTok. From a report: Last month, the House of Representatives passed a bill by a wide margin that would ban distribution of TikTok in U.S. unless TikTok's Chinese parent, ByteDance, sells its ownership in the app within 165 days of the law's enactment. On Wednesday, House Speaker Mike Johnson issued a new proposal that would extend the sale requirement deadline to nine months, with a potential for a 90-day extension -- addressing a key concern of Sen. Maria Cantwell (D-Wash.), chair of the Senate's Commerce, Science and Transportation Committee, that the divestiture timeline was too short.

The revised TikTok ban proposal is tied to a broader bill providing emergency aid for Ukraine and Israel; the House is expected to vote on the measure Saturday, and if it passes would move to the Senate. President Biden has said he will sign the TikTok divest-or-ban legislation into law. On Wednesday evening, Cantwell said she supported the revised TikTok ban bill. "I'm very happy that Speaker Johnson and House leaders incorporated my recommendation to extend the ByteDance divestment period from six months to a year," she said in a statement. "As I've said, extending the divestment period is necessary to ensure there is enough time for a new buyer to get a deal done. I support this updated legislation."

Odds of US TikTok Ban Increase After House Fast-Tracks Revised Bill, Picking Up Key Senate Support

Comments Filter:
  • by zephvark ( 1812804 ) on Thursday April 18, 2024 @10:52AM (#64404930)

    The Feds are trying to confiscate a large part of TikTok's business by a forced sale to American businessmen. I gather this is because TikTok appears to be successful, whereas ex-Twitter and Pravda Social are going down in flames.

    It's not a ban and was never intended to be a ban. It's a direct threat based on, "nice company you have here. It would be a shame if something happened to it."

    • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

      Exactly correct. It isn't even a secret [pbs.org].
    • It would be a shame if something happened to it

      This would imply that ByteDance has an option.

    • by ranton ( 36917 ) on Thursday April 18, 2024 @11:47AM (#64405142)

      It's really odd a ban like this didn't happen a long time ago. I think there is valid criticism that the US shouldn't allow private businesses to control media (including social media) to the extent they do without more regulation, but not allowing a foreign geopolitical adversary to do it should be a no-brainer. YouTube, Twitter, Instagram, WhatsApp, and Facebook are all banned in China. The fact TikTok has been allowed in the US for as long as it has is ridiculous.

      • Yep. It just seems like they wrapped up a legitimate complaint into a forced sale for some connected people though too (Mnunchin)- yay American capitalism I guess.
      • YouTube, Twitter, Instagram, WhatsApp, and Facebook are all banned in China. The fact TikTok has been allowed in the US for as long as it has is ridiculous.

        Banning a foreign social media company makes us more like China, not less. I'm truly surprised how many Americans have jumped on the "China BAD! Let's beat them by emulating them!" bandwagon.

        • Even a broken clock is correct twice a day. And I've got a newsflash for you... there are other things [wikipedia.org] that China does better than we do in the US.

          Personally, I don't think a TikTok ban will happen or would even be productive if it passes. It will undoubtedly be challenged in court more or less instantly. I would be astounded if it will get all the way through all of the appeals in less than half a decade. And by then the kids who are on TikTok now will have moved on to whatever the next cool thing turn

      • YouTube, Twitter, Instagram, WhatsApp, and Facebook are all banned in China.

        This is a stupid fucking bit of logic right here.

        You know what else is banned in China? Speaking ill of their fucking dictator.
        Seek a better fucking benchmark, dude.

      • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

        The problem with that reasoning is that it would seem China needs to ban Apple products, Microsoft products including Bing, American movies... But they don't, they just require that anyone doing business there sticks to their laws, which is what most countries do.

        The real reason why the US wants to force the sale of TikTok is because it is politically quite left leaning. Lots of stuff about unions and worker's rights, how unfair the real-estate/rental market is, socialism and other left leaning politics...

    • The Feds are trying to confiscate a large part of TikTok's business by a forced sale to American businessmen. I gather this is because TikTok appears to be successful, whereas ex-Twitter and Pravda Social are going down in flames.

      It's not a ban and was never intended to be a ban. It's a direct threat based on, "nice company you have here. It would be a shame if something happened to it."

      You really think they care that much about that tiny bit of cash?

      The real reason is that the Feds (and legislators) are cluing into how powerful AI and analytics are and they're scared over what China is doing with the giant masses of data it's collecting from TikTok.

      What kinda stuff goes viral? How does info spread through networks? What's spreading right now? Legislator X is authoring a bill that touches our interests, what do we know about that legislator in specific?

      For a country looking to meddle in We

  • by christoban ( 3028573 ) on Thursday April 18, 2024 @10:52AM (#64404934)

    Hope it passes!!

  • Stop bundling! (Score:3, Insightful)

    by holostagram ( 6735694 ) on Thursday April 18, 2024 @10:53AM (#64404938)
    Here's an idea: prohibit the practice of bundling separate issues into a single vote. Why is it important to allow Mnuchin and related cronies to purchase TikTok before we vote to provide aid to Ukraine? Why are we linking Ukraine's fight for independence from tyranny to support for apartheid Israel's genocidal campaign against Palestine? Goddamn ridiculous. The United States is no beacon on a hill - it is a morally repugnant cesspool of incompetence and grift.
    • Here's an idea: prohibit the practice of bundling separate issues into a single vote. Why is it important to allow Mnuchin and related cronies to purchase TikTok before we vote to provide aid to Ukraine? Why are we linking Ukraine's fight for independence from tyranny to support for apartheid Israel's genocidal campaign against Palestine? Goddamn ridiculous. The United States is no beacon on a hill - it is a morally repugnant cesspool of incompetence and grift.

      Amend the Constitution with a single statement: Every law or resolution having the force of law shall relate to but one subject, and it shall be expressed in the title. In short, no riders.

      Just remember that this is a double-edged sword, because it will affect legislation you like as well as legislation you despise. Me? I'm willing to let it work that way, because then we'll know just where these politicians actually stand on an issue. Many riders are added to bills specifically to get the minority part

      • Re:Stop bundling! (Score:5, Informative)

        by jacks smirking reven ( 909048 ) on Thursday April 18, 2024 @11:44AM (#64405136)

        Yet if you dig deeper, the reason that congress critter voted against the bill was because of a rider, not because of the main subject.

        This is true but we also have to acknowledge that the only reason the rider tends to be there is pull someone elses vote to the bill in question.

        Riders are a result of negotiations to get things passed. The prevalence of them is a response to gridlock.

        If this was 20-30 years ago you are not complaining about "riders" but about "earmarks" (this "one bill per topic" argument isn't new, i've heard it all my life) but yet when Republicans banned earmarks in 2011 it actually worsened the problem:

        In December 2015, Citizens Against Government Waste (CAGW) claimed in their 2016 Congressional Pig Book,[25] that all the FY2016 earmarks were contained in the December 2016 omnibus 2000-page Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2016 which authorized $1.15 trillion in appropriations.[26] The CAGW argued that "Throwing all earmarks into one large bill makes it more difficult to identify and eliminate earmarks than if Congress adhered to regular order and considered the 12 appropriations bills individually."

        Horse trading is part of politics. If you outright ban it then effectively much like any other product the problem will be worked around either in the open or more likely just done in secret, a black market for legislations as it were.

        If you really want to move closer to the goal you prescribe then you have to attack the root cause, not the symptom and the cause is gridlock. Nobody wants to pass 10 smaller bills because that'll just never get anywhere so one giant bill it is. If you want people to vote 10 times instead of one we need people in Congress who actually believe in the process and legislation.

        Right now when half the legislators have it as their goal to not legislate and specifically talk about gumming up the systems, well, you get gridlock, giant riders and massive omnibus style bills.

        • Horse trading is part of politics. If you outright ban it then effectively much like any other product the problem will be worked around either in the open or more likely just done in secret, a black market for legislations as it were.

          If you really want to move closer to the goal you prescribe then you have to attack the root cause, not the symptom and the cause is gridlock. Nobody wants to pass 10 smaller bills because that'll just never get anywhere so one giant bill it is. If you want people to vote 10 times instead of one we need people in Congress who actually believe in the process and legislation.

          Right now when half the legislators have it as their goal to not legislate and specifically talk about gumming up the systems, well, you get gridlock, giant riders and massive omnibus style bills.

          I'm not saying that it isn't part of politics... what I am saying is that we keep hearing these bold statements about "needing transparency," yet riders or earmarks are clearly attempts to add opacity when someone tries to say, "That party is against X," because someone voted a certain way because of the riders (or earmarks). My issue is more the reason for why no riders... that being that if it is so important that it must be added as a rider to something, then it is important enough to have a standalone

          • Well I mean, it' transparent in that it's negotiated out in the open, the items in the bill are that it is in the bill. So while the process is opaque in ways since the negotiations are sorta in the backrooms but the outcomes are right out in front. The fact that bills are long and can be difficult to read, well, those are separate questions (Thinking of the Daily Show bit about Herman Cain "all treaties must fit on the back of a cereal box!") that happens with or without riders and earmarks.

            that being that if it is so important that it must be added as a rider to something, then it is important enough to have a standalone vote

            It's not a ma

    • Here's an idea: prohibit the practice of bundling separate issues into a single vote. Why is it important to allow Mnuchin and related cronies to purchase TikTok before we vote to provide aid to Ukraine? Why are we linking Ukraine's fight for independence from tyranny to support for apartheid Israel's genocidal campaign against Palestine? Goddamn ridiculous. The United States is no beacon on a hill - it is a morally repugnant cesspool of incompetence and grift.

      Because this is the only way the outside players can ever get the most egregious things to pass.

      WE'RE HANDING OUT LOLLIPOPS!
      But every third one is laced with cyanide.

      Then when someone balks, the proponents of the second half can scream at the top of their lungs to the press that their opponents are against handing out free lollipops! HOW DARE THEY NOT WANT FREE LOLLIPOPS FOR EVERYONE! HOW ANTI-AMERICAN!

      We need to clear our our government and start over. It's too filled with shitbags, and the shitbags ha

  • They are stealing it from the owners to then proceed to cut it up among themselves and friends.
    Anyone that thinks that this will protect children and/or increase national security is an idiot.
    • This action has an equally important function: It's a political football to distract people with while Patriot Act 3.2 is being quietly passed.
  • I mean, this is basically passing a law saying that company A cannot own something. Yes, it is China nd Bytedance, but if this stands, is there anything saying they couldn't do the exact same thing to another company. Could the dems pass a bill saying Trump must sell off all his ownership of Trump Media? I mean, this seems like a REALLY bad idea.

    • Depends on how many free vacations https://www.propublica.org/art... [propublica.org] and motor homes https://apnews.com/article/sup... [apnews.com] Bytedance is willing to gift.

    • Why can't they handle it like they have done with other foreign media moguls? I think they just made Rupert Murdoch become a US citizen or something like that.

      Just have Liang Rubo become a US Citizen... What's with the double standard?

      • Why can't they handle it like they have done with other foreign media moguls? I think they just made Rupert Murdoch become a US citizen or something like that.

        Separate thing.

        The US is able to impose domestic ownership requirements on broadcasting licenses, because they are the sole grantor of license for use of the airwaves.
        There is no issue with his ownership of News Corp.

        Restriction of corporate ownership is a bit more murky in the constitutional waters. The Equal Protection Clause comes into play (as TikTok is a legally incorporated US entity, it therefor has rights), as well as the constitutional restrictions on Bills of Attainder.
        Passing a bill specifi

  • So, if Congress bans TikTok, what then? There is NOT a great firewall of the USA. App store? Just type TikTok into your phone's browser. Congress can pass bills all day long but if they are unenforceable, nothing changes.
    • Presumably, they'll target distributors, as you do on any War on Drugs.
      Seize domains that host apks, threaten Apple and Google with big fines, etc.
  • How can you honestly post a story saying it's a ban? If you want to call it a ban, call it an "ownership ban". They're not banning TikTok, they're preventing the CCP from having a vast propaganda machine to influence the perceptions, opinions and behavior of 150 million Americans. It's not about data gathering or keylogging or even location tracking. Those are bad but the real bottom line is that it can be (and is being) used to influence public opinion, perception of reality and behavior of 150 million
  • The U.S. does censorship better than China! Got it! Can't have people seeing the truth from short form videos or making their own opinions from short form videos made by other people. OMG, we might get the lab leak wrong, the covid vaccine wrong, the Isrealie genocide wrong, the Russia stealing Hillary's election wrong, etc. Noone censors better than the U.S. government and we're going make sure of that by stealing back a company the U.S. allowed to be bought by China. Like, what world do we live in today?
  • Step 1: Be more like China

"Don't talk to me about disclaimers! I invented disclaimers!" -- The Censored Hacker

Working...