RedEye9 wrote on Mar 24, 2023, 14:42:
snippets
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"American social companies don’t have a great record with privacy and data security. I mean, look at Facebook and Cambridge Analytica."
While the European Union has far-reaching privacy laws, Congress has not agreed on national privacy legislation, leaving Americans’ online data rights up to a patchwork of state and federal laws. In the meantime, reams of data on Americans’ shopping habits, browsing history and real-time location, collected by websites and mobile apps, is bought and sold on the open market in a multi-hundred-billion-dollar industry.
If the Chinese Communist Party wanted that data, it could get huge volumes of it without ever tapping TikTok. (In fact, TikTok says it has stopped tracking U.S. users’ precise location, putting it ahead of many American apps on at least one important privacy front.)
Worries about TikTok’s addictive algorithms, its effects on teens’ mental health, and its hosting of propaganda and extreme content are common to its American rivals, including Google’s YouTube and Meta’s Instagram. Congress has not meaningfully addressed those, either.
the above snippets from https://wapo.st/3lCs8ND
America’s online privacy problems are much bigger than TikTok
Concerns of Chinese data access highlight Congress’s own failure to protect Americans’ personal information
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Now why are we going after TikTok again?
Yes, security. It's right there in the post you made, 13th word in. They don't care about privacy from American companies, because that doesn't threaten security. TikTok, being Chinese, does.