So many people I've casually observed have seen the news and are onboard with a TikTok ban because they hate it so much, not realizing that this bill has dire, far-reaching consequences that affect more than just TikTok.
Which is why I say: Please, please put your blind hatred aside and realize what's being done here, because this affects so much more than TikTok.
@xodium Already sent emails to my representatives, this is a huge deal that needs more scrutiny by everyone.
I'm admittedly in that camp that wants TikTok gone, but I had to walk away from my desk to recompose myself after reading the bill in question. I'm both livid and appalled that the feds are trying to pull this, and all under the guise of "banning TikTok", knowing most people won't look into it further...
@Rosa @xodium Speaking for myself, yes. I’m of the opinion that all the major centralized social media platforms need to go, not just those mentioned.
One could argue that goes against free speech, but they’re huge corporate entities that can be bought out and controlled by those willing to influence what is presented on those platforms. At least a decentralized platform like Masto is more resistant to such corporate influence/censorship.
@Rosa @xodium In a sense, yes.
There is a conspiracy theory that the media outlets in the US were bought out and consolidated by CIA shell corporations a very long time ago. What we see in the news is a carefully orchestrated attempt at distracting the people from real issues by encouraging infighting and deliberately pushing misinformation. The internet is the next thing to control, and the centralized social media platforms have been their most recent target.
@Rosa @xodium Can’t say who’s involved for sure, honestly. You should rightfully be cautious of conspiracy theories, but they usually have a grain of truth to them. Takes a lot of digging and due diligence to weed out the misinformation, but a common theme can be found.
That’s the prevailing narrative that’s told, but it’s difficult to say if that’s the complete truth. What I know for sure is that the old internet allowed information to freely spread without hindrance.
If that's true, why would we need the Restrict Act to restrict something that's already restricted by our government?
Grains of truth. Well there are a lot of conspiracy theories, which I see as nothing more than vehicles of disinformation and misdirection.
Taking them all away doesn't solve any problems.
But breaking up monopolies does. More competition, not regulated monopolies, benefits everyone, imo.