Bill Unveiled To Ban TikTok From U.S. Unless Company Makes Massive Changes

Unless you buy everything in cash, the corporations already know plenty about you. I have received junk mails for bagels when I bought bagels at the supermarket, and stopped receiving them when I stopped buying bagels.

And if the corporations know about you, then you can be sure the government will also find a way.

This will only get worse with IoT when everything from your toaster to your shoes and winter jacket will be connected to the internet. Anybody who wants privacy will have to live off the grid in some forest bunker.

Dude I get that lol

This isn't about "junk mail". I hardly receive robocalls at all. 1/4th-1/3rd of all my voicemails are from Chinese numbers. My phone tells me if the call is coming from outside the US (which country) or inside the US (which state).

I have voicemails saved that are entirely in Chinese. :ROFLMAO: :ROFLMAO: :ROFLMAO:

Edit1: I haven't interacted with Chinese corps within the US either.
 
Bingo!

Merchants/Mercantilism have also been historically under the thumbs of Chinese rulers, again "political rulers". Unlike the West where mercantilism gave way to new ideas/nations/welfare, in China is someone like Jack Ma speaks up, he'll end up being removed from the public sphere of influence for a long time. Then reemerge as a "humble servant of the State".

We, the US, never want to help such a "State", which's why we'll take precautionary pro-active measures against them.



This has to do with National Security first and foremost. Freedom of Speech comes later.

You should be asking the Chinese why they don't allow US apps inside China....whereas US has allowed Chinese apps into the US. But then again, TikTok (like any other app) is collecting massive amounts of data which can be used against the US in many ways.

Which is why there's a bill going around proposing a ban. I and others already explained all this above.

As for the Zionist media, well that's also part of US N.S. sadly. But there are a lot of counter-media running in the US like Al-Jazeera and others too. Did you forget about them?

The US gives room to all global voices.....until they infringe on National Security, that is.

Alright then, so far so good.

Why isnt zionist media and its backmen, who has complete control of American politics, regarded a national security issue? Is it because the CIA, NSA is also compromised?.

Why is a foreign entity like Israel allowed to roam free in the US?
 
Dude I get that lol

This isn't about "junk mail". I hardly receive robocalls at all. 1/4th-1/3rd of all my voicemails are from Chinese numbers. My phone tells me if the call is coming from outside the US (which country) or inside the US (which state).

I have voicemails saved that are entirely in Chinese. :ROFLMAO: :ROFLMAO: :ROFLMAO:

Edit1: I haven't interacted with Chinese corps within the US either.

I get voice calls and WhatsApp messages from China, Thailand, India and a bunch of countries. These are just common criminals, not some government conspiracy.

Most of the Chinese calls (as my Chinese friends tell me) ask the victim to pay a small fee to release an alleged package held in Customs. By design these calls are made to people with foreign sounding names who might reasonably expect foreign parcels. Lots of elderly people fall victim to these scams.
 
Alright then, so far so good.

Why isnt zionist media and its backmen, who has complete control of American politics, regarded a national security issue? Is it because the CIA, NSA is also compromised?.

Why is a foreign entity like Israel allowed to roam free in the US?

I find it amusing and predictable when the Australian media writes alarmist articles about Arab or Chinese origin Australians defending Palestine or China, respectively. They are subtly accused of divided loyalties.

Meanwhile, nobody bats an eye when other Australians lobby on behalf of Israel or India.

The Zionist control is so absolute that even to suggest or debate the subject is considered off limits or uncomfortable. In the 'free world', you can openly debate whether Muslims are terrorists or Christians are pedophiles, but you must not debate Zionist control of Western governments and media.
 
NEW: “TikTok shareholders who make any ‘disparaging statement’ about the company risk having their entire holdings seized.”
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Current and former TikTok employees who criticize the company risk losing any stock they own—in some cases worth millions of dollars—under a shareholder agreement that bans disparaging the social media service.

Like many tech companies, TikTok awards restricted stock units to its employees that vest over time as part of their compensation. The shares incentivize employees to work hard and stay with the company in the hopes of big paydays.

But TikTok is also using the stock compensation as a tool to tamp down dissent. Any current or former employees who own shares risk losing them by speaking out about a wide range of topics.

Five attorneys who practice shareholder law told Fortune that TikTok’s non-disparagement provision is unusual, but not illegal so long as it doesn’t prevent, intimidate, or punish employees for filing complaints with government agencies. For example, workers can’t be blocked from reporting dangerous working conditions or nefarious company practices to the Occupational Safety and Health Administration or the Securities and Exchange Commission.

“We see non-disparagement clauses in a variety of different contracts. It’s a little unusual that you would see it in a shareholder agreement, but it’s not out of the question,” says Joshua Hollingsworth, who is a partner at Barnes & Thornburg and co-chairs the firm's entrepreneurial and emerging companies team.

TikTok’s shareholder contract, viewed by Fortune, says shareholders cannot “directly or indirectly make any critical, adverse or disparaging statement or comment about the Company or any of the Company's subsidiaries, affiliates, directors, officers, or employees.” If shareholders are caught doing so, “all of the participant’s restricted share units will be immediately forfeited.”

TikTok went on to say that shareholders have some leeway to talk to authorities about confidential matters and trade secrets as part of ongoing investigations. But attorneys said it’s unclear whether that exception applies to filing complaints with the government.

Jason Navarino, a law partner in Riker & Danzig’s tax and corporate groups, also questioned TikTok’s vague definition of disparagement by saying that it makes it difficult to know what the boundaries are. Furthermore, the legal landscape about non-disparagement clauses is evolving, he said. For example, last year, the National Labor Relations Board ruled that overly broad non-disparagement clauses are unlawful in severance agreements.

“The question is: What’s disparagement? There’s a fine line between ‘you’re not going to say anything bad about the company,’ and prohibiting an employee from saying anything about the company,” Navarino said.


TikTok did not respond to Fortune’s multiple requests for comment about its non-disparagement clause or whether it has ever seized stock from any shareholders.

Patrick Spaulding Ryan, TikTok’s former lead technical program manager who owns tens of thousands of company shares, is putting TikTok’s non-disparagement clause to the test. On Wednesday, Ryan filed a complaint with California’s Department of Industrial Relations’ Retaliation Unit after TikTok failed to include him in its latest program to buy back shares from current and former employees at set prices. He accused the company, owned by China-based ByteDance, of leaving him out of the offer because he had criticized the disparagement clause in a post on LinkedIn. Being left out is costing him millions of dollars and qualifies as retaliation, he said in his complaint.

In his LinkedIn post, published on Feb. 21, Ryan wrote: “ByteDance's non-disparagement clause is illegal…Anyone impacted or threatened by ByteDance with this clause should report the violation to the Department of Industrial Relations.”

The law in California, where TikTok and Ryan are based, says that non-disparagement clauses can’t stop employees from speaking out about retaliation, discrimination, harassment, and other unlawful acts at work.

Ryan and another ex-TikTok worker who owns shares and who spoke to Fortune anonymously for fear of retribution by TikTok, said the non-disparagement clause wasn’t included in the shareholder agreements they signed. Only after employee shareholders threaten legal action or say they need to see the clause for their recordkeeping does the company reveal what’s in the clause, said the two former TikTok workers.

Ryan, who is now an attorney with his own tech law practice, hopes his complaint will attract the attention of California’s labor commissioner and trigger an investigation into TikTok, where he led parts of its security operations from March 2020 to June 2022.

This comes amid a rocky week for TikTok with a bipartisan House of Representatives’ Energy and Commerce Committee unanimously supporting a bill that would force ByteDance to sell TikTok within 165 days. Representatives also criticized the company for flooding their phone lines with calls from upset users who believed the company was calling for a total ban, which House China Select Committee Chair Mike Gallagher (R-Wis.) told reporters is an “outright lie.”

TikTok shareholders received the latest buyback offer on March 4 and have until March 29 to tender their shares for sale. On March 5 and March 8, Ryan contacted the company by email about its failure to send him the offer, and has yet to receive any response.

In October, Ryan had communicated with the TikTok-ByteDance legal team to express his concerns about a related issue involving the company’s willingness to buy shares at a higher price from current employees than former ones. At the time, the company responded that the provision was included in the shareholder terms and conditions, to which Ryan had agreed, and that tendering his shares was voluntary.

Ryan is among several former TikTok employees who haven’t received the latest share buyback offer. He and the others are among the 300-plus people who communicate their grievances in a group chat for ex-TikTok workers. They say there is a correlation between the people who weren’t invited to sell their shares and those who’ve complained about TikTok.

Ryan said he is unaware of TikTok seizing shares from any current or former employees for violating the disparagement clause.

It’s possible that Ryan didn’t receive the latest buyback offer due to a system glitch, administrative error, or a decision by the company that he is ineligible for reasons other than violating the non-disparagement clause. But Ryan is convinced otherwise, and said that if he does eventually receive the invitation after the delay, it will be because the company meant to intimidate and silence him.

It could take months, even years, for California regulators to resolve Ryan’s complaint. But any ruling may have enormous implications for shareholder law. If regulators say TikTok did nothing wrong, other companies could add broad non-disparagement clauses to their employee shareholder agreements. If it rules in Ryan’s favor, TikTok and other companies may have to strike or revise the non-disparagement clauses, potentially opening the floodgates for employee complaints about protected topics.


Unbelievable @F-22Raptor @Hamartia Antidote The sooner this app gets blocked, the better! The CCP doesn't even bother hiding their intentions anymore!

TikTok has already snatched up a bunch of data I hope this nonsense ends soon!!! If the Senate blocks garbage TikTok, the app's toast especially if European countries jump on board and do the same.
 
Why isnt zionist media and its backmen, who has complete control of American politics, regarded a national security issue? Is it because the CIA, NSA is also compromised?.

Why is a foreign entity like Israel allowed to roam free in the US?

Zionists aren't in "complete control" they just have a very big lobby inside the US. CIA/NSA knows about them but since they're "allies" they're not touched much.

Not to mention why would Zionists hurt the hand the feeds them?

Zionists need the US more than the US needs them anyways.

I get voice calls and WhatsApp messages from China, Thailand, India and a bunch of countries. These are just common criminals, not some government conspiracy.

Glad I'm not the only one although I haven't been getting any robocalls from outside US much, other than China or UK. Your list is quite bigger than mine. 😂


Most of the Chinese calls (as my Chinese friends tell me) ask the victim to pay a small fee to release an alleged package held in Customs. By design these calls are made to people with foreign sounding names who might reasonably expect foreign parcels. Lots of elderly people fall victim to these scams.

Idk if the idiots sending robocalls/voicemails think I actually speak Chinese (other than a few words here and there) cuz all my robocalls/voicemails are in Chinese and not English so I never know what the F they're saying. 😂
 
This must be a joke

Joke is to assume a bunch of Zionists have complete control over US Corporate media...

If that was the case then no one would be live streaming all the pro-Palestinian protests going on around the US, like CNN and others.

This ain't PTV or Pakistan where outsiders/insiders can exert total control. :ROFLMAO:
 
Joke is to assume a bunch of Zionists have complete control over US Corporate media...

If that was the case then no one would be live streaming all the pro-Palestinian protests going on around the US, like CNN and others.

This ain't PTV or Pakistan where outsiders/insiders can exert total control. :ROFLMAO:

Whatever makes you happy.
Cannot wake up someone who pretends to be asleep.
 
Whatever makes you happy.
Cannot wake up someone who pretends to be asleep.

Nah I'm fully awake, as a US resident/citizen I'm fully aware of what goes on in the US.

As an outsider, you're free to have your own opinion but I know the truth to a better degree.
 
Nah I'm fully awake, as a US resident/citizen I'm fully aware of what goes on in the US.

As an outsider, you're free to have your own opinion but I know the truth to a better degree.

May be.
An outsider can have a pretty well informed and objective assesment.

Often an insider is too ingrained in a systems and its inherent power supporting mass propaganda, to even be able to make questions. Thats the nature of the propaganda itself.
 
May be.
An outsider can have a pretty well informed and objective assesment.

Often an insider is too ingrained in a systems and its inherent power supporting mass propaganda, to even be able to make questions. Thats the nature of the propaganda itself.

I can easily spot "propaganda". Can do everything else you mentioned also.
 
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Smh 😤
 
"OH MY GOD, I read TikTok's Terms of Service...This is from TikTok's Policy:

All right, it says we collect certain information about the device you use to access the platform, such as your IP address and user region; this is really crazy. User Agent, mobile carrier timezone settings, identifiers for advertising purposes, model of your device, the device system, network type, device IDs, your screen resolution, and operating system, app, and file names and types.

So all your apps and file names, all the things you have filed away on your phone, they have access to that file names and types, keystroke patterns or rhythms. So they're monitoring your keystrokes.

This means they know every fucking thing you type while battery state audio settings and connected audio devices where you log in from multiple devices to be able to use your profile information to identify your activity across devices.

We may also associate you with information collected from devices other than those you knew you use to log into the platform.

Meaning they can use other computers that you're not even using to log into Tiktok they can suck the data off that That's what you're agreeing to when you download and start using Tiktok."

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Fck TikTok real talk!!!
 

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