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In two days, barring any interference from the Supreme Court or the executive branch, the clock runs out on TikTok. Bytedance, TikTok’s parent company, must either sell to a U.S. company or shut down operations. This law will go into effect amidst widespread opposition, not only from creators and users, but from digital rights, free expression, and human rights groups, like U.S.-based Fight for the Future and China-based GreatFire.
Fight for the Future has been campaigning against the U.S. TikTok ban for years, pushing thousands of calls and emails to Congress against this ban through DontBanTikTok.com
As the U.S. government moves closer to potentially banning TikTok, Fight for the Future and GreatFire jointly express their opposition to this move. A ban on TikTok would undermine democratic values, validate authoritarian censorship tactics, and fail to address real threats to national security and user privacy.
Instead of pursuing censorship, lawmakers must prioritize meaningful reforms that protect digital rights and uphold freedom of expression. We also support the latest efforts led by Senator Ed Markey to extend the deadline for the TikTok ban, as highlighted in Fight for the Future’s recent post, emphasizing the need for thoughtful deliberation over hasty action.
“When analyzing China’s App Store, we saw firsthand how censorship creates a digital ecosystem completely isolated from the rest of the world. Chinese users are more digitally disconnected than ever, with limited access to global platforms and perspectives. By adopting similar tactics, the U.S. risks fragmenting the global internet and repeating the mistakes of authoritarian regimes,” said Benjamin Ismail, Director of GreatFire’s App Censorship Project.
“This case is reminiscent of the EU’s 2022 ban on RT and Sputnik, which had precisely the consequences we warned about. The ban left EU civil society in the dark about the narratives these media were presenting, failed to effectively address Russian propaganda, and instead provided justification for further actions by Russia,” Ismail added.
Governments often decried by the U.S. government for their efforts to censor the free flow of information online, like the Chinese Communist Party and the Kremlin, have long justified their own censorship by pointing to similar actions in democratic nations. The message becomes: “You ban TikTok, we ban Twitter; we’re all the same.” By forcing compliance with the TikTok ban, the US government also establishes a precedent for companies like Apple and Google to comply with censorship orders, both in the US and elsewhere, normalizing their role in government-led censorship of all kinds.
“TikTok going dark serves no one’s interest but authoritarian regimes. It disrupts the lives of creators, pushes users toward unsafe alternatives, and reinforces Big Tech’s monopoly by eliminating competition,” said Evan Greer (she/they), director of Fight for the Future.
Even if you ignore the blatant censorship and suppression that the TikTok ban represents, history shows that banning apps is rarely effective. Users will migrate to alternative platforms, as U.S. TikTok users are already doing by downloading RedNote or Xiaohongshu (小红书) in large numbers. Worse, bad actors may exploit users looking for workarounds, exposing them to spyware and malware disguised as “solutions.” A ban on TikTok would create new vulnerabilities, without solving any existing problems.
Instead of censorship, lawmakers should address the real issues:
We cannot respond to surveillance and censorship with more of the same. Instead, let’s seize this moment to advance real solutions: protect user privacy, regulate tech monopolies, and ensure an open internet for all.
Fight for the Future is a group of artists, engineers, activists, and technologists who have been behind the largest online protests in human history, channeling Internet outrage into political power to win public interest victories previously thought to be impossible. We fight for a future where technology liberates -- not oppresses -- us.
(508) 368-3026Citing the suit and other recent Republican attacks on the press, one critic said that "it sure looks like an open attempt at authoritarian control of the media."
U.S. President Donald on Friday made good on his pledge to sue The Wall Street Journal over its reporting that he wrote a "bawdy" letter for a leather-bound album that Ghislaine Maxwell prepared for the 50th birthday of Jeffrey Epstein, the financier and convicted sex offender who allegedly killed himself in jail while facing federal sex trafficking charges.
Maxwell, who is now serving a 20-year prison sentence "for conspiring with Jeffrey Epstein to sexually abuse minors," collected dozens of letters for the book, according to the Journal.
"This does not save taxpayers money; it simply shifts costs to hospitals, families and communities left to bear the health and economic consequences of increased pollution and weakened oversight."
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency said Friday that it will reduce its workforce by more than 3,700 and abolish its stand-alone science branch, moves that one group of former EPA officials warned will "gut" research and enforcement and "leave communities unprotected."
The EPA said the personnel cuts—which will be achieved via layoffs, voluntary early retirements, and other measures—will deliver $748.8 millions in savings.
"This action is not only morally indefensible, but also wasteful, strategically shortsighted, and completely counter to the entirety of your work while in the Senate."
More than 50 congressional Democrats on Friday condemned U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio's decision to withhold and destroy nearly 500 metric tons of emergency food aid for Afghanistan and Pakistan—a move that came a month after the Trump administration's State Department abolished all overseas positions at the United States Agency for International Development.
The USAID emergency food aid—which has been stored in a warehouse in Dubai for months and will expire before the end of July—is enough to feed around 1.5 million children for a week. The aid consists of high energy biscuits that are used primarily to satisfy the immediate nutritional needs of children enduring food crises. It is now set to be incinerated.