With the change in TikTok ownership, TikTok users in the U.S. are collectively freaking out over the company’s updated privacy policy after being alerted to the changes through an in-app message.

The revised document details the U.S. joint venture’s conditions for using its service, including the specific location information it may collect.

Many users are also posting to social media about language found in the policy, which says that TikTok could collect sensitive information about its users, including their “sexual life or sexual orientation, status as transgender or nonbinary, citizenship or immigration status.”

  • Voroxpete@sh.itjust.works
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    23 days ago

    Yeah, remember when Trump “saved” Tiktok? This is what he was doing. You fucking idiots celebrated when you should have been taking it as a sign to leave that app and never return.

  • CharlesDarwin@lemmy.world
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    22 days ago

    Here’s a hint:

    STOP USING THE APP

    Or just stop using the platform altogether. The reason that most of these things are “apps” is so that they can track you better, not for the “experience”.

    JFC.

    • Akuchimoya@startrek.website
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      22 days ago

      Around two or three years ago, I was on a sales call/app demo as a potential customer–not for TikTok, of course. It’s an American company and I’m based in Canada. I asked the sales guy about their data storage, encryption, privacy, and the like; he didn’t know. I said I needed to know that if our group uses the application to communicate internally about, for example, helping refugees, the government won’t be able to access it. The guy asked me if that really was a concern.

      Well, you tell me now, sales guy, is it really a concern?

    • Ruigaard@slrpnk.net
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      22 days ago

      I agree, but the bad thing is, a lot of people (especially kids) are addicted to TikTok and other apps. They crave it. So similar to smoking, they know it’s bad but still can’t quit.

    • SirEDCaLot@lemmy.today
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      22 days ago

      Amen. Unfortunately I feel like there’s a whole generation that has come up with a different mindset. Not that you want to stand up for your rights, but that you will do whatever you want and complain about it if it violates your rights or your privacy, but not actually stop doing it.

      I feel like the idea of proactively standing up for your rights or what you believe in rather than just complaining or posting online is no longer in in common parlance.

      • CharlesDarwin@lemmy.world
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        22 days ago

        Yeah, I wonder what percentage of various generations would be able to explain who EFF is or what they do. As a for instance.

        I’m glad to see that it’s fairly common to see people talking about/using things like a VPN, for instance, but…if you then “log in” to whatever brand for a “better experience”? Okay, you hid your traffic from your ISP but, not much else. All that data is flowing into that company(ies) servers, never to be deleted. If you trust that company as being “one of the good ones” right now, doesn’t mean it will stay that way. Look no further than something like Xitter - many people believed they were “good” (lol) before fElon’s takeover, most people sure don’t think so now. All that data you gave up is now his.

      • architect@thelemmy.club
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        21 days ago

        There’s also a matter of small businesses and artists that despite what people here might think need platforms like this because regular people are too fucking stupid to go to a website.

        Or I guess we could all just fucking starve to death and you could all just go shopping at Walmart.

        • SirEDCaLot@lemmy.today
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          20 days ago

          I’m sorry but I don’t believe that privacy violations and massive online tracking is the only solution to that. There are other platforms that don’t track nearly as much, and emerging decentralized platforms where one could build a similar following if that platform got the same kind of mainstream usage. This is not a faustian deal anyone needs to make.

  • Jo Miran@lemmy.ml
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    23 days ago

    Please remember this name; Larry Ellison. He’s the biggest bogeyman most people aren’t even aware is there.

    • RedstoneValley@sh.itjust.works
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      22 days ago

      The good news is that everything Larry Ellison touches dies slowly and painfully. Oracle’s touch of death is well known in the tech community… Java, MySQL, etc.

      • criss_cross@lemmy.world
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        22 days ago

        They have no idea how to run anything that requires community goodwill. It’s actually impressive how awful they are.

      • CharlesDarwin@lemmy.world
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        22 days ago

        Eh, Java is probably bigger than ever, but there’s been lots of open source/alt forks and try as they might, I don’t think Oracle has monetized it all that well after they bought Sun.

        Same with MySQL - I don’t know that its use has slowed down all that much, even if most people are using MariaDB and calling it MySQL.

        So it’s more like once Ellison acquires something, people do their best to get his stench off of it if they can. Or at least fork it and not give him any money. But even if all they made was just their DB, they’d still be more or less printing money, given so many things running on Oracle and how much it can cost to use it at the enterprise level.

        • RedstoneValley@sh.itjust.works
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          22 days ago

          I’d argue that Java is not bigger than ever, it’s more of an established legacy language used almost exclusively in business applications today. Comparing it to COBOL in that sense would be mean but there are similarities. When I started with Java in the late 90s it was something completely different. It became popular because it was open and easy to learn. Java gained a huge community quickly. Now there are some technical reasons why Java lost its popularity among the general tech community over time but as I witnessed it the major downfall happened when Sun Microsystems was acquired by Oracle and the new licensing model was just horrible. Many of us didn’t want to use a language that wasn’t open and moved on. Others created open source forks like you said. I remember we were forced to move to OpenJDK in the company where I was employed. At that time OpenJDK was was neither fast nor complete. It was a shitshow and I can assure you we did not have a good time. Eventually we phased out Java entirely and built the next version on a new stack. And today there are a lot of open and modern general purpose languages available so there is no need to use Java for new projects unless you want to integrate it into an existing Java ecosystem.

          And it was basically the same story with MySQL. You actually said it - “people do their best to get his stench off of it if they can”. In most cases that means moving on to something that isn’t owned by Oracle.

  • Lucidlethargy@sh.itjust.works
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    22 days ago

    Do you own a Tok Tok account?

    Fuck you.

    Sorry for the bluntness… But that’s how we feel. Fuck you, you fucking shithole.

  • FiniteBanjo@feddit.online
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    23 days ago

    The app developed and operated by an authoritarian military psyops is collecting data and promoting authoritarianism?!

    No way!

    /s

      • Ech@lemmy.ca
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        22 days ago

        The change is who the information is going to, not that it was collected.

        • Taldan@lemmy.world
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          22 days ago

          This very article is about a change in the privacy policy, indicating a change in what was collected. The CCP/ByteDance has zero reason to have been previously tracking immigration status of US users

        • Bronzebeard@lemmy.zip
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          22 days ago

          Thanks for letting us know you have no clue what we’re talking about. They literally sent a mandatory survey out in the new patch.

  • fodor@lemmy.zip
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    22 days ago

    Freak out, they say, well that’s a interesting way of describing it. It sounds like a pretty good thing to freak out about. Maybe it’s not freaking out at all, maybe it’s reacting with a modicum of common sense at something that’s incredibly scary.

  • tubthumper@lemmy.world
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    22 days ago

    I called this shit 7 months ago. (Check my very first post.)

    Now, at that time, there was discussion of “public-private” cooperation concerning the cybersecurity of that data so it could (paraphrasing) “stay in the hands of American people.” Lolol.

    No doubt a similar agreement is in place and this shit is vectored directly to the US gov.

    (Sorry, I start getting long-winded here.)

    Fuck the technocracy. Bunch of cowardly assholes using and clearly planning to use Americans’ personal info against them en masse. The algorithms have manipulated us, pitting wage slave against wage slave. And all that extracted data will continue being utilized in siccing the brownshirts they rabbit-holed and radicalized onto conveniently corralled targets. Us.

    We have to fight their algorithm manipulation with not only data poisoning and/or removing ourselves from the tech altogether, but good ol’ fashioned interpersonal psychological manipulation. And what I mean by that is physically talking to humans outside our bubble. Find some common ground. Believe it or not, it still exists. Use seemingly innocuous quips to plant seeds of doubt. Try to reach the human that may or may not still exist in that withered husk you work with, that maga uncle with a maga son so in the closet it hurts, the ones just acting like it’s all okay. Help them see the writing on the wall that they, too, will lose.

    By completely disengaging with people we think are beyond redemption, we are possibly allowing so many with a shred of heart left to continue down the rabbit hole in private. People are stupid. And we know this division is by design. Fight it with well-placed words before they do something irredeemable and we have nothing left to fight with but arms.

    A vast number of maga figureheads and followers sure seem to be living in a world of shared psychosis. And when you’re in a psychosis, it genuinely feels like everyone’s out to get you for reasons you can only justify with increasingly difficult mental gymnastics. But it’s all manufactured by the very real psychopaths in power, the ones ensuring the cult psychosis keeps perpetuating.

    I guess what I’m saying is there’s still time to pull some of these followers or in-betweeners out of it by shifting the focus of what they think they have to fear by showing them what they really need to fear. A spin on killing them with kindness.

    Idk tho. I’m just mad all of this dystopian hatred shit didn’t just stay inside all the books I read growing up.

    • LavaPlanet@sh.itjust.works
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      22 days ago

      It’s a cult, it’s literally using cult trapping tactics, that’s why people are so delusional. Knowing that, might help in how you approach, should you choose to try.

      Look after yourself, too. It’s all a lot to take on, and they want everyone stuck in fight or flight, because it literally shuts down your critical thinking. The most empowering thing to do, right now, is beat their game against you, and find ways to bring yourself down out of fight or flight, after seeing the stuff going on, because your fight or flight can’t tell the difference between being there and watching a video. Complete the stress cycle after you see this stuff, hum, sing, dance or go for a walk, are some options.

      Find ways to decompress. Maybe it’s going to get hard, having good strategies to help yourself cope, and learning tools and techniques to undo the damage seeing this does, is going to make this an easier ride. We can beat them. They know that. They are scared of us. We will get through this.

    • architect@thelemmy.club
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      21 days ago

      They think we’re bad people. Even when we’re being good people and being nice and very sweet and etc., etc. etc. they get told by fucking Fox News were bad and that’s all they care about.

      It’s not going to be that easy. I talked to them plenty because my husband won’t let me get the fuck away from his family. Oh they seem so fucking nice. They’ll agree with every fucking thing you say. And they’ll sell you right the fuck out for Trump. No doubt.

      They would literally tell you how awful everything that is going on today is and then fucking put you on a list tomorrow.

      I know I’ve watched until their own fucking daughter how they regret her going to college because she learned woke values. How she’s a bad person and I don’t even know why to be honest. She did everything her parents expected of her To do literally graduated right before Trump became president. The moment he became president she was a bad person.

      Explain that—these people doing that to their own daughter and she’s the golden child of the family. They would sell out their own kids they will sell all of us out.

  • lepinkainen@lemmy.world
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    22 days ago

    We used to be anonymous on the internet. We had screen names, didn’t show our faces or tell people where we lived.

    This is what we get when sharing your face becomes the default.

    • architect@thelemmy.club
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      21 days ago

      I call it the sickness. You catch it from turning the lens onto yourself for too long. Once you have it, it’s terminal.

      The sickness asks how will this play not what do you think?

      And what happens is the difference between the lens the self and the audience begins to blur until you are no longer pretending anymore.

  • Burninator05@lemmy.world
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    22 days ago

    Maybe the lawyer isn’t lying but it doesn’t matter why the data was collected. Once it is collected it can be used for anything.

  • Doug Holland@lemmy.world
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    23 days ago

    A rule of journalism: Unless it’s meant literally, when a news headline includes words like blasts, blisters, bombshell, burns, claps back, drags, epic self-own, explodes, freaks out, goes viral, humbled, humiliated, melts down, mind-blowing, rages, rips, roasts, shocking, skewers, slams, staggering, stuns, or trolls, find a better source.

  • Avicenna@programming.dev
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    22 days ago

    the most apt punishment for these fascist supporting billionaires is to tank their investments to the ground by not using them

      • nforminvasion@lemmy.world
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        20 days ago

        Yeah the top 10% in the US account for 55% of market activity. There’s no way boycotts and divesting are as impactful as they used to be. Thankfully there are many other methods of throwing down the system, but they have to be used together. A general strike by itself will not accomplish much, but that combined with community militias and fierce mutual aid networks caring for neighbors, has a higher chance. Combined with mass noncompliance and subterfuge in multiple layers, we might be able to win this without a full hot civil war. But we’ll see.