Pierce Manhammer
Moderator
Good fackin' riddance
It's a scourge. I know people that LIVE on that shyte. Everything new they try, news they hear of, everything they learned on TT. It's pathetic.
I agree. The issue is that the Chinese Gov. are in control of TikTok and are spying on Americans. The Chinese Gov. controls just about every aspect of their citizens life. They control your bank account....look it up.Not a TikTok fan or user, nonetheless it's tough to get elated over news that the government is banning something else again
I agree 100%
Good fackin' riddance
It's a scourge. I know people that LIVE on that shyte. Everything new they try, news they hear of, everything they learned on TT. It's pathetic.
I agree. The issue is that the Chinese Gov. are in control of TikTok and are spying on Americans. The Chinese Gov. controls just about every aspect of their citizens life. They control your bank account....look it up.
People simply buy a VPN. Internet searches for VPNs skyrocketed.Let's all display an ample helping of compassion for folks living in the wilds of East Texas. With PornHub gone, indulging their long-held yet unconsumated fantasies of bringing the sheep out of the pasture, and into the bedroom, is the only viable option they have left.
So we need to trash the 1st Amendment because of that? That said, the ChiCom menace is a valid reason to take it down, or at least force it to be owned by Americans & regulated on a national security basis.
Good fackin' riddance
It's a scourge. I know people that LIVE on that shyte. Everything new they try, news they hear of, everything they learned on TT. It's pathetic.
It's OVER for LibertyCels.Trampling on personal freedoms because of one’s sexual frustration is pathetic.
But 99% of the VPNs don't actually secure your data, so it's a joke.People simply buy a VPN. Internet searches for VPNs skyrocketed.
I like Tik Tok enough to not care enough about that lol.An online property is not the “public square” it is private property so 1st Amendment rights do not apply, if they did I could demand that the New York Times publish my oped.
no shirt, no shoes, no service
p.s. the Chinese are up to no good, we know this they engage in spycraft in the US all the time - last week another scientist was convicted. If you think they’re not enabling in shady Shiite with TikTok you’re not paying attention.
VPNS encrypt your connection to a remote network, such as telecommuting to work. If you ever use public WIFI, a VPN helps protects you from hackers (unless the VPN itself is hacked, which sometimes happens). VPNs are only one layer of protection, though, nothing is a silver bullet. For the greatest protection, you have to use multiple layers of protection. VPNS advertise security as a selling point, which is largely moot because of HTTPS connections, although the primary reason somebody would use a VPN, other than telecommuting, is to spoof their geolocation. I use a VPN to watch foreign television.But 99% of the VPNs don't actually secure your data, so it's a joke.
An online property is not the “public square” it is private property so 1st Amendment rights do not apply, if they did I could demand that the New York Times publish my oped.
no shirt, no shoes, no service
p.s. the Chinese are up to no good, we know this they engage in spycraft in the US all the time - last week another scientist was convicted. If you think they’re not enabling in shady Shiite with TikTok you’re not paying attention.
Gov't should not be banning media.
What I'm saying is, if a governmental authority request user data, 99% of VPN companies will comply immediately and share all their customers info. It wouldn't surprise me if they sell your data to advertisers, too. Mullvad is one of the few VPN services that refuses to share and in fact last time I checked, they don't even store the data to begin with.VPNS encrypt your connection to a remote network, such as telecommuting to work. If you ever use public WIFI, a VPN helps protects you from hackers (unless the VPN itself is hacked, which sometimes happens). VPNs are only one layer of protection, though, nothing is a silver bullet. For the greatest protection, you have to use multiple layers of protection. VPNS advertise security as a selling point, which is largely moot because of HTTPS connections, although the primary reason somebody would use a VPN, other than telecommuting, is to spoof their geolocation. I use a VPN to watch foreign television.
So, when we talk about the whole "public square" idea in relation to the First Amendment, it gets a bit tricky with online forums. See, the First Amendment is all about keeping the government from messing with our speech and gatherings, ensuring we can speak our minds freely in public spaces. But here's the twist: online forums aren't really public spaces in the legal sense because private companies run them. It's like they're inviting us into their digital living rooms to chat.The internet IS part of the public square though, at least if that term means anything still. Same way communication via telephone has been part of the public square, once that technology became ubiquitous in our society
There's a big difference between the government sticking it's nose into such things when they're being used in the commission of a felony, and Uncle Sam clamping down our collective capacity to express ourselves freely, under the guise of "national security"