Tag: extraordinarily

  • Opinion | The Extraordinarily Misguided Attack on TikTok

    Opinion | The Extraordinarily Misguided Attack on TikTok

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    The stated concern is that because TikTok’s parent company is Chinese owned, the government in Beijing could ultimately access data on hundreds of millions of American users. As FBI Director Christopher Wray said, “This is a tool that is ultimately within the control of the Chinese government — and it, to me, it screams out with national security concerns.” The other concern held by some critics is that the Chinese government could use TikTok’s algorithms to barrage American users with disinformation and propaganda, potentially creating domestic havoc in the United States.

    These issues can’t be dismissed out right, but they are almost certainly overblown, according to security experts.

    The data of TikTok users — age, region, passwords, names, buying habits — is no different than that collected by countless online merchants and other social media sites. While that data is private and encrypted, much of it can either be scraped anonymously (and often is for use in the vast and profitable commercial data market) or already accessed by cyber spy agencies. User data isn’t particularly secure anywhere. Whatever the Chinese government wanted to glean from TikTok users, it likely can glean anyway, regardless of where that data is stored.

    Then there’s the chaos engine theory — that TikTok on instructions from the Chinese government could sow confusion in domestic politics or promote a certain ideology in the United States. It has echoes of Russian meddling in the 2016 election, which naturally causes some alarm. But while a foreign government can try to use social media to spread disinformation and spur division, the net effect of that in the context of so much other noise in the cyber world is unclear. Could it amplify an already fractious political climate? Maybe, but almost certainly not on its own and not in any clear directional way, and that assumed full and total control of TikTok by Beijing, which is something hardly anyone currently believes or alleges.

    But let’s say that the Communist Party of China could and will use TikTok. Even then, banning the app is a terrible idea for the United States. Why? Because the foundational strength of the United States is that it is an open society where information can and does flow freely. Banning TikTok, a platform of often astonishingly creative and often incredibly banal content that reaches 150 million Americans, is a step back from an open society and toward a closed one.

    That is why the United States mulling a TikTok ban is a very different thing than, say, India, which has already barred TikTok. The government of Narendra Modi in India has been tightening its censorship in multiple spheres, and its moves against TikTok and other Chinese apps are part of a broader attempt to control information. The United States, however, has a rich tradition of free speech and has erected a legal apparatus designed to protect it and encourage the open flow of information. It’s not just the First Amendment to the Constitution and subsequent court cases and precedent designed to bolster the right of free expression; it’s the implied link between a healthy, robust democracy and the ability to communicate all ideas, even ones that many find wrong and reprehensible, without fear of censorship or government suppression.

    The Chinese government holds no such values, and indeed it believes that information should first and foremost serve the interests of the state. Yes, the Chinese constitution does provide for the right of free speech but not if such speech “undermines the interests of the state.” Free speech in China is not seen as a key pillar of societal strength; it is provisional and valuable only insofar as it does not challenge the primary of the Communist Party.

    The United States, by contrast, has championed an open society as the ultimate guarantor of human liberty and prosperity, and as one of the most robust checks on the untrammeled exercise of government or corporate power. We can debate if openness and free speech do in fact serve those functions, but they at the very least make exercising control more difficult. And the sheer noisy vibrancy of American society has been a notable contrast to many other countries over time and one of the hallmarks of a democracy that has allowed individuals to say and do what they choose.

    That has, in turn, been the fuel for a rich culture of innovation and creativity, scientifically and artistically, including the invention and commercialization of the cyber world that we all now inhabit. TikTok may be a Chinese app, but it is built on American innovation.

    But if TikTok as a social media app par excellence is in essence a manifestation of American strength, banning TikTok is in essence a mimicking of Chinese policy. China has created its own internal intraweb and erected its “Great Fire Wall” to keep unwelcome information out of the public sphere. The Chinese government, with its legion of censors, polices what can be said and how, and punishes those who deviate too far from accepted parameters. That has only increased after the country’s “zero-Covid” policies that relied on mass surveillance of smart phones to control the movement of Chinese citizens. The efforts to control 1.5 billion people, what they say and how they say it publicly, are one way that the party retains control in China. It is a source of their strength.

    The United States will never be able to compete with China in censoring information, nor should it. But it could undermine its own vitality as an open society if it heads down the path of trying to ban apps in the name of national security. The wave of blacklists and McCarthy era crackdowns on Americans who professed Communist and even socialist beliefs and sympathies did not make the United States more secure in the early days of the Cold War; it made the country more paranoid and brittle, undermined creativity and the free flow of scientific information and briefly threatened to undermine the stability of the very government agencies such as the State Department and the Defense Department that were tasked with preserving national security.

    America does not do suppression of free speech particularly well, which is a good thing. And we should not optimize for a future where we do it better by making a new go at censorship. For the United States, the risks of TikTok are far outweighed by the risks of banning TikTok.

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    #Opinion #Extraordinarily #Misguided #Attack #TikTok
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Seattle’s anti-caste ordinance ‘extraordinarily historic victory’: Kshama Sawant

    Seattle’s anti-caste ordinance ‘extraordinarily historic victory’: Kshama Sawant

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    Washington: The banning of caste discrimination by Seattle city despite tough resistance from several people is an “extraordinarily historic victory” of the oppressed caste across the world, Kshama Sawant, the Indian-American political leader behind the legislative move, has said, alleging that the practice is prevalent in some of the major tech giants.

    Last week, Seattle became the first US city to outlaw caste discrimination after its local council passed a resolution moved by Sawant to add caste to its non-discrimination policy.

    The resolution was approved by the Seattle City Council by six to one vote.

    The 49-year-old politician and economist said she was able to achieve this historic feat despite a tough opposition mounted by a group of Indian-Americans, whom she described as “right-wing Hindus”, resistance from the tech companies and almost no cooperation from the Democrats.

    “The ordinance that we won this past Tuesday is an extraordinarily historic victory for oppressed caste people not only in Seattle but also in the United States and in India and the rest of the world. Because this ordinance is the first-ever ban on caste discrimination,” Sawant told PTI in an interview.

    Sawant, an upper-caste Hindu from Pune, migrated to the United States in the late 1990s.

    Seattle is not only the first American city to do so, but is the first jurisdiction of any level globally outside South Asia to ban caste discrimination.

    “So this is an absolutely earth-shattering victory because this is the first time outside South Asia that the law has decided that caste discrimination is not going to be invisible eyes, but instead it’s going to be codified in the law that it is illegal,” she said.

    The principal mechanism with which the new law works is that it gives the right to any caste-oppressed worker who is facing discrimination at the workplace to sue the corporation.

    “Obviously victories in the courts are not going to be automatic because the judicial system under capitalism is not on the side of workers and the oppressed,” she said, adding that winning such victories in the court will itself be a fight for the working people.

    Sawant said she had to face tough resistance from the “Hindu right-wing” and also an “entrenched Democratic establishment which did not want this ordinance to pass.
    Many Indian-Americans have opposed the move, fearing that codifying caste in public policy will further fuel instances of Hinduphobia in the US.

    “We had to build a powerful rank-and-file United movement that was able to overcome these forces of opposition,” she said.

    Sawant said the only reason she was able to do that was because of her socialist, or Marxist City Council Office, her organisation Socialist Alternative and many Dalit-oppressed caste-led organisations.

    Incidents of caste-based discrimination have increased rapidly, she said in response to a question.

    This form of discrimination, she said, is being under-reported in the country in general and her city of Seattle in particular because there are many oppressed-caste workers who are “justifiably” afraid of reprisals if they come out and openly speak about the discrimination that they’re facing in the workplace.

    “In addition to the statistical evidence, we’ve also seen hundreds of workers throughout the US and also hundreds of workers in Seattle. In the process of fighting this legislation, we have heard hundreds of courageous, oppressed-caste workers speak openly about the discrimination that they face,” she said.

    “We are primarily talking about the workplace, but I don’t believe that it’s only limited to the workplace. But that’s where you have most of the data and testimonials from hundreds of workers especially in the tech sector and Seattle being one of the tech hubs it’s not surprising that we have seen many cases of oppressed workers speaking up about the discrimination that they’re facing,” she said.

    This discrimination, she noted, comes all the way from being denied raises or promotions, or having bad appraisals or peer reviews, just because of being from an oppressed cast, not because of their workplace-based performance; to a daily dose of derogatory remarks, slurs are other ways of being targeted because of being from a lower caste.

    “As far as the tech sector is concerned, I can also share that it really runs the spectrum, all the way from IBM to Google, Amazon, Cisco and Microsoft,” she said.
    Sawant hoped that this “extraordinarily historic victory” will help build courage and also solidarity among the oppressed-caste workers for them to be able to speak more openly.

    “I would imagine that if there is more momentum around this issue if you’re able to win more big trees on this issue, we will probably see more and more evidence of this type of thing happening in other spheres as well, whether it’s education or more in social settings,” she said.

    The victory in the Seattle City Council, she said, has electrified the vast majority of workers and oppressed caste. She noted that she and her team are receiving a large number of emails from India, the US and other parts of the world in support of the ordinance.

    The best way to protect the victory in Seattle is to also win it in other cities, he asserted.

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    #Seattles #anticaste #ordinance #extraordinarily #historic #victory #Kshama #Sawant

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )