tony67
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- May 22, 2003
- Messages
- 5,353
Only the Chinese?neo-McCarthyism
Anyway - this seems to be a way for some US company to buy TikTok on the cheap and make a big profit I wonder who will have stock in that company.....
Only the Chinese?neo-McCarthyism
Well, they're already dominating the tech world, and they're also taking the EV market by storm, with a combination of low price, high feature and high quality. But while it is similar to what happened when the Japanese conquered the world of consumer electronics and cars in the late 20th Century, there is the added dimension of "Red Scare", which is leading to more active efforts than the numerous attempts at using patent laws to try and stop the likes of Panasonic from gaining a foothold in the US.Only the Chinese?
taking the EV market by storm...........
They're expanding in many continents, including Europe, where BYD, GWM Ora, SAIC (including MG), Xpeng and Geely, as well as through existing joint ventures with Honda and BMW, are making huge gains in the EV market. Though as for whether any of the brands have a US presence, Polestar (actually a Sino-Swedish product, with US market models assembled in Ridgeville, SC) seems to be the only one selling passenger cars, while BYD has factories in Los Angeles and Canada, but at the moment, they only assemble buses and energy products there, as they've yet to establish a passenger car presence in the North American market.How many Chinese made EV's are currently sold in the US? I don't get what you are referring to.
Well, they're already dominating the tech world, and they're also taking the EV market by storm, with a combination of low price, high feature and high quality. But while it is similar to what happened when the Japanese conquered the world of consumer electronics and cars in the late 20th Century, there is the added dimension of "Red Scare", which is leading to more active efforts than the numerous attempts at using patent laws to try and stop the likes of Panasonic from gaining a foothold in the US.
Well, if other countries are happy with them, then it seems to be only Washington who sees a problem, yet there's been no documented case that the vehicles are being used to spy on the populace.And spyware--don't forget spyware:
https://www.washingtonpost.com/technology/2024/02/29/us-investigation-chinese-vehicles/
How many Chinese made EV's are currently sold in the US? I don't get what you are referring to.
You are so right, these are people who would argue about the sun coming up but can agree here...I bet there is more to this than we know. You don't get 197 Republican and 155 Democrat votes on a bill like unless there is something really bad going on with this app. I suspect they have had briefings about dangers that they can't talk about.
Only the Chinese?
Anyway - this seems to be a way for some US company to buy TikTok on the cheap and make a big profit I wonder who will have stock in that company.....
We can only hope.I looked over the bill text and it refers to "adversary nations" (defined by another law) including China, Russia, North Korea, and Iran. If there's any forced divestiture, it only needs to go to an entity that theoretically isn't subject to the control of one of those nations.
TikTok and ByteDance are specifically noted in the bill, but theoretically the President could set in motion a process to declare other companies subject to similar divestiture.
I was referencing the other neo-McCarthyism I've seen from the government the last few years, but yeah I was aware of the rest of it - but its still good to bring up - thanksI looked over the bill text and it refers to "adversary nations" (defined by another law) including China, Russia, North Korea, and Iran. If there's any forced divestiture, it only needs to go to an entity that theoretically isn't subject to the control of one of those nations.
TikTok and ByteDance are specifically noted in the bill, but theoretically the President could set in motion a process to declare other companies subject to similar divestiture.
I wonder if any concerns have been raised about similar systems being used by the Detroit Three as well, particularly the OnStar system used by General Motors.Polestar has Chinese assembled EVs. Also Volvo, although the EX30 hasn't been delivered yet. I think the other Volvo EVs sold in the US are assembled in the US.
I suppose a concern would be all the data collection that could be done with modern tracking.
I wonder if any concerns have been raised about similar systems being used by the Detroit Three as well, particularly the OnStar system used by General Motors.
Yeah. I mean if China was really interested in spying on us, they'd simply secretly put that capability into our phones. They wouldn't even need tictok.Yeah, but has that actually been used in practice, or is this yet another example of neo-McCarthyism that seems to single out Chinese tech firms on the grounds of allegations of arms-length CCP links that could compromise national security? The USA missed out on some excellent smartphones, yet it overlooks the fact that even US brands like Apple routinely makes their smartphones in China. But they're scared of Huawei beating them so they just end up banning them.
Even Wyze cameras can turn an average suburban family man into James Bond unwittingly, if Beijing wanted to. But in practice, what would they gain out of it?Yeah. I mean if China was really interested in spying on us, they'd simply secretly put that capability into our phones. They wouldn't even need tictok.
I can never trust algorithms. I've seen them cause haphazard ad results, I've seen them cause unnecessary censorship. Even YouTube's use of algorithms has backfired when they attempted to address COPPA concerns amidst Elsagate.2 things:
Members of Congress said they got thousands of calls from young people threatening suicide if tiktok is banned. That's a problem.
And 2, tiktok controls algorithms that lead kids into dangerous places they shouldn't go. Research it. It's scary. Parents should already know this.
To each their own on how they feel but I don't think anyone wants to single anyone out, most people want ALL THREATS to be shown the door but if the Gov can only manage threats one by one because herding cats is hard, so be it.Yeah, but has that actually been used in practice, or is this yet another example of neo-McCarthyism that seems to single out Chinese tech firms on the grounds of allegations of arms-length CCP links that could compromise national security? The USA missed out on some excellent smartphones, yet it overlooks the fact that even US brands like Apple routinely makes their smartphones in China. But they're scared of Huawei beating them so they just end up banning them.