There Are No Girls on the Internet - Banning TikTok would harm marginalized communities - BEST OF TANGOTI
Episode Date: March 12, 2024This week Biden said he would sign legislation into law banning TikTok if congress passes it. TikTok is one step closer to being banned in the United States after the legislation unanimously passed a ...big vote last week. Popular TikToker and misinformation researcher Abbie Richards and I discussed what a ban would mean for marginalized communities. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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If you are against misinformation and hate speech,
you know, you got to be against it on all platforms
and not just on TikTok.
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I'm Bridget Todd, and this is There Are No Girls on the Internet.
This week, President Biden said that he would sign legislation into law
banning TikTok if Congress passes it.
This comes after legislation that would force TikTok,
which is owned by the Chinese company Bike Dance right now,
to sell to an American owner, passed a big vote last week.
The House Energy and Commerce Committee voted unanimously to pass the bill,
meaning TikTok is one step closer to being essentially banned in the United States.
Last year, after TikTok CEO Shoz-Ichu went before a congressional hearing to defend the platform,
popular TikToker and misinformation researcher, Abby Richards and I, discussed what a band would mean for marginalized communities.
With the platform being one step closer to being banned in the U.S., it is really important to understand what this means for our media landscape and for marginalized people.
Now, y'all know I love TikTok, but I'm not.
also know that like any other social media app, it is not without its issues.
TikTok disinformation researcher and friend of the show, Abby Richards, was one of the first people
calling out TikTok for the way that myths and disinformation and hate speech spreads on the app.
But for all of her criticisms of TikTok, Abby still says that banning the platform is not the right
move. In a recent op-ed for Newsweek that you can read in the show notes, Abby explained why
she thinks banning TikTok will ultimately hurt marginalized communities. I caught up with
Abby, right after we both watched the hearing.
Abby Richards, friend of the show, how are you?
I am angry, Bridget.
I am an infuriated girl right now.
As someone who has really built a lot of your career, not just on TikTok, but like calling out
TikTok for the ways that it can spread misinformation and hate speech, what has it been
like to watch elected officials talk about banning it?
It's been infuriating because they're got to get to.
all wrong. Like, I have literally built my career criticizing TikTok. I will be the first to tell you
about, like, the copious amounts of misinformation and hate speech, extremism, harassment that happened
on that app. But to then try and ban it without any evidence that it is a national security
threat whatsoever, and just using like fear-mongering and pointing to other pieces of misinformation.
that I have tried to debunk about TikTok.
And this is like the types of misinformation
that emerges off the platform.
So if you were watching the hearing yesterday,
you would have seen a lot of our congressmen and women
pointing to TikTok challenges that are causing children tons of harm.
And I have spent so many like countless hours debunking
these exact like moral panics around these challenges
where essentially adults try and
and blame the stupid things that kids do on the newest technology.
We see it over and over and over again.
But the fact that that's being used to justify the banning of this app too is infuriating.
And I'm deeply concerned about what the consequences will be of banning an app that 150 million Americans use.
So you brought up something really interesting.
I know that these so-called deadly challenges was a big part of the hearing.
And something that, I mean, I almost hate to ask this question, but I feel like it's an important context of the conversation.
That is like great news for Facebook.
They're like, oh, our strategy is winning.
Like our strategy to turn the public and, of course, elected officials against TikTok and make them think that like it's this like place where all these deadly challenges emerge.
Even though some, at least some of those challenges actually emerged on Facebook, if you really want to like get into the nitty gritty.
Did you so did you see in the hearings the ways that like,
fear-mongering, just sort of writ large about technology, was taking center stage in these hearings?
It's almost like they're placing this fear that they have of new and emerging technologies and how young people use them and just placing it on one singular app.
So rather than actually dealing with the consequences of this rapidly changing society because of the expansion of technology on a monthly basis,
we just want to like pin all of our anxiety on one app and cross our fingers that like if we just ban this one app it'll all go away
and so I think we see that a lot with the challenges and like the the steam that they pick up among people who are not on the platform in particular
we know that it was the Washington Post that reported that there was like consulting there was the Washington Post that
reported that there was a marketing group that was working with meta to place op-eds about,
you know, fear-mongering about TikTok. So that's something that we have seen happen before,
and it certainly seems like this is a big win for meta. If you are on TikTok at all,
you are probably seeing this widespread popularity of almost conspiratorial language about
where people are
blaming the ban on meta
and saying that like meta is lobbying
and Google too to some extent
blaming it but yeah blaming it on meta
and Google for lobbying Congress people
and encouraging them to ban their biggest competition
I don't know how much truth there is to that
because I think that there is a lot of geopolitics there too
and it seems like the U.S. government is
you know very interested in like splitting the internet
as much as possible right now.
So it's hard to say if it's like one cause versus another,
but this does definitely look like a big win for meta.
And they used rhetoric that meta has also pushed before.
Yeah.
So in terms of a TikTok ban, so in your piece,
you write about how, you know, obviously you are the first one to admit
that TikTok has its downfalls and the democratization of like media has its downfalls.
but you also talk about the ways that this could actually harm marginalized communities.
How do you see that working?
So let's, okay, well, we'll start here.
And you consider a institutional media, legacy media.
So New York Times, Washington Post, Wall Street Journal, CNN, they are top-down information systems,
which means that these newsrooms essentially look at all of the news and then decide what is newsworthy
and then disseminate it to their audience.
TikTok is much more of a bottom-up information system,
which means that anyone can post basically anything that they want,
and then the algorithm is working with the users
to determine what people are watching,
and in that way, the users decide what is of importance to them.
So we have two different information systems,
and this top-down one tends to privilege
white, richer, more privileged people.
It tends to be composed of people who come from more privileged backgrounds.
It speaks about their problems and things that they are interested in thinking about.
They, in particular, they have to sell subscriptions or sell ads, so they have to run stories
that they know that the wealthy audience that they pander to will be interested in the
first place, because it's really not that profitable to tell stories of marginalized people
who can't afford to subscribe to their newspaper.
So TikTok, being this much more bottom-up infrastructure, allowed for two major, like,
kind of newish forms of massive dissemination of news and information.
The first would be seeing information from firsthand accounts.
So that's like when, you know, you started the invasion of Ukraine where we saw all of these videos of people fleeing the country or being in bomb shelters.
So you're seeing people who are actually experiencing the events posting online and that garners attention without editors needing to push it out.
And then the second is through trusted messengers.
And these are people that can speak to specific communities.
And they have had a lot of success on TikTok.
They have built up these communities where they are trusted sources of information and
sometimes opinion.
People go to them to try and feel like they can understand certain problems.
And, you know, this could range from a community of like 10,000 people to communities
of millions of people.
But this is particularly advantageous to marginalized groups who probably can't afford a subscription
to the New York Times.
Or alternatively, they don't want one because they don't trust the New York Times.
They've never seen themselves represented in the New York Times.
Like, there are so many reasons why they might not turn to legacy media, but they will turn to, like, a trusted messenger who looks like them, who speaks their language, who they feel understands them in their communities.
And so if we dismantle that infrastructure, like suddenly, like flipping off a light switch, you'd be leaving all these communities without their information infrastructure.
And that could be leaving them in the dark.
It could be really, really damaging for them.
And they're very resilient to all of these marginalized communities,
whether it's communities of color, queer communities, disabled communities.
They're very resilient.
They will rebuild.
But keeping them in a state of like constantly rebuilding the information infrastructure
stops them from being able to do things like organize and mobilize and gain power
because they're constantly rebuilding their information infrastructure.
So yeah, I'm mad.
I mean, that's such a good thing.
point, like, I, where do I even start? I think that one of the reasons why we're even having
this conversation is like a fundamental misunderstanding of the ways that platforms like TikTok have
worked and what they have been used to, like, what movements they've been used to build, right?
Like I still see people being like, oh, like, it's a kids dancing app, which like part of my soul
dies every time I hear that. You know, looking around like what was happening to women in Iran.
I have to say, I don't think I would have known what was happening.
I don't think I would have known what was going on, if not for TikTok.
If not for Iranian women saying, hey, this is what's going on.
Here's how you can help.
Here's what we need.
I don't think I would have been able to be plugged into what was happening, if not for TikTok.
And so I think that it's like the people who are legislating this don't necessarily have that visibility
into the ways that it has functioned for communities who are marginalized.
And so I, if we're going to have any conversation about just an outright ban, they're not even including that in the conversation.
And I feel like it kind of like what you said, like, if we're going to do something about how these apps and platforms function in our lives and in our like media ecosystem, let's not have it be done hastily and badly, right?
Where people are going to be, have the rug pulled out from under them.
And their very real issues are not even being discussed or like, you know, brought to the table.
Oh yeah, there's no nuance in this conversation whatsoever, and you would think that if we're going to have a conversation about pulling the plug on one of the biggest pieces of communications infrastructure in the world, that is a conversation that we should be very careful about.
Dismantling infrastructure that large is not a decision that should be taken lightly, and yet it seems.
like our representatives, like, truly have bought into this idea that TikTok is somehow
simultaneously just a kid's dancing app and also spyware.
Like, it's really confusing how it can be both.
And, like, saying, like, oh, well, you could push specific, you know, you could push
specific misinformation campaigns and try and sway the American populace.
But then also simultaneously ignoring the fact that, like, it is.
a messaging center for a huge portion of the American populace. If you just remove it, there will
be consequences. And then when I bring this up, I see some people just like, oh, well, you know,
national security is more important. Or it's like everyone will just go to a new app. And like, yes,
probably they will. But that doesn't mean that it won't cause a lot of harm in the process. It doesn't
mean that people will, you know, there's still going to be lots of creators who lose their
jobs. There's going to people, people who have built these large audiences who now have nothing.
And a lot of people whose voices were empowered and suddenly were coming into a position of
discursive power who will now not have access to that. And even if, like, yes,
technically, if you look at like a very big picture level, people will migrate to new apps.
Sure.
But there's still going to be a lot of consequences and we can't really ignore that.
Yeah.
I mean, even looking at what's going on with Twitter, there was a time where I was like,
oh, everyone's going to be using Mastodon or this or that.
It hasn't.
I know that our communities, particularly marginalized communities, as you said, are really resilient.
and we always find a way to make,
we always make a way out of no way, right?
Like, that is what we do.
But it's watching,
watching Twitter become a place where people spend less and less of their time,
there hasn't been like one place where everybody is like setting up shop.
And so it takes longer, it's messier.
It's, it's more energy for these communities,
many of whom, like if you look at the trans community and the queer community,
are up against quite a bit right now.
And so maybe having to pick up and rebuild a new,
communications infrastructure elsewhere is not what they need right now.
It's maybe not going to be like great for those communities.
It'll be horrible for them because now in addition to legislation that is threatening their
right to exist, they also don't have their communities that they can turn to for advice,
for support, for information.
And they don't have access to their broader communications network to like mobilize.
and plan what they will do in response
or try and have a place they can turn to to raise funds
if they need surgery or if they need legal fees
or if they need to get out of whichever state they're in.
If you remove the communications infrastructure
and we're talking about a marginalized community
that is undergoing a lot of legislative challenges right now,
that's putting them in a position that just increases their marginalization.
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So let me zoom at a little bit and just make sure that I have this right.
Lawmakers are saying that they want to ban TikTok because it's a national security risk.
This is a little bit above my pay grade.
I am no digital national security expert.
And I want to make sure that my understanding of this aligns with your understanding.
So it is true that TikTok is a Chinese-owned company.
And it is true that potentially that could open the door.
for all kinds of national security risks. But what we don't have right now is a smoking gun
that this is actually a problem. We're very much speaking in hypotheticals of what could happen or what
potentially might happen. So lawmakers right now are trying to legislate TikTok because of this
hypothetical threat that might be out there but is not yet revealed itself. Do I have that right?
Yeah, I would say you nailed it. They haven't provided any evidence.
of instances where China use TikTok
in any sort of antagonistic way towards the U.S.
It's only in the hypothetical of like they own it
and they maybe could.
And even if they could, it's kind of unclear
how they would go about doing that.
What we do know and like what feels like
it's missing from this conversation so much
is that even if we were to ban TikTok,
it would not stop the Chinese government
or any government or any bad actor
from just buying your data elsewhere.
TikTok is roughly collecting about the same amount of data
as any of the other major social media platforms,
and then they profit by selling it.
Well, it was in the hearing that he denied that they sold data,
so maybe they're not even selling the data.
but social media platforms in general collect your data and sell it and it is not difficult for anyone with any sort of intention to just buy your data so that they can target you with specific advertisements and specific messages
so if we were actually concerned about the Chinese government or any other government manipulating Americans you would be implementing like a comprehensive data
privacy legislation rather than going after one singular app.
Because even if you were to ban TikTok and even if TikTok were using its data in that way,
which we still have no evidence that it does,
they would still just be able to purchase your data anywhere else.
So this is like applying a used, gross, infected band-aid to a wound that will really not fix
the wound at all, but will almost certainly...
add additional infections.
Oh my God. I was just about to read your quote in the Newsweek piece back to you.
But yeah, I mean, this is what like really gets me about this conversation is that like,
I guess we have no meaningful data privacy legislation in this country. Right. And so like that,
the fact that we're even having this conversation indicates to me a complete failure of
leadership, governing, and legislating. Right. And so I feel like banning TikTok.
is this big flashy gesture of like, see, we did something. See, we got it together and governed
and made some kind of a gesture toward, you know, data privacy. But it actually does nothing.
As you said, like, there's nothing keeping these companies or really anybody from buying our data.
Like, there are so many other, the fact that our data is so misused and, like, that is the baseline,
shouldn't we be talking about that? So even if we were to ban tips,
TikTok, it would be totally possible for the Chinese government to access Americans' data in all other kinds of ways.
Maybe they have. And so it's like, what does it really do if the real problem is our lack of data privacy infrastructure in this country, other than being a big flashy gesture, what does banning TikTok actually achieve?
I mean, to answer your question, nothing. On a political level, I think that it is a distraction.
that allows for the American public to feel like something was done to make them feel safer
while simultaneously not passing the legislation that would actually protect the American public.
And, like, we are a superpower and we demand that all of the major social media platforms be stemming from us.
How dare the Chinese also have one?
Yeah, I saw this great USA Today headline that was like, how, like, how did it?
there China try to get my data from TikTok,
don't they know that that's for Google and Facebook?
Like, I think like it, like,
like we have just like lost the plot of doing anything
to meaningfully address this.
And yeah, I think like during the hearing,
some of the things that came up around like content moderation and stuff,
those are important conversations to have,
but having them, having TikTok be the face of, you know,
a lack of content moderation,
or hate speech and harmful content proliferating on a platform.
As someone who has worked in this space for a while, I'm deeply uncomfortable with that
because I think it creates a scapegoat that lets these other, I would say, sometimes bad actors
off the hook, right?
Like we're not having the conversation in a meaningful way to actually get results.
We're just making an example out of this one big bad boogeyman, which is TikTok.
Yeah, definitely.
And I mean, the examples that they were pointing to, aside from these like moral panic
challenges. The examples of violent content on the app were really wilds that they were pointing
to it in the first place. Because as far as removing, you know, really violent content, TikTok is
better than most of the other platforms. I mean, I professionally criticize them. It's one of my
favorite things to do is bullying TikTok. But they will generally be pretty,
good about removing anything that I flagged towards them. And they have a lot of like horrible
things on their apps, like absolutely, but all social media platforms do. And so what you really want
to be looking at, too, is just how much reach are those things getting. So one of the videos that
they pulled up during the hearing was an imagery of a gun. And I think it included one of the committee
members' names. And it was, and they were railing on TikTok because the video had been up for, I believe,
41 days and what they were failing to account for is that the video had like no likes it was not a
video that had been engaged with whatsoever so arguably it's actually tic-tok it's evidence that ticot was
doing a decent job with its moderation but that it had like siphoned this off and contained it
um more than anything else like yes it shouldn't be on the platform at all but if it's not getting
any reach really, then TikTok's moderation to an extent is working. That's the whole point. It's like
you want these things contained, you want them quarantined so that they don't spread. So being
able to point towards that was like, it was such a strange choice. And then it was additionally
strange because we love guns in this country, but apparently have problems with images of them.
If you watch the hearing, there were actually some pretty good questions that came up.
Representative Yvette D. Clark asked whether or not TikTok suppresses marginalized creators.
And Representative Lisa Blunt-Rochester asked about whether accurate information about abortion is being suppressed on TikTok.
But what was much more abundant, sadly, were questions that weren't just silly,
but also underscored how little some elected officials seem to know about the technology that they are responsible for legislating.
Yeah, I mean, that example really brings me to something that, like, it pains me.
But I can't not talk about it with you.
How some of the questions and examples that these elected officials were raising were just embarrassing,
like, you know, Representative Richard Hudson from North Carolina, like, I'm sure you know what I'm going, what I'm getting at,
the like exchange about whether or not TikTok accesses users home Wi-Fi.
Like, do you ever, like, do you ever feel like the people that we have elected to represent us and to advocate for us and our interests
up against Big Tech, just are making it clear that they're talking about legislating technology
that they seem to not really understand or get?
No, it was quite clear that no one on that committee had ever opened TikTok.
Like, they had never used it before.
They're just making wild statements and accusations and guesses about how it works.
And if you go on TikTok now, in response to that committee, I mean, they're just being ridiculed.
the users can tell that these congressmen and women have never really actually used the app or know what they're talking about in any way, shape, or form.
And it is mind-bogglingly infuriating to witness people who don't even understand how Wi-Fi works,
or they couldn't tell you the difference between a modem and a rotor, trying to legislate major,
major social media policies, like in major data privacy policies, like they don't understand
any of it. So how are we expecting them to even know where to begin when it comes to those bigger
legislative problems? It really goes back to what you said in the beginning of our conversation
of like, if we're going to do it, let's not do it badly. Let's not do it in a way that like we are
talking about a pretty major communications platform. If we're going to do it, let's not have the people in
charge, make it clear time and time again that they have no idea what they're talking about.
Maybe, just maybe.
Just maybe.
That could maybe be a good place to start is like knowing that you need to use Wi-Fi to access
TikTok.
Like, oh my God.
I really liked the exchange about whether or not TikTok tracked how much your pupils dilated
in response to certain videos.
And it's like, no, they look.
look at watch time.
They're not like reading your pupils to see how big they get in response to each video.
I don't know what Black Mirror episode you think we are in.
We're in a different one.
We're still in one, but it's different.
Just a different episode.
Yeah, I don't think that TikTok is like logging your biometrics, dude.
Like it just was some of those questions were concerning.
And I also think they just like, reverect.
feel how we just need younger people, I think, like younger folks, both in the, both in elected
office and also being listened to, I think is really, really important. People who actually have
real world experience with the technology that they're talking about, because it was, as you said,
it was just so clear that many of the folks in Congress had just had no idea what they were
talking about. Yeah, no, we would absolutely need to have younger people or just more, you know,
digitally literate people writing these laws.
Because if you truly don't understand that, like, the app needs to track where your eyes are
so that they can put sunglasses filters on you, like, that is just something that a younger
person would need to explain and need to help them understand.
And if all of our legislators are, you know, I don't want to say dinosaurs, but, like,
they're acting like dinosaurs right now and I feel like it's called for, then we can't expect
solid digital legislation from them. Like they don't, they don't know what they're doing.
They don't understand anything beyond email at this point. Yeah. That is sad. I mean,
it's really sad. It's really scary. Because if you want to talk about like the American people
being vulnerable, our leaders not even understanding like the, you know, bare minimum that they
need to understand about how the internet works.
Like, that leaves us quite vulnerable.
That's such a good point.
That seems like a much bigger threat.
Our leaders failing to understand anything about technology,
feels like a much bigger threat than this TikTok bogeyman scare.
So what do you say to someone listening who is like,
I am concerned about the national security threat that TikTok post.
still, what would you say to that person?
I would say that at this point in time, we have seen more evidence of Facebook engaging in
schemes to manipulate the American public than we have TikTok.
I mean, we have evidence of Cambridge Analytica.
We know that Meta was involved with this.
We have no evidence of TikTok doing it.
So at the moment, all of our fears are based around a hypothetical.
and that they are based around this like boogeyman of China and that that might not be the best
place to create legislation from like that mentality might not lend itself to the creation of
like really strong digital privacy legislation and that I mean also if you are personally
concerned about TikTok there's no reason why you have to have it on your
your phones.
That's a decision that you can totally make.
If you have national secrets on your phones, like, maybe don't have TikTok on it.
But then also, like, maybe don't use any other social media platforms because they are
all gathering your data.
More after a quick break.
Another podcast from some SNL late-night comedy guide, not quite.
Unhumor me with Robert Smygel and friends.
Me and hilarious guests from Jim Gaffigan to Bob Odenkirk, to David Letterman,
help make you funnier.
This week, my guest, SNL's Mikey Day and headwriter, Streeter Seidel,
help an acapella band with their between songs banter.
There's the worst singer in the group?
The worst?
Yeah.
Me.
Is there anything to the idea that because you're from Harvard,
you only got in because your parents made a huge donation.
The group.
The yard birds, right?
That's the name.
The Harvard yard, but they're open to change.
Do you have a name suggestion?
We're open.
Since you guys are middle.
age.
One erection.
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Let's get right back into it.
Other platforms are also gathering your data and behaving badly and acting in ways that calls all kinds of harm.
But this legislation is very much black and white.
And it seems very much based in scary.
fear mongering about TikTok as this potential boogeyman.
And I just don't think that fearmongering is a place that will elicit good, meaningful,
substantive legislation.
You know, black and white thinking on a nuanced issue is bad enough.
But black and white legislating, I don't know.
I don't like it.
I don't like it either.
I don't trust it.
It's not coming from a smart place.
It's coming from a fearful place.
And that's not where we get good legislation.
And if you want to have a much bigger conversation about social media,
and the future of social media, and whether it's bad for us, whether it's good for us,
what harms it does, but also, you know, what net positives it brings to the world.
I am here for that conversation.
It'll take us a few years to get to the bottom of it.
It is not like a quick and easy conversation to have, but I do think that that's one we should be having.
And I've been trying to push for it.
It's like, okay, well, there are all these issues with, like, misinformation and extremism on social media,
and we know that these platforms benefit.
from the posting and sharing of content that appeals to our emotions that is often false or
is, you know, oversimplifying really complex issues or is just like extremist and hateful in nature.
We know that they benefit from that because that's the sort of content that keeps people
on their platforms consuming content and therefore consuming ads.
And I would like us to be working towards the creation of like digital.
communities that are better for our emotional and social well-being. I could absolutely see that
occurring in the future is like creating these digital public spaces where people can go share
information but that aren't driven exclusively by profit and are built with the goal of creating
a more well-informed and empathetic public.
but that doesn't happen just because you ban one app you don't like.
That is deep, deep infrastructural change that we need to make,
and I think is the only way really forward unless we want to drive ourselves insane.
But that's not a light and easy task.
It's certainly not going to be achieved by banning one app.
Yeah, if you are against misinformation and hate speech,
you know, you got to be against it on all platforms and not just on TikTok because Facebook, Instagram, YouTube, Twitter, they all have it. I mean, Twitter right now is also such a mess. Just as a, like, it is wild to watch all of this, this giant attack on TikTok. Meanwhile, Twitter is just falling apart, crumbling and has disintegrated as like this, this giant attack on TikTok.
Meanwhile, Twitter is just falling apart, crumbling, and has disintegrated as, like, this, this reasonable public space.
And the fact that, you know, we thought we would be losing TikTok and essentially be losing Twitter that would really leave Meadow with a lot of power.
But I also think it's interesting that one rich guy can just buy and ruin Twitter.
But, like, God forbid, an app has just some Chinese ownership.
If you had to say, do you think that TikTok is going to be banned in the United States?
I'm pretty 50-50 right now.
I don't like it.
If you had asked me before, I'd be like, probably not.
Because I thought that the Dems were smarter than me.
that. I don't know about that. I know. I know what I, in hindsight, what was I thinking? They love losing.
But I just, I was baffled that the Biden administration pushed for the sale versus ban.
Because I thought that they knew that if they lost TikTok, they would not be able to mobilize voters in 2024.
But apparently they don't know that. And they just are down.
for political suicide.
It baffles me.
So I continue to be wrong and surprised by what they will do in the name of like this weird
singular bipartisanship over xenophobia.
It's the one thing that they can relate to the Republicans on right now.
Also, you know, you made the point about mobilizing younger voters.
I said this on a panel and it got like a laugh and I was like, oh, I was actually serious.
I think, and this might sound, it's going to sound how it sounds, but I truly believe this.
I think if TikTok is banned in the United States, I see that going very poor for Biden and the Democrats,
not to make this like a horse race issue, but I think that some of the most interesting,
meaningful organizing of young folks politically is having.
happening on TikTok. If you look at the conversations that younger folks are leading on when it comes to things like climate justice, those conversations are happening on TikTok and they are mobilization conversations. So I don't, I'm not saying that I think that young people will be like, oh, we love TikTok and we're not going to vote for Joe Biden just because he banned it and we love it. I think it's much deeper than that. I think that Gen Z uses it as a platform to do political and social mobilization and organizing. If you show that you don't not just don't understand that, don't
see it, don't value it, ignore it, that is going to be a problem. And so it's not an issue of like,
oh, these whiny brats just want their dance videos. No, no, no, no. I think it's much deeper than that.
And if you show that you aren't even able to see that, it is going to be a problem.
A hundred percent. And people keep playing this off as like, oh, you're going to piss off Gen Z.
And it's like, that's less what I'm worried about. I think a lot of Gen Z would still,
you know, the ones who are going to vote anyways will still vote for the less.
serve two evils, like that's going to continue, but what will you will, but what you will lose
is all of this mobilization infrastructure where people are getting their news, where people
are having, like, lots of political discourse. What is helping young people to understand the
world is, is the discourse on TikTok, is the trusted messengers that they turn to on TikTok.
And if you take that away, like, they're just going to not be as political.
engaged. Because TikTok made it really easy for them to get politically engaged and get politically
informed and deep dive into this discourse. Like, you know, people keep saying TikTok is this
dancing app. And it's so, so wrong because, like, fundamentally, it's a discourse app.
It's where people are having conversations about the world. That's why, like, stitching was such
a groundbreaking feature, because you could take one video and respond to it and you get this, like,
built and constructed
constant discourse
about political and social issues.
If you remove that,
they might still be left leaning
and some of them might vote, but they won't be
as informed on certain issues. They won't
necessarily know
where to
or like where to be putting their
energy for certain political
issues. Like they would just be losing so much
of their infrastructure and that will have
severe costs, particularly
purely for the Dems and it's really mind-blowing to me that they don't recognize that.
Yeah, I'm just, I'm completely shocked.
I shouldn't be.
I shouldn't be.
I'm years into this.
I shouldn't be.
Well, here's, I mean, big question.
Where will Abby Richards go if there's no TikTok?
Like I think of you as the person who is like made a platform.
Like one of the first people who really made a platform from calling out and criticizing TikTok
and advocating for it to be better.
or where do you personally see yourself showing up if it's banned?
Here's the thing.
It's like on one level, I think I experienced some panic where it's like, if I lose my
platform on TikTok, do I lose my power?
Like, you know, will I still have work to do?
Will people still see me as valuable?
And then after, you know, a little bit of dwelling in that panic, I got over it because
it's like, no, I'm privileged.
I have a lot of like institutional power at this point.
Like I can pivot to other platforms if I want.
And fundamentally, I think that the deeper we go into a tech dystopia, the more job security I actually have, which is dark.
That was some dark, Abby.
That was some dark shit.
But I mean, you're right, right?
Like, you call out TikTok, but really you're calling out, like, our media ecosystem, the way that it impacts our democracy.
Like, it's so much more than one platform.
Your voice is about so much more than one platform.
I guess I'll put it that way.
But I agree with you that like, you know, when I started this tech podcast, I never knew the like, I remember thinking like, oh, maybe I'll, what if I run out of content? What if I run out of like things to talk about? Nope, I sure never will. Never ever. I mean, my goal is to eventually put myself out of a job. I would really like if I could work hard enough and eradicate all of the misinformation and hate speech online. And then one day I get to retire and I don't need to do this job anymore. I don't see that happening.
So I think, you know, if TikTok is banned, I will go to other platforms,
I will build out my presence on other platforms too.
I'm far more concerned about, like, the people who don't have the institutional backing
and who don't have power outside of their TikTok presence.
Like, they will have their lives much more uprooted than I think I will.
We are in such uncharted waters.
Yeah, no, truly what happens to the.
creators. Like, because
Congress, I saw
one congressman like went on
Politico was like, no, they'll be able to
switch to a different platform.
As if they haven't spent last
like two, three, four years
building a platform so that now
they can do brand deals or now they
can make money
from the creator fund.
And now, oh no, they can just start
over. It'll be fine. Who cares?
Like, it's...
Do you know how long that takes? Like,
yeah, but again, it's showing that the people who are meant to be legislating this just don't have a real,
realistic understanding of what they're actually talking about. And when they make suggestions like that,
it's like, have you taken a step back to ask what that actually looks like in practice?
Yeah, I don't think that they have. I will say where there are marginalized creators on a platform
facing some kind of something that they don't like, there's always,
really good pushback. And so scrolling the platform after those hearings, got to give it up to the
creators who are using their strengths, creating good content to, you know, educate people on those
hearings and sort of what they thought about them. I've seen such hilarious TikToks coming out of
that. I saw one creator who was pretending to be a lawmaker in Congress who was like, I want to
know and my wife wants to know why every time I open TikTok, all I see is these big-breasted women.
Just making fun of how silly some of their questions were.
So that's something I'll always have faith in is marginalized creators,
being able to use social media platforms to poke fun at legislators
and to spotlight and educate folks on something that they do not like.
Oh, 100%. The TikTok's coming out of this have been phenomenal.
I was like getting a lot of comfort last night in just seeing the conversations that
were being had.
even, did you see any of the Chew edits, the edits of the CEO?
People were making like spicy edits of him.
Being like, save TikTok.
Those were great.
There were a lot of, I want to see if I could pull one.
I know I just screenshoted one this morning that was giving me life.
Oh, it was the Capcut meme of Pedro Pascal eating a cracker sandwich.
And then it says, me watching the CEO of TikTok defend the American people and our rights from the literal U.S. government, all while they mispronounce his name, have no knowledge about how Wi-Fi works, and are saying they are doing it for the children when there was yet another school shooting that I didn't see on the news, but I did see reported on TikTok.
Doesn't that really say at all?
That does. That sums it up, doesn't it?
So, like, TikTok is reading this stuff for shit.
but like the rest of the internet, I don't know so much, because there was also that study that came out, or I don't know if it was a study, it was a report.
Well, I want to say, no, I don't even remember which news organization ran it.
That was the biggest determining factor of whether or not you support the TikTok band is whether or not you use TikTok.
Yeah, so there you go.
It's like people who don't have direct familiarity with the issue are the ones who are in favor of an outright band.
Yeah, it's much more, it is much easier to convince people who are not even using the app that the app is dangerous because they are not exposed to it. They don't understand how it actually works. It's much easier to fearmonger about something that you're unfamiliar with. It's much easier to hijack people's feelings of fear and distrust if they don't even know the other group that they're dealing with. If they're completely unfamiliar with the topic, then you can just push like fearmongering on them.
But the people on TikTok who have their own experience with it, you know, can read that as bullshit.
Yeah, totally in favor of some comprehensive sweeping data privacy legislation that would absolutely affect TikTok.
Let's do that from a place of reason.
And, you know, national security of the American people.
Like, if we actually cared about that, let's go write that legislation.
In the end, TikTok and its partner, larger digital media.
ecosystem is huge. So a potential ban would have major consequences, not just for the millions of
people who use it, but for the way that information and discourse is spread. Oh, this was cut from
my Newsweek article, but it was good. It's, so like, I'm a member of this coalition of TikTok members.
I'm a member of this coalition of TikTokers, TikTok influencers,
with the coalition has over 500 members,
and collectively they have over 500 million followers.
And to put that in perspective,
I believe that that is more than the collective monthly viewership
of like Foxy and NMS in BC,
which is about 5 million.
So not just more, it's like 100 times more
than their monthly viewership.
And that's just like their following count.
But I thought that that was, you know, really,
I thought that that was a good way to highlight just how vast this infrastructure is.
And that we're not talking about cutting off like a couple million people or like, you know,
a handful of people.
We're talking about dismantling in a communications infrastructure that is so vast that it is like literally hundreds of times the reach of,
of the biggest news networks that we can think of.
That is not a decision that we should be taking lightly.
I'm so glad you added that.
I do think that for people who don't use TikTok,
it's probably easy to think of it as like,
it's like that arrested development line.
Like it's a TikTok, Michael.
How many users could there be 100?
Like they might not necessarily know the gravity of the way that it functions
as a communications platform and its role in our larger ecosystem of digital communications,
which is vast.
It's huge.
It's huge.
And people don't understand that it's not a dancing app and that it is, in fact, an information
app.
It is a discourse app.
And that there is, like, so much existing infrastructure, which has been built over the
course of the last few years to mobilize people, particularly for progressive causes.
And if you take that away, we're going to have to rebuild it.
And rebuilding takes time.
rebuilding is a way of keeping people down, right?
Like the reason why legacy news institutions are so powerful
is that they don't have to rebuild every four to five years.
It's like you build power by, you know, having stability in your institution.
And if you take all of these young people who have finally found a bit of power,
and particularly marginalized young people who have finally found a bit of power,
and then you force them to rebuild again, you're removing all of their access to power.
And like, sure, they'll get it back in a few years.
But a lot can happen in a few years.
Yeah.
And wouldn't it be, and I guess it would be to have to force these folks to have to
rebuild for something that didn't even really achieve much, right?
For something that, like, didn't even really achieve much meaningful action in terms of
protecting digital national security.
That is like, to me, it's like the real cruelty of it, I guess.
Yeah.
I mean, for it to be done for such a pointless cause, for which there is no evidence of harm in the first place, is deeply unsettling.
To be like, you know, really challenging our First Amendment rights in the way that they are threatening to with zero evidence.
Again, we have more evidence against Facebook than we have.
do against TikTok and to ban TikTok, I mean, it's such a concerning choice for the First Amendment.
And like, usually I'm on the misinfo side of like having to be like, well, you know, free speech is not free reach.
But like right now it's like, yes, no, free speech does matter.
And like this is a First Amendment issue.
Yeah, this is the government regulating.
Like, how many times are you in the comment section being like, well, this isn't the government regulating something?
It's a private platform regulating something.
so it's a little bit different. Maybe don't evoke the First Amendment.
This is actually the government regulating something.
So, like, all those free speech people, like, mobilized.
Like, let's hear from you.
I know. It's, like, so quiet from the free speech absolutionist right now.
Like, they cared a lot when TikTok was censoring medical misinformation that TikTok had every right to be removing.
but if the government is actually coming for a platform where 150 million people
practice the utilization of their voices,
that seems like a free speech issue to me.
That seems like a challenge on our First Amendment rights.
Really scary one, too.
I was like, yeah, watching the hearing was quite scary to me.
What scared you about it?
I think that there was this strange element of like, okay, I did, I, when I learned about the Red Scare and history class, I didn't anticipate living through another one.
That was like weird to watch in real time. I was like, oh, I thought that was like a historical event. I thought we didn't do that again.
So it had that element to it where they were like asking the CEO of TikTok who I don't know his personal finances.
But if he's not a billionaire, he is a multi-millionaire.
Just asking him if he's a communist had a wild tone to it.
But on a much deeper level, the lengths that they will go to to take away our free speech in the name of just xenophobia, that was really scary to me.
I don't think that that symbolized like massive steps towards a more progressive world.
That felt like taking steps backwards towards, you know, stricter borders and more nationalism and stricter laws
and just creating this divide between the West and the East and just trying to reimpose this iron curtain of sorts,
this digital iron curtain.
And like that felt really dark to me.
I mean, when you put it that way, yeah, it's, I hadn't picked up on that vibe, but now that you say it, it is scary.
And I don't think it's, I don't think it's discourse that leads us to a more just progressive world.
it seems like it leads us someplace else.
Yeah, it seems like it shuts us down and puts us deeper into, like, isolationist thinking.
And that's not the type of thinking that I want to see our worlds practicing.
I would like to see, you know, the Internet was always promised as this thing that would, like, bring global citizens together.
I don't believe that we are in any sort of, like, technological utopia or,
or that the internet is perfect.
But I do see the internet's capacity for connection
and connection with people that you would otherwise
never have spoken to or heard their stories.
So earlier you were talking about seeing women in Iran protesting
and how you feel like you wouldn't have been exposed to that without TikTok.
And I worry that if we continue down this path of implement,
these strict bands and like insisting that we control all of these social media platforms
that like it'll continue to cut us off.
And that's not what I want to see.
Here fucking here.
Abby, thank you so much for being here.
This was informative.
I'm really glad I everyone should read your Newsweek piece.
We're going to put it in the show notes.
But yeah, this was great.
I feel like I learned a lot.
I'm glad that you let me come rant.
I wrote the piece and I was like, I know who I need to send this to it.
You have an open invite.
Anytime you're like, I'm annoyed about this.
You've an open invite.
Well, you know, I love coming on your show.
It's always fun.
You were like one of the first ever podcasts that I did and you were so nice to me.
Oh, my God.
You were, I remember it very clearly.
You were such a pro.
I had no idea what I was doing.
It was all.
I was faking it.
Now you've got the mic.
You've got the pop filter.
Look at you.
Now I know what we're doing.
I know that I can like, when I first started,
I didn't know that I could like restart a sentence when I like the first time I ever did podcast.
So the pressure was way higher.
But now I know I can restart.
Oh, I love a restart.
I restart like, I catch myself doing it in casual conversation or I'm like, nope, no one's going to come in and clean this up.
But you know.
You're like, there's no editor right now.
Still, sometimes it's good to just restart because you're like, you know what?
That sentence had a false.
It was a faulty start.
And it doesn't even matter from being recorded.
It'll make more sense if you just let me scratch it and start over again.
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