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Comment by ericlamb89

10 hours ago

I'm not sure it's the right thing to ban TikTok, but I'm not surprised people aren't protesting in the streets. My feeling is that most people are addicted to these apps, not using them for the utility or pleasure they bring. These users have a deep down sense that they'd be better off without these apps. Instagram won't be banned, but if it were I think there might be a similar non-reaction.

That doesn't characterize me or any of the folks I know who use the app.

I know what it feels like to be addicted- I used to drink quite heavily and often.

Why are you theorizing about people you don't know engaging in an activity which is foreign to you?

Can you state some of your media consumption preferences so we can deconstruct them and find their problematic aspects via a struggle session? If you're not up for that, why do you feel like it's okay to try and take that line with other adults?

  • Exactly. I know people who have TikTok as the lifeline of their business and they're rightfully pissed off that it's taken from them on a whim.

> My feeling is that most people are addicted to these apps, not using them for the utility or pleasure they bring.

...I find it interesting to think about whether using something due to addiction means you wouldn't protest if it's forcibly taken away.

In other words, I wonder if people would protest if cigarettes were banned.

  • Not many people would protest a cigarette ban because the effects of smoking are very visible.

    Not many people will protest a TikTok ban because it's largely happening to someone else and not very many people care about issues of free speech, as long as it's not happening to them.

>My feeling is that most people are addicted to these apps, not using them for the utility or pleasure they bring.

What if most people aren't addicted to them, and do simply find them useful and entertaining, and the hyperbole and discourse about how dangerous and addictive social media and "algorithms" are is a means to manufacture consent for the government regulating and controlling free speech?

What if it's a bigger problem that all the government has to do is gesture vaguely in the direction of China and many people will just roll over?