Comments by "D W" (@DW-op7ly) on "TikTok BANNED By Biden, Congress: CEO Shou Chew RESPONDS" video.

  1. China won’t allow ByteDance to sell TikTok off Especially to an American company. Because It is the algorithms that make the company It’s not like the Chinese Central Government actually wants a Social Media App that they can’t control and regulate, or to be out there possibly with people giving their unfettered opinions on China anyways They already cracked down on Douyin the sister version of TikTok in China So it’s highly likely the Chinese Government will force ByteDance to have TikToc just leave the US market. Like their Government stated they would do 👇 A forced sale of TikTok in the US amounts to a downgrade of the app, as the Chinese government won’t approve the sale of its algorithms,” said Alex Capri, a research fellow at the Hinrich Foundation and a lecturer at the National University of Singapore’s Business School. “If TikTok is forced to stop operating in the US, ByteDance’s prospects in other mostly liberal democracies will come under further scrutiny,” he said. If the Chinese government won’t let ByteDance relinquish TikTok’s algorithm, it could block the sale outright. Alternatively, it may allow TikTok to be sold without the lucrative algorithm that forms the basis for its popularity. A US ban, or a less powerful version of TikTok,would be a windfall for YouTube, Google, Instagram and other TikTok competitors, as many of its customers may jump ship, Capri said. And it would be a major hit to the global ambitions of ByteDance. “It [a TikTok ban] would be the end of ByteDance’s global expansion, as it would be a sign that the Chinese state values the algorithm’s security more than ByteDance’s financial prosperity and global expansion,” said Richard Windsor, tech industry analyst and founder of Radio Free Mobile, a research company based in the US. “The implications are that the ideological struggle being fought in the technology industry will become more intense.” A ban on TikTok is also likely to accelerate a shift that is splitting the world’s tech landscape into two blocs, one centered on the US, the other embracing tech from China, according to Capri. CNN
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  2. China won’t allow ByteDance to sell TikTok off Especially to an American company. Because It is the algorithms that make the company It’s not like the Chinese Central Government actually wants a Social Media App that they can’t control and regulate, or to be out there possibly with people giving their unfettered opinions on China anyways They already cracked down on Douyin the sister version of TikTok in China So it’s highly likely the Chinese Government will force ByteDance to have TikToc just leave the US market. Like their Government stated they would do 👇 A forced sale of TikTok in the US amounts to a downgrade of the app, as the Chinese government won’t approve the sale of its algorithms,” said Alex Capri, a research fellow at the Hinrich Foundation and a lecturer at the National University of Singapore’s Business School. “If TikTok is forced to stop operating in the US, ByteDance’s prospects in other mostly liberal democracies will come under further scrutiny,” he said. If the Chinese government won’t let ByteDance relinquish TikTok’s algorithm, it could block the sale outright. Alternatively, it may allow TikTok to be sold without the lucrative algorithm that forms the basis for its popularity. A US ban, or a less powerful version of TikTok,would be a windfall for YouTube, Google, Instagram and other TikTok competitors, as many of its customers may jump ship, Capri said. And it would be a major hit to the global ambitions of ByteDance. “It [a TikTok ban] would be the end of ByteDance’s global expansion, as it would be a sign that the Chinese state values the algorithm’s security more than ByteDance’s financial prosperity and global expansion,” said Richard Windsor, tech industry analyst and founder of Radio Free Mobile, a research company based in the US. “The implications are that the ideological struggle being fought in the technology industry will become more intense.” A ban on TikTok is also likely to accelerate a shift that is splitting the world’s tech landscape into two blocs, one centered on the US, the other embracing tech from China, according to Capri. CNN
    1
  3. China won’t allow ByteDance to sell TikTok off Especially to an American company. Because It is the algorithms that make the company It’s not like the Chinese Central Government actually wants a Social Media App that they can’t control and regulate, or to be out there possibly with people giving their unfettered opinions on China anyways They already cracked down on Douyin the sister version of TikTok in China So it’s highly likely the Chinese Government will force ByteDance to have TikToc just leave the US market. Like their Government stated they would do 👇 A forced sale of TikTok in the US amounts to a downgrade of the app, as the Chinese government won’t approve the sale of its algorithms,” said Alex Capri, a research fellow at the Hinrich Foundation and a lecturer at the National University of Singapore’s Business School. “If TikTok is forced to stop operating in the US, ByteDance’s prospects in other mostly liberal democracies will come under further scrutiny,” he said. If the Chinese government won’t let ByteDance relinquish TikTok’s algorithm, it could block the sale outright. Alternatively, it may allow TikTok to be sold without the lucrative algorithm that forms the basis for its popularity. A US ban, or a less powerful version of TikTok,would be a windfall for YouTube, Google, Instagram and other TikTok competitors, as many of its customers may jump ship, Capri said. And it would be a major hit to the global ambitions of ByteDance. “It [a TikTok ban] would be the end of ByteDance’s global expansion, as it would be a sign that the Chinese state values the algorithm’s security more than ByteDance’s financial prosperity and global expansion,” said Richard Windsor, tech industry analyst and founder of Radio Free Mobile, a research company based in the US. “The implications are that the ideological struggle being fought in the technology industry will become more intense.” A ban on TikTok is also likely to accelerate a shift that is splitting the world’s tech landscape into two blocs, one centered on the US, the other embracing tech from China, according to Capri. CNN
    1
  4. China won’t allow ByteDance to sell TikTok off Especially to an American company. Because It is the algorithms that make the company It’s not like the Chinese Central Government actually wants a Social Media App that they can’t control and regulate, or to be out there possibly with people giving their unfettered opinions on China anyways They already cracked down on Douyin the sister version of TikTok in China So it’s highly likely the Chinese Government will force ByteDance to have TikToc just leave the US market. Like their Government stated they would do 👇 A forced sale of TikTok in the US amounts to a downgrade of the app, as the Chinese government won’t approve the sale of its algorithms,” said Alex Capri, a research fellow at the Hinrich Foundation and a lecturer at the National University of Singapore’s Business School. “If TikTok is forced to stop operating in the US, ByteDance’s prospects in other mostly liberal democracies will come under further scrutiny,” he said. If the Chinese government won’t let ByteDance relinquish TikTok’s algorithm, it could block the sale outright. Alternatively, it may allow TikTok to be sold without the lucrative algorithm that forms the basis for its popularity. A US ban, or a less powerful version of TikTok,would be a windfall for YouTube, Google, Instagram and other TikTok competitors, as many of its customers may jump ship, Capri said. And it would be a major hit to the global ambitions of ByteDance. “It [a TikTok ban] would be the end of ByteDance’s global expansion, as it would be a sign that the Chinese state values the algorithm’s security more than ByteDance’s financial prosperity and global expansion,” said Richard Windsor, tech industry analyst and founder of Radio Free Mobile, a research company based in the US. “The implications are that the ideological struggle being fought in the technology industry will become more intense.” A ban on TikTok is also likely to accelerate a shift that is splitting the world’s tech landscape into two blocs, one centered on the US, the other embracing tech from China, according to Capri. CNN
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  6.  @文羽-j7o  China won’t allow ByteDance to sell TikTok off Especially to an American company. Because It is the algorithms that make the company It’s not like the Chinese Central Government actually wants a Social Media App that they can’t control and regulate, or to be out there possibly with people giving their unfettered opinions on China anyways They already cracked down on Douyin the sister version of TikTok in China So it’s highly likely the Chinese Government will force ByteDance to have TikToc just leave the US market. Like their Government stated they would do 👇 A forced sale of TikTok in the US amounts to a downgrade of the app, as the Chinese government won’t approve the sale of its algorithms,” said Alex Capri, a research fellow at the Hinrich Foundation and a lecturer at the National University of Singapore’s Business School. “If TikTok is forced to stop operating in the US, ByteDance’s prospects in other mostly liberal democracies will come under further scrutiny,” he said. If the Chinese government won’t let ByteDance relinquish TikTok’s algorithm, it could block the sale outright. Alternatively, it may allow TikTok to be sold without the lucrative algorithm that forms the basis for its popularity. A US ban, or a less powerful version of TikTok,would be a windfall for YouTube, Google, Instagram and other TikTok competitors, as many of its customers may jump ship, Capri said. And it would be a major hit to the global ambitions of ByteDance. “It [a TikTok ban] would be the end of ByteDance’s global expansion, as it would be a sign that the Chinese state values the algorithm’s security more than ByteDance’s financial prosperity and global expansion,” said Richard Windsor, tech industry analyst and founder of Radio Free Mobile, a research company based in the US. “The implications are that the ideological struggle being fought in the technology industry will become more intense.” A ban on TikTok is also likely to accelerate a shift that is splitting the world’s tech landscape into two blocs, one centered on the US, the other embracing tech from China, according to Capri. CNN
    1
  7. China won’t allow ByteDance to sell TikTok off Especially to an American company. Because It is the algorithms that make the company It’s not like the Chinese Central Government actually wants a Social Media App that they can’t control and regulate, or to be out there possibly with people giving their unfettered opinions on China anyways And yes….they already cracked down on Douyin the sister version of TikTok in China So it’s highly likely the Chinese Government will force ByteDance to have TikToc just leave the US market. Like their Government stated they would do 👇 A forced sale of TikTok in the US amounts to a downgrade of the app, as the Chinese government won’t approve the sale of its algorithms,” said Alex Capri, a research fellow at the Hinrich Foundation and a lecturer at the National University of Singapore’s Business School. “If TikTok is forced to stop operating in the US, ByteDance’s prospects in other mostly liberal democracies will come under further scrutiny,” he said. If the Chinese government won’t let ByteDance relinquish TikTok’s algorithm, it could block the sale outright. Alternatively, it may allow TikTok to be sold without the lucrative algorithm that forms the basis for its popularity. A US ban, or a less powerful version of TikTok,would be a windfall for YouTube, Google, Instagram and other TikTok competitors, as many of its customers may jump ship, Capri said. And it would be a major hit to the global ambitions of ByteDance. “It [a TikTok ban] would be the end of ByteDance’s global expansion, as it would be a sign that the Chinese state values the algorithm’s security more than ByteDance’s financial prosperity and global expansion,” said Richard Windsor, tech industry analyst and founder of Radio Free Mobile, a research company based in the US. “The implications are that the ideological struggle being fought in the technology industry will become more intense.” A ban on TikTok is also likely to accelerate a shift that is splitting the world’s tech landscape into two blocs, one centered on the US, the other embracing tech from China, according to Capri. CNN
    1
  8. China won’t allow ByteDance to sell TikTok off Especially to an American company. Because It is the algorithms that make the company It’s not like the Chinese Central Government actually wants a Social Media App that they can’t control and regulate, or to be out there possibly with people giving their unfettered opinions on China anyways They already cracked down on Douyin the sister version of TikTok in China So it’s highly likely the Chinese Government will force ByteDance to have TikToc just leave the US market. Like their Government stated they would do 👇 A forced sale of TikTok in the US amounts to a downgrade of the app, as the Chinese government won’t approve the sale of its algorithms,” said Alex Capri, a research fellow at the Hinrich Foundation and a lecturer at the National University of Singapore’s Business School. “If TikTok is forced to stop operating in the US, ByteDance’s prospects in other mostly liberal democracies will come under further scrutiny,” he said. If the Chinese government won’t let ByteDance relinquish TikTok’s algorithm, it could block the sale outright. Alternatively, it may allow TikTok to be sold without the lucrative algorithm that forms the basis for its popularity. A US ban, or a less powerful version of TikTok,would be a windfall for YouTube, Google, Instagram and other TikTok competitors, as many of its customers may jump ship, Capri said. And it would be a major hit to the global ambitions of ByteDance. “It [a TikTok ban] would be the end of ByteDance’s global expansion, as it would be a sign that the Chinese state values the algorithm’s security more than ByteDance’s financial prosperity and global expansion,” said Richard Windsor, tech industry analyst and founder of Radio Free Mobile, a research company based in the US. “The implications are that the ideological struggle being fought in the technology industry will become more intense.” A ban on TikTok is also likely to accelerate a shift that is splitting the world’s tech landscape into two blocs, one centered on the US, the other embracing tech from China, according to Capri. CNN
    1
  9. China won’t allow ByteDance to sell TikTok off Especially to an American company. Because It is the algorithms that make the company It’s not like the Chinese Central Government actually wants a Social Media App that they can’t control and regulate, or to be out there possibly with people giving their unfettered opinions on China anyways They already cracked down on Douyin the sister version of TikTok in China So it’s highly likely the Chinese Government will force ByteDance to have TikToc just leave the US market. Like their Government stated they would do 👇 A forced sale of TikTok in the US amounts to a downgrade of the app, as the Chinese government won’t approve the sale of its algorithms,” said Alex Capri, a research fellow at the Hinrich Foundation and a lecturer at the National University of Singapore’s Business School. “If TikTok is forced to stop operating in the US, ByteDance’s prospects in other mostly liberal democracies will come under further scrutiny,” he said. If the Chinese government won’t let ByteDance relinquish TikTok’s algorithm, it could block the sale outright. Alternatively, it may allow TikTok to be sold without the lucrative algorithm that forms the basis for its popularity. A US ban, or a less powerful version of TikTok,would be a windfall for YouTube, Google, Instagram and other TikTok competitors, as many of its customers may jump ship, Capri said. And it would be a major hit to the global ambitions of ByteDance. “It [a TikTok ban] would be the end of ByteDance’s global expansion, as it would be a sign that the Chinese state values the algorithm’s security more than ByteDance’s financial prosperity and global expansion,” said Richard Windsor, tech industry analyst and founder of Radio Free Mobile, a research company based in the US. “The implications are that the ideological struggle being fought in the technology industry will become more intense.” A ban on TikTok is also likely to accelerate a shift that is splitting the world’s tech landscape into two blocs, one centered on the US, the other embracing tech from China, according to Capri. CNN
    1