• @tal@lemmy.today
    link
    fedilink
    English
    08 months ago

    Okay, that may be a valid point, though I don’t know what would happen at the polititical level if that actually occurred. If it did, I could imagine China, if the government felt that it were a sufficiently-critical tool, slugging back. Google and Apple also have a business presence in China, so the PRC has similar jurisdiction and could require them to include it, and we’d be looking at a heck of an economic schism or trade war or something.

    • @conciselyverbose@sh.itjust.works
      link
      fedilink
      English
      48 months ago

      Actually happening worldwide isn’t likely. But Google and Apple would not be able to comply with China in that case. They’d be obligated to leave the market. They’re US companies. US Law supersedes any other obligations. And it wouldn’t be the first time the US government has forbidden any business with a foreign company.

      “If the government felt it was a sufficiently critical tool” is exactly why banning it is a genuine possibility, though. Because the Chinese government does exercise far more direct control of how their companies operate, and that control does make TikTok a very real threat to national security.

      If Apple and Google were French companies, for example, though, banning it from the US app stores would still be completely within the government’s authority and would be unlikely to create any real tension between the US and France. Telling them they had to ban it globally or be banned from the US probably would, but sovereignty means being able to put some limitations on interactions between foreign companies within your market.

      • @tal@lemmy.today
        link
        fedilink
        English
        18 months ago

        US Law supersedes any other obligations.

        Only from in the eyes of the US legal system. The Chinese legal system won’t see it that way.

        They can place conflicting demands on a company; they don’t have to be compatible.

        They’d be obligated to leave the market. They’re US companies.

        They’d be placed under conflicting demands. They might well choose to exit, but it isn’t that one set of constraints is superior to another. Look at the current scenario, which is the mirror image of that – Bytedance is being required to divest. They could divest, or could exit the US market.

        • wanderingmagus
          link
          fedilink
          English
          18 months ago

          Honestly, with the way geopolitics is going right now, outright deglobalization sometime this century seems inevitable. It wouldn’t surprise me in the least if the current tensions turn into de facto Cold War II, with regional blocs that outright ban any trade or positive discourse about the other side, and hold high profile hearings on dissidents suspected of following the ideology of the other side.