Cape Times

Bid to ban TikTok a ‘mission impossible’

- WESLEY DIPHOKO Wesley Diphoko has been working at the intersecti­on of technology and media as an editor of FastCompan­y (SA) magazine, a technology analyst on SABC radio stations, and developing technology solutions in the township economy. You can follow

AMERICAN lawmakers have taken steps to show that they are serious about banning TikTok, if the Chinese parent company ByteDance does not sell to a US company.

When the ban becomes a reality it will be a step back.

A ban is something that I associate with a terrible past.

As news of the TikTok ban emerged I wondered about the possibilit­y of banning an informatio­n platform in our modern era.

Calls for a ban reminded me of what happened to publishers whose books were banned whenever they published something contrary to popular views.

It’s always troubling for society whenever an authoritat­ive entity is advocating for banning anything. Today we have the privilege of reading some of the most important books which were banned at some point.

One would have thought that by now everyone has learnt a lesson about the futility of banning anything. In my view, banning anything that disseminat­es informatio­n does not work.

Rulers of the world who tried to ban important books and informatio­n repositori­es failed dismally. All they did was to delay the distributi­on.

Today, some of the best books written were once banned.

The history of technology also tells us that banning informatio­n platforms often fail. It only manages to frustrate the short-term success of those who are banned. In the long run informatio­n platforms that are banned often survive.

Think WikiLeaks, a platform created

by Julian Assange. WikiLeaks was designed to reveal informatio­n you were not supposed to see.

At some point the informatio­n platform shared informatio­n that revealed how privacy was violated. It seems some of these revelation­s triggered very powerful countries to prevent WikiLeaks from publishing such informatio­n.

We now know that it was almost impossible to close down WikiLeaks. The informatio­n platform was designed in such a way that its presence would not be disturbed.

Closure of the platform in one country triggered a resurrecti­on of another version in a different location. WikiLeaks used servers across the

world. It had several domains (web addresses) making it accessible even if one domain name was shut down.

The story of WikiLeaks should serve as a reminder that modern means of communicat­ion as well as informatio­n platforms cannot easily be banned.

TikTok’s parent company ByteDance knows this very well.

The company has already created another version of TikTok, which is known as Lemon8.

The app which caters to a Gen Z audience, features a mix of TikTok-like videos and Instagram-like photos. One online news platform had this headline describing the latest on the app: “TikTok’s Sister App Lemon8 Grew 160%, Boosts Influencer Marketing.”

Bear in mind that this is just one known replica of TikTok; it’s possible there’s more in different countries.

In my books, this is one indication that it would be impossible to effectivel­y ban TikTok.

I can also confirm, based on my study of Chinese tech companies, that one of their secret weapons is to build tech companies that are difficult to destroy. They are built to withstand bans and other forms of competitio­n disguised as justifiabl­e legislativ­e actions.

The TikTok name may not always be with us. The technology behind TikTok will, however, re-emerge under a different brand name driven by the same business principles that brought us TikTok.

Instead of banning TikTok, those who really care should address the real challenges presented by social media platforms across the globe.

Targeting one social media platform will not work, instead another similar one will come from China or any other country. Will that one be banned as well?

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 ?? | KON KARAMPELAS Pixabay ?? WHEN THE TIKTOK ban becomes a reality it will be a step back, the writer says.
| KON KARAMPELAS Pixabay WHEN THE TIKTOK ban becomes a reality it will be a step back, the writer says.

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