The U.S. move toward banning the hugely popular TikTok video service is “hypocrisy.” That’s the opinion of Steve Wozniak, a cofounder of Apple.
He sees no difference from a Chinese company tracking users and U.S. companies doing the same thing.
Proposed TiKTok ban ignores that Facebook and Google also track users
In mid March, the U.S. House of Representatives resoundingly approved a bill that would essentially ban TikTok in the United States if the Chinese company ByteDance didn’t sell the service.
When CNN asked Steve Wozniak to weigh in on the proposed ban, the tech pioneer pointed out that ByteDance’s practice of tracking users is no different from what US-based social media and search engine companies already do.
“Tracking you is questionable, but my gosh, look at what we’re accusing TikTok of, and then go look at Facebook and Google and that’s how they make their businesses,” said Wozniak.
He noted, “We’re saying ‘oh, you might be tracked by the Chinese.’ Well, they learned it from us.”
Rules should apply to everyone
Wozniak objects to applications and websites tracking users without their knowledge. But one company shouldn’t be singled out for tracking when all others get a pass.
“If you have a principal: a person should not be tracked without them knowing it. You apply it the same to every company or every country,” said the former Apple exec. “You don’t say here’s one case where we’re going to outlaw an app, but we’re not going to do it in these other cases.”
He summed up by saying, “I don’t like the hypocrisy.”