For decades, the United States has fashioned itself the champion of an open internet, arguing that the web should be largely unregulated and that digital data should flow around the globe unhindered by borders.
The government has argued against internet censorship abroad and even funded software that lets people in autocratic states get around online content restrictions.
Digital rights groups and others around the world have taken notice — and raised the question of how the moves against TikTok contradict the United States’ arguments in favor of an open internet.
A Russian opposition blogger, Aleksandr Gorbunov, posted on social media last month that Russia could use the move to shut down services like YouTube.
And digital rights advocates globally are expressing fears of a ripple effect, with the United States providing cover for authoritarians who want to censor the internet.
Persons:
Aleksandr Gorbunov, authoritarians
Organizations:
TikTok, United
Locations:
United States, Israel, Ukraine, States, Russian, Russia