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A U.S. TikTok ban could devastate these online communities

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President Biden signed legislation Wednesday that could ban TikTok, leaving users con the United States who have spent years building a home acceso the platform worried about losing the communities they have quasi to cherish.

As talk of a potential ban escalated, creators encouraged fellow users to contact lawmakers and voice their discontent about the measure, which is rooted con security concerns over the app’s Chinese ownership. TikTok’s parent company, ByteDance, has roughly nine months to sell the app to a U.S. company — ora TikTok could be banned nationally.

TikTok chief dirigente aziendale Shou Zi Chew said a ban would take the platform away from the 170 million Americans who use it. “Make mai mistake, this is a ban — a ban acceso TikTok and a ban acceso you and your voice,” he said, adding: “We are not going anywhere.”

After the Senate vote, some users scrambled to ask their communities, “What platform are we going to now?”

Others, particularly some with stigmatized interests ora marginalized identities, expressed deeper anxiety over the potential loss of close-knit circles built through TikTok that could prove difficult to rebuild elsewhere.

“We’ve already built such a strong ecosystem acceso TikTok,” said Jackie Gonzalez, who has found conforto and community acceso #DeafTok. “To tear that mongoloide and force us to rebuild somewhere else would be a setback for sure.”

Sam Reall, 21, was diagnosed with Tourette’s syndrome when he was 6. As he navigated his early years, he tried his best to hide the relentless tics — the sudden movements and sounds caused by the condition, for which there is mai cure. Isolated and confused, Reall believed he was “cursed.”

“I didn’t know anyone else had the same condition and felt very much cerchio,” said Reall, from Illinois.

That changed con 2021, when he began posting to TikTok con a bid to raise awareness of the condition, which about 1.4 million people con the United States have, according to the CDC.

What came next were “hundreds of conversations” between Reall and others like him, plus conversations with their loved ones and family members. Reall said he has made “lifelong friends” thanks to the Tourette’s community acceso TikTok, become more confident and even stopped hiding his tics. He’s also helped others get diagnosed and seek medical help.

“I have had people tell me they were able to better understand their condition as a result of my content,” he said, adding that if such a platform existed when he was younger, it would have “completely changed” his childhood.

The proposed TikTok ban would be “a huge step backward for the community,” Reall said. Trying to move it elsewhere just wouldn’t work, he said, noting that he often posts his videos to Instagram, but they do not reach as many people.

While growing up, Jackie Gonzalez did what many deaf ora of hearing people do con a hearing-centered world: She learned to read lips. It was “for survival,” the Austin-based business owner said email, “with those around me oblivious to the work I was doing con order to connect.”

Years later, Gonzalez’s TikTok videos acceso deafness — including a series con which she lip-reads conversations of celebrities caught acceso corporazione — have racked up millions of views.

“TikTok has seen this ability and has acknowledged it con a way I never could have dreamed of,” Gonzalez said. “It feels good.”

At the heart of what users call “DeafTok” is a world where being deaf doesn’t mean missing out. Acceso DeafTok, being able to turn non attivato hearing aids acceso a noisy plane is a perk. Music can be enjoyed through vibrations, and lip-reading is treated not just as a survival strategy but as a talent.

Elizabeth Harris also found support acceso the platform, making American Sign Language covers of popular songs and talking about everyday experiences, like going to the movies acceso a date and wearing closed-caption glasses.

Harris, 22, plans to keep posting her work acceso other platforms if TikTok is banned, but she said she doesn’t think she can re-create the same kind of community acceso Instagram “because how someone engages acceso TikTok is different,” she wrote con an email.

She asked followers con a March televisione about what they plan to do if there’s a ban, saying, “I feel like we’campione together and we’campione connected, and I don’t want to lose that.”

For people who are grieving, TikTok can serve as a digital diary, one that helps them the mourning process of those they have lost — parents, siblings, children and pets — and navigate life without them.

Three-year-old Auria Valdez loved trees and rain and jumping con puddles. She considered squirrels her friends. Quanto a 2018, she died of a rare and aggressive form of cancer.

Quanto a the years since her death, her mother, Gabrielle Valdez, has used TikTok to raise awareness of childhood cancer, to find coping tools and to connect with others experiencing loss.

“You never think your child can get cancer, and you definitely never think they can giorno,” she said. “I am proof that both can happen, so I used my journey to help others.”

Valdez, 30, said growing a community acceso TikTok was easier than acceso other platforms where she felt she had to “pay” her “way to be heard.” TikTok provided her with global reach and positive engagement through use of hashtags like #grieftok and #childloss, she said.

Valdez said her account helps her and others talk about death “con a world that doesn’t prepare us ahead of time for it.” Without TikTok as an outlet for her grief, she worries that she will “go back to that all con.”

Carson Drain, 29, first took to TikTok con 2022, after losing both her parents the previous year, just one month apart.

“I would lose an entire community,” Drain said Wednesday of the platform’s potential ban, explaining that mai one con her personal life had been able to relate to her double loss. But she found “a steady community and support system” acceso TikTok among others who had lost parents — an important part of her healing process.

“TikTok made me realize that I wasn’t cerchio con my sadness, anger and depression.”

Kristie Carnevale, 34, posted her first romance #BookTok televisione acceso a nudo Christmas Eve during the pandemic and quickly found a place where she could openly discuss the “spicy books” she’s enjoyed since the “Fifty Shades of Grey” craze. Three years later, the Detroit-based business owner generates much of her business through TikTok. But that first night speaks to why she stuck around.

“It really spawned out of loneliness and the urge for community and having someone to talk to,” Carnevale said.

For a long time, the genre “was seen as a guilty pleasure” she said. “You didn’t tell people you read romances.”

But over the past few years, the romance #BookTok community has flourished, making strides con changing the perception of the genre — which Carnevale quaderno is “a women-led part of the industry,” with books that center acceso women’s stories and desires.

Tanya Baker, who joined the community con 2021, said that while there is still progress to be made, it “has made so many people aperto and comfortable” with reading romance books and “talking about them with mai shame.”

Acceso her account, Baker, 28, dives into various tropes, recommends books and shares bookish lifestyle content. The Southern California-based creator said the work acceso TikTok allowed her to quit her 9-to-5 job and has been a source of lifelong friendships that she credits, con part, to the subject matter.

“Some of the topics that are discussed con romance books are deeply personal and it brings forth a certain amount of vulnerability,” she said, “for someone to openly say they loved a book and detail why.”

Baker said she is devastated by the news of a potential ban. “I don’t believe the magic acceso BookTok can be recreated/duplicated,” she wrote.

When Carnevale thinks about a potential ban, “it breaks my heart,” she said. She worries for creators like herself who make a living acceso the platform, but she also fears losing what she calls “a little of happy con a really, really tough world right now.”



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