Submitted by shellystarzz t3_z5979p in technology
nicuramar t1_ixyy2cj wrote
Reply to comment by AvatarWan in U.S. bans the sale and import of some tech from Chinese companies Huawei and ZTE by shellystarzz
> Uh huh. So they’ve now changed their app so it doesn’t do that anymore.
Sure, and so did many others. This is because now the API works differently, and notifies the user.
> Mind letting me know what functionality they gave up doing that?
I don’t know what tiktok used it for, but I have examples above. It’s also likely possible to code it in a different way so as to not lose functionality. Developers are sometimes lazy. The API worked, so why do it differently.
> I don’t have to think of a legitimate reason why TikTok would need to read my clipboard data, that’s their responsibility. If they can’t, then it shouldn’t be done.
Fortunately for you, they don’t anymore.
> There’s no argument you can make that justifies reading the data
I think I did make such arguments.
> after they were discovered they both changed their app to no longer do that and they didn’t lose any functionality.
You make it sound like it was a big secret. It was just an API that used to not pop up a notification, and now does. So all apps that used this before, now got noticed. But this doesn’t imply anything about how they used it.
Why did they change their app? Well, it’s obviously very annoying for the user with those pop ups, and it raises questions about why they do it. But that still doesn’t mean there weren’t perfectly fine reasons for it.
AvatarWan t1_ixz4jmg wrote
Instagram didn't do it, Twitter didn't do it, Facebook didn't do it. None of the mobile apps in their space did what TikTok was doing. Why was TikTok?
You made arguments, none of them are a good reason for copying clipboard data every second and then suddenly changing that behavior with no functionality loss.
Did they ever give a good reason to be doing it? They haven't. It would seem from a PR perspective if it was for some user functionality benefit you would just say, our bad, we did it so we could parse youtube links automatically for you. They didn't do that.
nicuramar t1_iy1lkra wrote
> Instagram didn’t do it, Twitter didn’t do it, Facebook didn’t do it. None of the mobile apps in their space did what TikTok was doing. Why was TikTok?
Who knows. You don’t, at least.
> You made arguments, none of them are a good reason for copying clipboard data every second and then suddenly changing that behavior with no functionality loss.
Plenty of apps did it, and the functionality lost isn’t always clear to the user, or, like I already said, it was just written a different way so no function was lost.
> Did they ever give a good reason to be doing it? They haven’t.
Sure they did. For instance:
> Following the beta release of iOS14 on June 22, users saw notifications while using a number of popular apps. For TikTok, this was triggered by a feature designed to identify repetitive, spammy behavior. We have already submitted an updated version of the app to the App Store removing the anti-spam feature to eliminate any potential confusion.
Other apps did similar. Also, it wasn’t “every second”.
> It would seem from a PR perspective if it was for some user functionality benefit you would just say, our bad, we did it so we could parse youtube links automatically for you. They didn’t do that.
They did do that.
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