> Do you think anti-ICE videos are being blocked in China?
Of course not, but other stuff is.
Interestingly, my understanding is government pressure forces Douyin to be more "positive" and "encouraging" than Tiktok (i.e. outrage is an easy way drive engagement with obvious negative externalities, and that path is blocked).
Then the GP statement is still correct.
"The forced US hosted tik-tok sale is all about hiding information from the US public that most people in the rest of the world have easy access to."