The RESTRICT Act Would Restrict a Lot More Than TikTok
Once again, politicians use popular fears to push for open-ended power.

Even if you believe that governments should be in the business of banning things such as popular communications tools, the details of the effort to eject TikTok from the United States should give you pause. Predictably, politicians are using fears that the popular social media service is spying on behalf of the Chinese government to propose broad legislation that threatens to affect much more than one app.
You are reading The Rattler from J.D. Tuccille and Reason. Get more of J.D.'s commentary on government overreach and threats to everyday liberty.
Wait, I Thought This Was About TikTok
"Would the RESTRICT Act—a.k.a. the TikTok ban bill—criminalize the use of VPNs?" Reason's Elizabeth Nolan Brown asked of the potential impact on virtual private networks that shield internet users' identities and locations.
The answer is: in many cases, yes—but wait, there's more! The RESTRICT Act proposed by Sen. Mark Warner (D–Va.) and a list of co-sponsors including Sen. John Thune (R–S.D.), doesn't mention "TikTok," or parent company "ByteDance," or even "social media." Instead, it hands a whole lot of power to the government, particularly the Secretary of Commerce, "to review and prohibit certain transactions between persons in the United States and foreign adversaries" regarding information and communications technology. The bill's text states, in part:
The Secretary, in consultation with the relevant executive department and agency heads, is authorized to and shall take action to identify, deter, disrupt, prevent, prohibit, investigate, or otherwise mitigate, including by negotiating, entering into, or imposing, and enforcing any mitigation measure to address any risk arising from any covered transaction by any person, or with respect to any property, subject to the jurisdiction of the United States that the Secretary determines—
(1) poses an undue or unacceptable risk of—
It then launches into a list of presumed horribles involving "information and communications technology products," "critical infrastructure," "digital economy," "a Federal election," or "national security." It includes a vague authorization of action to counter "coercive or criminal activities by a foreign adversary that are designed to undermine democratic processes and institutions or steer policy and regulatory decisions in favor of the strategic objectives of a foreign adversary…"
"The RESTRICT Act has been garnering bipartisan momentum in the Senate, as well as backing from the Biden administration, as a workable solution to address the emergent risk posed by foreign ICT products and services to national security," The National Law Review summarized last week. "If passed, the RESTRICT Act would provide the secretary of commerce broad authority to take appropriate measures to deal with identified risks, and to enforce such measures with hefty civil and criminal penalties."
Of course, this being the 21st century, the bill also grants the president new power to take actions regarding "undue or unacceptable risk" posed by information and communications technology (ICT).
That's a huge grant of authority to address the supposed peril posed by TikTok. What does it all mean?
Use your imagination; government officials implementing the law certainly will.
No, It's Not Just About TikTok
"VPNs would be covered in the RESTRICT Act led by Sens. Mark R. Warner (D-Va.) and John Thune (R-S.D.) that would require the Commerce Department to evaluate the national security risks of foreign technology," The Washington Post's Tim Starks writes.
"Warner said Chinese VPNs were the sort of apps that cry out for a systemic review like that proposed in the bill, which would allow the Commerce Department to examine apps on national security grounds," Starks's colleague Joseph Menn reported this week.
But the legislation doesn't stop there. The bill's reference to "digital economy" also raises eyebrows.
"Although the primary targets of this legislation are companies like Tik-Tok, the language of the bill could potentially be used to block or disrupt cryptocurrency transactions and, in extreme cases, block Americans' access to open source tools or protocols like Bitcoin," warns Coin Center.
Under the bill, any technology targeted by the government should be connected to a "foreign adversary." Those are defined in the text as China, Cuba, Iran, North Korea, Russia, and Venezuela. But the bill also allows the Secretary of Commerce to designate new foreign adversaries "in consultation with the Director of National Intelligence." That allows an enormous amount of room to go after technology developed in whole or part in countries that don't play along with crackdowns on cryptocurrencies, encryption, or online speech. And the language may allow even broader reach for meddling by U.S. officials.
It's Not Just About Foreign Apps, Either
"No person may cause or aid, abet, counsel, command, induce, procure, permit, or approve the doing of any act prohibited by, or the omission of any act required by any regulation, order, direction, mitigation measure, prohibition, or other authorization or directive issued under, this Act," adds the bill. Arguably, that applies to using an American VPN to evade restrictions on foreign services. "Perhaps a court would ultimately deem it unusable against individuals merely trying to evade a TikTok ban, but that doesn't mean prosecutors wouldn't try," observed Brown.
The bill provides for civil penalties of up to "$250,000 or an amount that is twice the value of the transaction that is the basis of the violation" and criminal penalties of up to 20 years in prison. That said, the sponsors insist that doesn't apply to people using TikTok and other targeted technology.
"Under the terms of the bill, someone must be engaged in 'sabotage or subversion' of communications technology in the U.S., causing 'catastrophic effects' on U.S. critical infrastructure, or 'interfering in, or altering the result' of a federal election in order for criminal penalties to apply," Rachel Cohen, Warner's communications director, insists.
Maybe, but those terms are open to definition. Chances are that ambitious prosecutors will, as always, test the boundaries of the law and some unfortunate souls will be forced to run the federal gauntlet.
If the Feds Don't Like TikTok, They Shouldn't Use It
"We are troubled by growing demands in the United States for restrictions on TikTok, a technology that many people have chosen to exchange information with others around the world," notes the Electronic Frontier Foundation. "Before taking such a drastic step, the government must come forward with specific evidence showing, at the very least, a real problem and a narrowly tailored solution."
"Narrowly tailored" would be deleting TikTok from sensitive government devices and otherwise leaving people alone to make their own choices. The RESTRICT Act isn't narrowly tailored at all. In fact, it's so broad it's difficult to see where its authoritarian powers end. Open-ended bills crafted to exploit popular panics make for terrible legislation.
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
"The Rattler is a weekly newsletter from J.D. Tuccille."
I hope that the rattle snakes will bite ALL of the authoritarians and totalitarians! Don't tread on me!
Easily work do it for everyone from home in part time and I have received $23K in last 4 weeks by easily online work from home.i work daily easily 3 to 4 hours a day in my spare time. everybody can do this job and makes more income online in part time by just open this link and follow instructions……....... https://salarybez4.blogspot.com/
I am able to obtain 80 dollars per/hr to complete easy work working off of a home computer. I not at all realized that it is possible however one of my greatest mate has collected $25k only within three weeks completing this super job furthermore she satisfied me to avail.
Discover further guidance by reaching following
website. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .>>> http://Www.jobsrevenue.com
good
What information?
TikTok didn't ask for any information.
What kind of BS are these Power-Mad politicians selling now?
Funny how the FBI was just recently insisting on back doors while the politicians are blaming their own BS (back-doors) on foreign websites? Typical retarded bureaucracy.
You don’t understand. China. See? China. China is communist. China is bad. China is the enemy. China wants to destroy our country and take over the world. And their government owns and controls all of the corporations in the country (proof that we need more central planning). Since TikTok is Chinese, then it’s a branch of the Chinese government, which means people are running Chinese spyware on their devices. May as well just ask to be bugged. It’s an intelligence bonanza! If we allow it then they’re going to find all of our weaknesses and take over the country! Don’t you get it! That’s why TikTok must be banned along with everything from China! Total boycott for national security!
Or maybe Facebook and YouTube are pissed about competition and this is just a smokescreen to justify more protectionism. Nah, that would be conspiracy talk.
All of those things about China are true. Banning any app service, especially with such an oversized bill like this, is fucking retarded.
Though I’m not surprised the bill was proposed by a Democrat.
All of those things about China are true.
I heard this interview where the person said their society views government differently than we do. I wish I could remember the wording. Something like we respect our government but we'll go out and defy it, while they don't respect their government but they do what they're told. Something to think about.
As far as TikTok goes, I don't see how the information they collect is any different than the information that Facebook and YouTube collect and sell. Why does the Chinese government need their own app to do that? They can just buy the information.
As far as all of those companies go, they’re not free. What people don’t understand is that they are the product. Show me a free app, and I’ll show someone who sells the personal information that you freely give to them in exchange for targeted advertising.
What makes the information that TikTok collects any different? I’m sure that plenty of Chinese companies buy that information from Facebook and Google and such. That means the Chicoms have the information anyway.
So I truly don’t understand what makes this a big deal. It just stinks of protectionism (which sadly is not partisan).
Ah! Cue the conservative girl-bullier cheering squad!
MAGA MAGA Trump's Da Man. If He Can't Gag Her, nobody can! YAAAAAAY DONNNEEEEEE!
The 1856 Dem platform defined its "determined conservatism of the Union—NON-INTERFERENCE BY CONGRESS WITH SLAVERY IN STATE AND TERRITORY, OR IN THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA." Von Mises Libertarian impersonators and God's Own Prohibitionists now agree that enslaving females to build "a new race" is Godly Good Girl-bullying. Dems... won't be fooled again.
Laugh, but China's imports boycott turned the USA into as fanatical a looter dictatorship as the Qing. In 1929 the Geneva Conference was full of proposals for planned global economy, government dope cartels and more government snoops--when only America banned beer AND opium dens. Chinese lobbyists got their way and 2 world wars ending with huge nuclear-tipped communist empires resulted. Conservatives jump through Chinese hoops with no whip needed.
This bill is probably as dangerous as the Patriot Act. Of course it will pass with overwhelming bipartisan support.
We've got a bunch of Chinaphobes in these comments who will cheerfully give up their freedom if it means sticking it to the Chicoms.
It's only insulting if it's true.
“In fact, it’s so broad it’s difficult to see where its authoritarian powers end. Open-ended bills crafted to exploit popular panics make for terrible legislation.”
It seems to me that it wouldn’t be much of a stretch to assume all a federal government entity — be it some busy-body or the President — actually would need to do is to claim that an entity, even one based in the US, was “collaborating” with some foreign government which the aforementioned busy-body chooses to define as “adversarial,” and therefore shut them down pending an “investigation.”
Spike Cohen posted a pretty good summary of this on Facebook 3 days ago. I don't know how to link directly because I'm social media illiterate. Let me summarize here:
Yeah. I was going to write something like that, but I restrained myself a bit. Given the "mission creep" of both administrators, politicians, and judges in response to such legislation, I don't think that it is much of an exaggeration.
I believe the bill also says the law cannot be subject to judicial review by any federal court.
Gee. The new form of "justice" for those who don't "toe the line?"
This seems like a special new type of hell.
So where in its thousands of pages does it say this? Illiterate Jesus never wrote a word except in the 1927 Ayn Rand movie. Illiterate Trumpanzee Dave Smif says to "go back and listen to what I said"... Still, Biden's mandatory minimums law, in its unreadable volume, took judges out of the "War On Some Drugs" Doomsday Machine. So there really IS such a thing. Judges actually fear imprisonment if they deviate one jot or tittle from stare decisis and voted looter usurpations. This is NOT reassuring. (http://bit.ly/41lxAU4)
Seems like a bill they’ve been sitting on for a while just looking for the right time to push it. Just like the Patriot Act.
++
So... which buildings should we not stand near?
RESTRICT is a bad law. A good law might have defined criteria for protecting privacy against totalitarian governments, a perfectly reasonable thing to do, which coincidentally works have forced the US subsidiary of TikTok to be sold to a US or European owner.
But with Reason’s uncompromising, bigoted faux-libertarian approach, it exists outside the window of rational and effective political discussion and therefore fails to have any impact at all.
What does it take for someone like Tucille to understand the threat the word faces from China?
Free and open markets and zero government regulations aren't a panacea JD.
i am making easily persistently $9k to $11k simply by doing direct work at home. Multi month again i have made $28970 from this movement. amazing and smooth to do work and standard pay from this is bewildering. i have propose each final one of you to join this progress right directly as low protection and get than full time salary through take after this association.GOOD LUCK ★★
↓↓↓↓COPY THIS WEBSITE↓↓↓↓
HERE☛↠ https://9dollar9.blogspot.com
I hope if anything this gets people to care about anonymity more. Edward Snowden told everyone a decade ago but still so many not listening. Maybe they will now.
I only use the internet in a virtualbox behind a VPN via non-ISP DNS. Only use non-Chromium browser and a search engine that doesn't track. Use an ad blocker, delet cookies regularly. No social media on my phone, GPS turned off, updates turned off and only DL apps via USB and APK installer on my phone to name a few...
Tuccile is of course right. Who but kids and feds could stomach looking at that or most other cell apps? Its the LEAKS the looter Kleptocracy fears now as it did 100 years ago. But newspaper cartels and infant radio were easy to coerce. Scattered apps aren't. So the choice is clear: A: give up killing, robbing and jailing people for no good reason or B: double down and "kill all who resist, though they should be hundreds of thousands, and thus strike terror into all others similarly disposed. See that the work of murder is thoroughly done; that we may have no further trouble of this kind hereafter." Which do you expect from the Kleptocracy that gets 96% of the votes from the 66% who manage to vote?
If enforced as written, and NOT superseded by new power-grabbing laws passed by pussy-grabbers, authoritarians, and totalitarians, then YES, this! S-230 will save our free speech and property rights!!
Holy Shit, R Mac, have you now finally started to grow a BRAIN!?!? Kudos!