Biden signs into law Congress bill that bans TikTok use in America as its Chinese owners vow to go to court  

Biden signs into law Congress bill that bans TikTok use in America as its Chinese owners vow to go to court  

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President Joe Biden on Wednesday signed a bill that will ban TikTok in the US unless its Chinese parent company, ByteDance, sells the social media platform’s US assets.

The bill is part of a broader $95 billion foreign aid package providing support to Israel, Ukraine and Taiwan.

Under the new law, ByteDance must divest its US operations by January 19, 2025. The US House of Representatives passed similar legislation in March but the bill stalled in the Senate.

FBI Director Christopher Wray told NBC News earlier this week that TikTok is “a national security concern” because the platform is “beholden to the Chinese government.”

“The data, we’re talking about the ability to control or collect data on millions and millions of users, and to use it for all sorts of influence operations, like driving their AI efforts which are not remotely constrained by the rule of law,” Wray said.

Senator Maria Cantwell (Democratic – Washington), chair of the Senate Commerce Committee, said, “Congress is acting to prevent foreign adversaries from conducting espionage, surveillance, maligned operations, harming vulnerable Americans, our servicemen and women, and our US government personnel.”

TikTok also has come under fire for its negative influence on children and teenagers, including data collection and other privacy issues. However, the bill’s language appears to leave room for the US government to do more than just target TikTok and its parent company or address concerns over what content children are exposed to or about their privacy.

Aside from targeting other sites operated by “foreign adversaries,” the bill also gives the government the power to shut down any website “determined by the President to present a significant threat to the national security of the United States.”

Such “threats” are not explicitly defined in the bill. But critics said lawmakers’ arguments merely mask other intentions underlying the law, including the desire of US intelligence agencies to gain a similar foothold within TikTok as they have attained within US-based social media platforms.

Some critics said they are concerned about the legal precedent a TikTok ban could create.

Tim Hinchliffe, editor of The Sociable, says he thinks “the attempt to force ByteDance to sell TikTok has little to do with China, the Chinese Communist Party and national security, and everything to do with censorship.”

“With its parent company based in Beijing, TikTok is an easier target to go after and silence than any of the big American tech companies – most of which the government funded through DARPA, the National Science Foundation and universities,” Hinchliffe said.

Austin-based attorney and technology expert W. Scott McCollough told The Defender In-Depth earlier this week, “The real reason they are doing this isn’t to positively influence or change what social media does to our kids.”

McCollough said: “Our intelligence services dislike TikTok because they do not control TikTok like they do the social media platforms that were grown here in the United States, the Facebooks and all of the others.”

Andrew Lowenthal, CEO of digital rights and civil liberties organisation Liber-net, observed, “I think it’s hard for me to believe that the explicit reasons being provided are the real reasons, given the information environment we’re in and the level of manipulation we’re seeing.”

Lowenthal added: “I don’t think it’s unreasonable to assume there are risks from a Chinese-owned app in the same way that I’m sure lots of other countries see risks from an American-owned social media platform operating in their country.

“The question is, what are the real reasons? Can we trust the people bringing up the legislation? Is this thing going to open up other dangers that might risk censorship on other platforms?”

Cato Institute analysts Paul Matzko and Jennifer Huddleston said Congress opted for “the most extreme regulatory option on the table instead of adopting intermediate measures that could have addressed concerns about data surveillance and algorithmic manipulation.”

Reuters and CNN reported that TikTok is considering legal action against the US government to challenge the law. In a video posted to TikTok, CEO Shou Zi Chew said: “Rest assured: We aren’t going anywhere. We are confident, and we will keep fighting for your rights in the courts. The facts and the Constitution are on our side and we expect to prevail.”

According to CNN, if ByteDance doesn’t sell TikTok within 270 days, TikTok will be barred from accessing US app stores and “internet hosting services.” The deadline can be extended for another 90 days if “progress” is made toward a sale.

Finding a buyer may not be easy, experts told Reuters. Even if ByteDance could find a buyer with the financial resources, it’s unclear whether China and US government agencies would approve a sale.

The platform is worth anywhere from $20 billion to $100 billion, The Wall Street Journal reported. Efforts to ban TikTok in the US began in 2020, when then-President Donald Trump attempted, through an executive order, to ban the platform and Chinese-owned WeChat.

This effort was blocked in court. In 2022, Biden signed legislation barring US government employees from using TikTok on government phones.

According to Reuters, in November 2023, a Montana judge struck down a state ban on TikTok, on the basis of free speech grounds.

TikTok is set to challenge the new law on First Amendment grounds and TikTok users are expected to take legal action again. Lawyer and tech expert Greg Glaser says that aside from the perceived threat China poses, geopolitics of a different sort may have played a role in the new bill’s passage.

“The political will for the TikTok ban happened immediately after the Israel-Palestine killings in October 2023, when it was revealed that young people overwhelmingly support Palestine, by about 10 to 1.”

Hinchliffe made a similar observation. “Notice how this piece of legislation was lumped together in an aid package for Israel, Ukraine and Taiwan? I think the move to ban TikTok may have something to do with trying to control narratives surrounding those countries and conflicts in the short term, along with any others that may come in the future,” Hinchliffe said.

According to CNN, a potential obstacle in the way of a TikTok sale “is that TikTok’s parent is subject to Chinese law,” with the Chinese government “on record opposing a sale.”

CNN noted that China has imposed export controls governing algorithms, which may prevent TikTok’s algorithms being included in a potential sale.

CNN reported that “TikTok’s looming legal challenge will be one of several that could eventually reach the US Supreme Court that could completely redefine online speech,” alongside other high-profile First Amendment free speech cases.

  • The Defender report
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