TikTok says US House bill that could ban app would 'trample' free speech
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[April 22, 2024]
By Kanishka Singh
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -TikTok on Sunday repeated its free-speech concerns
about a bill passed by the House of Representatives that would ban the
popular social media app in the U.S. if Chinese owner ByteDance did not
sell its stake within a year.
The House passed the legislation on Saturday by a margin of 360 to 58.
It now moves to the Senate where it could be taken up for a vote in the
coming days. President Joe Biden has previously said he would sign the
legislation on TikTok.
Many U.S. lawmakers from both the Republican and Democratic parties and
the Biden administration say TikTok poses national security risks
because China could compel the company to share the data of its 170
million U.S. users.
The step to include TikTok in a broader foreign aid package may
fast-track the timeline on a potential ban after an earlier separate
bill stalled in the Senate.
"It is unfortunate that the House of Representatives is using the cover
of important foreign and humanitarian assistance to once again jam
through a ban bill that would trample the free speech rights of 170
million Americans," TikTok said in a statement.
TikTok in February had criticized the original bill that ultimately
stalled in the Senate, saying that it would "censor millions of
Americans." It had similarly argued that a state ban on TikTok in
Montana passed last year was a violation of the First Amendment.
The American Civil Liberties Union opposed the House bill on free speech
grounds.
TikTok insists it has never shared U.S. data and never would.
Democratic Senator Mark Warner, chairman of the Senate Intelligence
Committee, said on Sunday that TikTok could be used as a propaganda tool
by the Chinese government, noting that "many young people" use TikTok to
get news.
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U.S. flag is placed on a TikTok logo in this illustration taken
March 20, 2024. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration
"The idea that we would give the Communist Party this much of a
propaganda tool as well as the ability to scrape 170 million
Americans' personal data, it is a national security risk," he told
CBS News.
The Knight First Amendment Institute at Columbia University, a free
speech group, said the latest bill had "no real pay-off" because
China and other U.S. rivals could still buy Americans' data from
brokers in the open market and engage in disinformation campaigns
using U.S.-based social media platforms.
Some Democrats have also raised free speech concerns over a ban and
instead asked for stronger data privacy legislation.
Democratic Representative Ro Khanna told ABC News on Sunday that he
felt a TikTok ban may not survive legal scrutiny in courts, citing
the Constitution's free speech protections.
The House voted on March 13 to give ByteDance about six months to
divest the U.S. assets of TikTok or face a ban.
The legislation passed on Saturday gives a nine-month deadline that
could be extended by three months if the president was to determine
progress toward a sale.
Maria Cantwell, the Senate Commerce Committee chair, expressed
support for the latest bill. She had earlier asked the House to
revise some details in the March 13 bill.
TikTok was also a topic of conversation in a call between Biden and
Chinese President Xi Jinping earlier this month. Biden raised
concerns about the app's ownership.
(Reporting by Kanishka Singh in Washington; Editing by Chizu
Nomiyama and Leslie Adler)
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