TikTok heads to court over US law that could lead to a ban on the
popular platform
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[September 16, 2024] By HALELUYA HADERO
The U.S. government and TikTok will go head-to-head
in federal court on Monday as oral arguments begin in a
consequential legal case that will determine if – or how — a popular
social media platform used by nearly half of all Americans will
continue to operate in the country.
Attorneys for the two sides will appear before a panel of judges at
the federal appeals court in Washington. TikTok and its China-based
parent company, ByteDance, are challenging a U.S. law that requires
them to break ties or face a ban in the U.S. by mid-January. The
legal battle is expected to reach the U.S. Supreme Court.
The law, signed by President Joe Biden in April, was a culmination
of a years-long saga in Washington over the short-form video-sharing
app, which the government sees as a national security threat due to
its connections to China. But TikTok argues the law runs afoul of
the First Amendment while other opponents claim it mirrors
crackdowns sometimes seen in authoritarian countries abroad.
In court documents submitted over the summer, the Justice Department
emphasized the government’s two primary concerns. First, TikTok
collects vast swaths of user data, including sensitive information
on viewing habits, that could fall into the hands of the Chinese
government through coercion. Second, the U.S. says the proprietary
algorithm that fuels what users see on the app is vulnerable to
manipulation by Chinese authorities, who can use it to shape content
on the platform in a way that’s difficult to detect.
TikTok has repeatedly said it does not share U.S. user data with the
Chinese government and that concerns the government has raised have
never been substantiated. In court documents, attorneys for both
TikTok and its parent company have argued that members of Congress
sought to punish the platform based on propaganda they perceived to
be on TikTok. The companies also claimed divestment is not possible
and that the app would have to shut down by Jan. 19 if the courts
don’t step in to block the law.
“Even if divestiture were feasible, TikTok in the United States
would still be reduced to a shell of its former self, stripped of
the innovative and expressive technology that tailors content to
each user,” the companies said in a legal brief filed in June. “It
would also become an island, preventing Americans from exchanging
views with the global TikTok community.”
Opponents of the law stress a ban would also cause disruptions in
the world of marketing, retail and in the lives of many different
content creators, some of whom also sued the government in May.
TikTok is covering the legal costs for that lawsuit, which the court
has consolidated with the company’s complaint and another filed on
behalf of conservative creators who work with a nonprofit called
BASED Politics Inc.
Though the government’s primary reasoning for the law is public,
significant portions of its court filings include classified
information that has been redacted and hidden from public view. The
companies have asked the court to reject the secret filings or
appoint a district judge who can ferret through the material, which
the government has opposed because it will cause a delay in the
case. If admitted into the court, legal experts say those secret
filings could make it nearly impossible to know some of the factors
that could play a part in the eventual ruling.
In one of the redacted statements submitted in late July, the
Justice Department claimed TikTok took direction from the Chinese
government about content on its platform, without disclosing
additional details about when or why those incidents occurred. Casey
Blackburn, a senior U.S. intelligence official, wrote in a legal
statement that ByteDance and TikTok “have taken action in response”
to Chinese government demands “to censor content outside of China.”
Though the intelligence community had “no information” that this has
happened on the platform operated by TikTok in the U.S., Blackburn
said there is a risk it “may” occur.
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The TikTok Inc. building is seen in Culver City, Calif., on March
17, 2023. (AP Photo/Damian Dovarganes, File)
In a separate document submitted to court, the DOJ
said the U.S. is “not required to wait until its foreign adversary
takes specific detrimental actions before responding to such a
threat.”
The companies, however, argue the government could have taken a more
tailored approach to resolve its concerns.
During high-stakes negotiations with the Biden administration more
than two years ago, TikTok presented the government with a draft
90-page agreement that allows a third party to monitor the
platform’s algorithm, content moderation practices and other
programming. TikTok says it has spent more than $2 billion to
voluntarily implement some of these measures, which include storing
U.S. user data on servers controlled by the tech giant Oracle. But
it said a deal was not reached because government officials
essentially walked away from the negotiating table in August 2022.
Justice officials have argued complying with the draft agreement is
impossible, or would require extensive resources, due to the size
and the technical complexity of TikTok. The Justice Department also
said the only thing that would resolve the government’s concerns is
severing the ties between TikTok and ByteDance given the porous
relationship between the Chinese government and Chinese companies.
But some observers have wondered whether such a move would
accelerate the so-called “decoupling” between the U.S. and its
strategic rival at a time when other China-founded companies, such
as Shein and Temu, are also making a big splash in the West. Last
week, the Biden administration proposed rules that would crack down
on duty-free products being shipped directly from China.
For its part, ByteDance has publicly said TikTok is not up for sale.
But that has not stopped some investors, including former Treasury
Secretary Steven Mnuchin and billionaire Frank McCourt, from
announcing bids to purchase the platform. However, even if such a
sale would occur, it would most likely be devoid of TikTok's coveted
algorithm, leaving a big question mark on whether the platform would
be capable of serving up the type of personally tailored videos that
users have come to expect.
The political alignments on the issue are playing out in
unconventional ways.
The law, which passed with bipartisan approval in Congress, had
encountered resistance from some progressive and Republican
lawmakers who voiced concerns about giving the government the power
to ban a platform used by 170 million Americans. Former President
Donald Trump, who tried to ban TikTok while in office, is now
opposing a ban because that would help its rival, Facebook, a
platform Trump continues to criticize over his 2020 election loss.
In court, free speech and social justice groups have submitted
amicus briefs in support of TikTok, arguing it restricts the First
Amendment rights of users and suppresses the speech of minority
communities by disrupting a tool many of them use to advocate for
causes online. Some libertarian groups with ties to ByteDance
investor Jeff Yass have also filed briefs supporting the company.
Meanwhile, the Biden administration has received the backing of more
than 20 Republican attorneys general, former national security
officials and China-focused human rights groups who are asking the
court to uphold the law.
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