TikTok creators left in limbo while awaiting decision on potential 
		platform ban
						
		 
		
		Send a link to a friend  
 
		
		
		 [January 06, 2025]  By 
		JONATHAN LANDRUM JR. and HALELUYA HADERO 
						
		Will TikTok be banned this month? 
		 
		That’s the pressing question keeping creators and small business owners 
		in anxious limbo as they await a decision that could upend their 
		livelihoods. The fate of the popular app will be decided by the Supreme 
		Court, which will hear arguments on Jan. 10 over a law requiring TikTok 
		to break ties with its Chinese-based parent company, ByteDance, or face 
		a U.S. ban. 
		 
		At the heart of the case is whether the law violates the First Amendment 
		with TikTok and its creator allies arguing that it does. The U.S. 
		government, which sees the platform as a national security risk, says it 
		does not. 
		 
		For creators, the TikTok doomsday scenarios are nothing new since 
		President-elect Donald Trump first tried to ban the platform through 
		executive order during his first term. But despite Trump's recent 
		statements indicating he now wants TikTok to stick around, the prospect 
		of a ban has never been as immediate as it is now with the Supreme Court 
		serving as the final arbiter. 
		 
		If the government prevails as it did in a lower court, TikTok says it 
		would shut down its U.S. platform by Jan. 19, leaving creators 
		scrambling to redefine their futures. 
		 
		“A lot of my other creative friends, we're all like freaking out. But 
		I'm staying calm,” said Gillian Johnson, who benefited financially from 
		TikTok’s live feature and rewards program, which helped creators 
		generate higher revenue potential by posting high-quality original 
		content. The 22-year-old filmmaker and recent college graduate uses her 
		TikTok earnings to help fund her equipment for projects such as camera 
		lens and editing software for her short films “Gambit” and “Awaken! My 
		Neighbor.” 
						
		
		  
						
		Johnson said the idea of TikTok going away is “hard to accept.” 
		 
		Many creators have taken to TikTok to voice their frustrations, 
		grappling with the possibility that the platform they’ve invested so 
		much in could soon disappear. Online communities risk being disrupted, 
		and the economic fallout could especially be devastating for those who 
		mainly depend on TikTok and have left full-time jobs to build careers 
		and incomes around their content. 
		 
		For some, the uncertainty has led them to question whether to continue 
		creating content at all, according to Johnson, who says she knows 
		creators who have been thinking about quitting. But Nicla Bartoli, the 
		vice president of sales at The Influencer Marketing Factory, said the 
		creators she has interreacted with have not been too worried since news 
		about a potential TikTok ban has come up repeatedly over the years, and 
		then died down. 
		 
		“I believe a good chunk think it is not going to happen," said Bartoli, 
		whose agency works to pair influencers and brands. 
		 
		It's unclear how quickly the Supreme Court will issue a decision. But 
		the court could act swiftly to block the law from going into effect if 
		at least five of the nine justices deem it unconstitutional. 
		 
		Trump, for his part, has already asked the justices to put a pause on 
		the ban so he could weigh in after he takes office. In a brief — written 
		by his pick for solicitor general — Trump called the First Amendment 
		implications of a TikTok ban “sweeping and troubling" and said he wants 
		a “negotiated resolution” to the issue, something the Biden 
		administration had pursued to no avail. 
						
		While waiting for the dust to settle in Washington, some creators are 
		exploring alternatives ways to promote themselves or their business, 
		encouraging users to follow them on other social media platforms or are 
		investing more time producing non-TikTok content. 
						
		
		  
						
		
            [to top of second column]  | 
            
             
            
			  
            A TikTok sign is displayed on top of their building in Culver City, 
			Calif., on Dec. 3, 2024. (AP Photo/Richard Vogel, File) 
            
			  Johnson says she is already 
			strategizing her next move and exploring alternative opportunities. 
			While she hasn’t found a place quite like TikTok, she’s begun to 
			spend more of her time on other platforms, such as Instagram and 
			YouTube, both of whom are expected to benefit financially if TikTok 
			vanishes. 
			 
			According to a report by Goldman Sachs, the so-called creator 
			economy, which has been fueled in part by TikTok, could be worth 
			$480 billion by 2027. 
			 
			Because the opportunity to monetize content exists across a range of 
			platforms, a vast amount of creators have already diversified their 
			social media presence. However, many TikTok creators have credited 
			the platform — and its algorithm — with giving them a type of 
			exposure they did not receive on other platforms. Some say it has 
			also boosted and provided opportunities for creators of color and 
			those from other marginalized groups. 
			 
			Despite fears about the fate of TikTok, industry analysts note 
			creators are generally avoiding making any big changes, like 
			abandoning platform, until something actually happens. 
			 
			“I’m anxious but also trying to be hopeful in a weird way," said 
			Brandon Hurst, who credits TikTok with rescuing his business from 
			obscurity and propelling it into rapid growth. 
			 
			A year after joining TikTok, the 30-year-old Hurst, who sells 
			plants, said his sales doubled, outpacing the traction he’d 
			struggled to gain on Instagram. He built his clientele through the 
			live feature on TikTok, which has helped him sell more than 77,000 
			plants. The business has thrived so much that he says he now employs 
			five people, including his husband and mom. 
			 
			"For me, this has been my sole way of doing business," Hurst said. 
			 
			Billion Dollar Boy, a New York-based influencer marketing agency, 
			has advised creators to download all of their TikTok content into a 
			personal portfolio, which is especially important for those who post 
			primarily on the platform, said Edward East, the agency’s founder 
			and group CEO. This can help them quickly build their audiences 
			elsewhere. Plus it can serve as a resume for brands who might want 
			to partner with them for product advertisements, East said. 
			 
			But until the deadline of Jan. 19 comes around, East said creators 
			should continue to post regularly on TikTok, which has 170 million 
			monthly U.S. users and remains highly effective in reaching 
			audiences. 
			
			
			  
			If the Supreme Court does not delay the ban, as Trump is asking them 
			to do, app stores and internet service providers would be required 
			to stop providing service to TikTok by Jan. 19. That means anyone 
			who doesn't have TikTok on their phone would be unable to download 
			it. TikTok users would continue to have access, but the prohibitions 
			— which will prevent them from updating the app — will eventually 
			make the app "unworkable,” the Justice Department has said. 
			 
			TikTok said in court documents that it estimates a one-month 
			shutdown would cause the platform to lose approximately a third of 
			its daily users in the U.S. The company argues a shutdown, even if 
			temporary, will cause it irreparable harm, a legal bar used by 
			judges to determine whether to put the brakes on a law facing a 
			challenge. In under three weeks, Americans will know if the Supreme 
			Court agrees. 
			
			
			All contents © copyright 2024 Associated Press. All rights reserved  |