tiktok ban
tiktok ban
TikTok ban
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In 2020, it banned the Chinese-owned app. Today, he opposes the Biden administration’s efforts in this direction.
By Lisa Friedman and Sapna Maheshwari
Four years ago, President Donald J. Trump denounced TikTok, the Chinese video-sharing app, as a risk to American national security. This week, as Trump prepares to take back the White House, he called it “a street for relaxed speech. ”
The comment is part of a brief he filed with the Supreme Court on Friday, asking the justices to suspend the ban on TikTok that goes into effect next month so he can “negotiate a resolution” to save the platform.
A law passed with broad bipartisan consensus and signed by President Biden in April requires ByteDance, TikTok’s parent company, to sell the app to a non-Chinese company or face a ban in the US due to the threat to national security and freedom of expression. The judges are examining the company’s challenge to this law.
TikTok said the law violated the First Amendment. It also says its parent company is majority-owned by investors.
Biden’s leadership and members of Congress argue that Chinese ownership of the platform undermines U. S. security because of the massive amount of user tracking and data collection it conducts, and the threat that Beijing could use the app for propaganda purposes.
That was Mr. Trump’s position, too, before he became a political star on TikTok, where he now has more than 14.7 million followers.
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