US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo has threatened to ban the app
over surveillance concerns.
TikTok,
the wildly popular social media app known for its viral dance and lip sync
clips, has been embraced by millions of students, celebrities and young adults
across the United States. But the company’s ties to China could cripple its
existence.
TikTok, which is owned by the China-based ByteDance, has become the latest target in the Trump administration’s long simmering security and economic battle with Beijing. It is now desperately trying to convince lawmakers and administration officials that its allegiance lies with the United States, not China.
TikTok, which is owned by the China-based ByteDance, has become the latest target in the Trump administration’s long simmering security and economic battle with Beijing. It is now desperately trying to convince lawmakers and administration officials that its allegiance lies with the United States, not China.
The social media
company, which one year ago had virtually no lobbying presence in the nation’s
capital, has hired a small army of more than 35 lobbyists to work on its behalf,
including one with deep ties to President Trump.
Behind that
buildup is a growing threat to one of TikTok’s most important markets.
Secretary of State Mike Pompeo has threatened to ban Chinese apps like TikTok,
which are downloaded to mobile phones, over concerns they could be used for
surveillance by the Chinese government. Peter Navarro, the White House trade
adviser, called TikTok’s new chief executive an “American puppet” during a Fox
Business interview on Sunday and said the administration would take “strong
action” against the company and other Chinese social media apps.
A powerful US
panel has opened a national security review into Bytedance’s 2018 purchase of
Musical.ly, an app that was merged to form TikTok. The Committee on Foreign
Investment in the US is examining whether the merged companies could give the
Chinese government access to vast amounts of American data, including videos
useful for training facial recognition software. And the Trump administration
is weighing action against Chinese social media services like TikTok under the
International Emergency Economic Powers Act, which allows the president to
regulate international commerce in response to unusual and extraordinary
threats, people familiar with the deliberations say.
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