Towards a total ban on TikTok in the United States? The White House supported, on Tuesday, via its American national security adviser Jake Sullivan, a bill, called the Restrict Act “allowing the banning of applications like the Chinese social network.
This text, carried by a Democratic senator and a Republican senator, “would allow the American State to prevent certain foreign states from operating technological services (…) in a way that threatens the confidential data of Americans and our national security “wrote the adviser to the White House.
Many American elected officials consider the platform of short and viral videos, which belongs to the Chinese group ByteDance, as a threat to national security. They fear, along with a growing number of Western governments, that Beijing could access user data around the world through this application.
TikTok has been denying it for years, but tensions between the two countries and, recently, the downing of a supposed Chinese spy balloon, have raised calls to stand firm against China. “It is widely accepted that TikTok poses a threat to our national security,” the influential elected Republican John Thune pleaded on Tuesday by presenting the text, already supported by a dozen senators.
The chief enforcement officer heard by Congress
A competing bill, introduced in the House of Representatives, also passed a key milestone in Congress last week. At the end of February, the White House had already ordered federal institutions to ensure that TikTok disappears from their smartphones within 30 days, pursuant to a law ratified in early January by Joe Biden.
Banning the application would amount to “muzzling the freedom of expression” of millions of Americans, protests TikTok, which claims more than a hundred million users in the United States. The app’s chief executive, Shou Zi Chew, will be heard by the US Congress at the end of the month.
The application has already surpassed YouTube, Twitter, Instagram and Facebook in “time spent” on it by American adults, and is now trailing Netflix.
The European Commission and the Canadian government recently made similar decisions for their civil servants’ mobile phones, and the Danish parliament announced that it has asked MPs and staff to remove the app from their devices.