Houston Chronicle

Newdeadlin­es loom in TikTok’s appeal of forced sale

- By David Yaffe-Bellany and David McLaughlin

ByteDance Ltd., the Chinese owner of TikTok Inc., has a new December deadline to submit documents as part of its court petition seeking to block a U.S. government forced sale of the video-sharing app.

The U.S. Court of Appeals in Washington on Thursday set dates of Dec. 14 and 28 for for ByteDance and the Trump administra­tion to file motions and other documents in the case.

ByteDance was facing a deadline on Thursday to comply with an order from President Donald Trumpto sell TikTok’s U.S. operations. While the company had received tacit approval from the Trump administra­tion about two months ago on an agreement to divest part of TikTok to Oracle Corp. andWalmart Inc., the deal was never finalized. It’s been stuck in limbo for weeks, and was quickly overshadow­ed by the U.S. election. The delay prompted TikTok to go to the appeals court on Tuesday to prevent a forced sale.

Trump’s order requiring a sale by Nov. 12 allows for a 30-day extension of the deadline but the new dates go past that period. The Commerce Department said on Thursday it won’t enforce its order to shut down TikTok if a sale wasn’t reached by the deadline, citing a federal court ruling in Pennsylvan­ia last month, according to the Wall Street Journal. Lawyers for TikTok and officials at the Treasury Department, which is overseeing the sale, and the Commerce Department didn’t immediatel­y respond to request for comment.

Trump has made the fight over TikTok a central front in a broader tradewar with China, in particular an effort to crack down on the growing influence of China’s technology industry in the U.S. Trump first ordered a TikTok sale in August, and threatened to ban the app if ByteDance couldn’t reach an agreement with an American company. That proposed ban has since been delayed twice — most recently on Oct. 30, when a Pennsylvan­ia judge issued a temporary injunction in response to a lawsuit filed by a group of TikTok users who make their living via the app.

TikTok is one of the most popular apps in the world — with more than 100 million U.S. users — and is also ByteDance’s most important service outside of China. The company and its investors are desperate to finish a deal to avoid a ban in what has been a valuable market for other social media apps, like Facebook Inc.’s Instagram and Snap Inc.’s Snapchat.

The way the original order was worded appears to require a divestment from ByteDance to be in place by the deadline — not just an agreement. If the government does reach an accord with the company, it could exercise discretion around enforcemen­t timing, said Aimen Mir, a partner at Freshfield­s Bruckhaus Deringer and a former deputy assistant secretary for investment security at Treasury, where he ran reviews for the Committee on Foreign Investment in the U.S.

“Usually when there is extended silence from Cfius, it suggests there’s no clear consensus within government on what the next step would be, but this has been an atypical case for awhile,” Mir said.

If an extension hasn’t already been granted, Mir said the Justice Department would have to go to court and seek enforcemen­t of the divestitur­e order.

Trump’s executive order from August doesn’t stipulate a clear punishment for failure to divest, but says that “the Attorney General is authorized to take any steps necessary to enforce this order.”

“There could be fines, or it could be as draconian as a ban if the administra­tion wanted to go that far,” said Carl Tobias, a lawprofess­or at the University of Richmond. “But the government still has until midnight on Nov. 12 to issue an extension, which is a plausible scenario.”

This sale process was originally brought about because of national security concerns. The U.S. government is worried about ByteDance’s access to the personal data of U.S. citizens.

Cfius, the Treasury Department panel that reviews foreign acquisitio­ns of American businesses, said in a July 30 letter included in ByteDance’s court filing that its security concerns were based on both classified and unclassifi­ed informatio­n. The letter cited the move by a ByteDance Chinese affiliate in 2017 to establish a Communist Party Committee in its governance structure, and pointed out thatByteDa­nce also collaborat­es with public security bureaus across China.

“The Treasury Department remains focused on reaching a resolution of the national security risks arising from ByteDance’s acquisitio­n of Musical.ly,” a Treasury spokeswoma­n said in a statement, referring to the 2017 purchase of an app that ByteDance merged with TikTok. “We have been clear with ByteDance regarding the steps necessary to achieve that resolution.” The Justice Department declined to comment.

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