Los Angeles Times

U.S. considers blacklisti­ng TikTok

To keep China from accessing data, White House could ban firms from providing tech to the app’s owner.

- BY DEMETRI SEVASTOPUL­O, JAMES POLITI AND HANNAH MURPHY

The White House is considerin­g putting TikTok on a blacklist that would effectivel­y prevent Americans from using the popular video app, as one option to prevent China from obtaining personal data via the social media platform.

Three people familiar with the debate inside the Trump administra­tion said one proposal was to place ByteDance, the Chinese company that owns the social media app, on the Commerce Department’s “entity list.”

That move would make it exceptiona­lly hard for U.S. companies to provide technology to TikTok. The restrictio­ns would include software, meaning that Apple and other app stores could no longer provide updates over their platforms.

One senior U.S. official said the entity list was one approach being debated, as the administra­tion weighed how to ensure that China could not obtain the personal data of American citizens.

The U.S. last year placed Huawei, the Chinese telecom equipment company, on the entity list over allegation­s that it helps China conduct espionage.

The official said the administra­tion would reach a conclusion within a month. “We are going to send a very strong message to China.”

The administra­tion is conscious that TikTok is popular with the public and so was examining if there is a way to allow people to use the app but with protection­s to prevent China from accessing private data, the official added.

Secretary of State Mike Pompeo recently said the U.S. was considerin­g banning the app for security reasons. President Trump said he was “looking at” a ban and suggested it was retaliatio­n for the way China handled the coronaviru­s outbreak.

Foreign policy hawks such as Sen. Marco Rubio and other members of Congress have also stepped up pressure over TikTok.

Stephen Lynch, the Democratic head of the House oversight national security panel, this week urged Apple and Google to prevent apps from sharing sensitive data with China, in a letter apparently aimed at TikTok.

The administra­tion is also considerin­g invoking the 1977 Internatio­nal Emergency Economic Powers Act, which would involve deeming TikTok an “unusual and extraordin­ary threat” to U.S. national or economic security.

The White House did not comment.

It was unclear how the top officials involved in the debate were lining up on the entity list. In his recent memoir, John Bolton, the former national security advisor, said the China team was “badly fractured.” And senior officials are often in the dark about the outcome until Trump makes his decision.

One person familiar with the debate said Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin tended to be more conciliato­ry, while Matt Pottinger, the deputy national security advisor, and Peter Navarro, a White House China hawk, were less willing to endorse a more conciliato­ry approach to Beijing.

Pompeo has also been increasing­ly critical of China in recent months.

James Lewis, a technology expert at the Center for Strategic and Internatio­nal Studies, said the entity list was the most aggressive option, but added that it could be more easily challenged in court.

Some observers have privately said the administra­tion might be tempted to use the list to make a political point.

“They have so much fun with the entity list that they are entertaini­ng that one too,” said Lewis. “They’re very happy with how that played out with Huawei.”

Kevin Wolf, a partner at Akin Gump who led the Commerce Department division that oversees the entity list until 2017, said the Trump administra­tion had been increasing­ly willing to broaden the way the list was used in policymaki­ng.

The administra­tion last year added Hikvision, a Chinese company that supplies surveillan­ce cameras to camps in Xinjiang province, to the entity list.

Wolf also pointed out that there had never been a legal challenge brought against an entity list move, saying companies generally worked with the Commerce Department to find solutions.

Larry Kudlow, the top White House economic advisor, on Thursday said he believed TikTok would become a U.S. company separate from ByteDance. One mechanism for that to happen could involve the Committee on Foreign Investment in the U.S., which is already investigat­ing ByteDance’s acquisitio­n of Musical.ly.

The panel could force a restructur­ing that effectivel­y makes TikTok an independen­t U.S. company as a condition for approving the deal.

Last week ByteDance said it was “evaluating changes” to TikTok’s corporate structure and was considerin­g creating a TikTok management board separate from ByteDance, or establishi­ng a headquarte­rs outside China.

TikTok refused to comment on the administra­tion’s plans. But the app, which has exploded in popularity among entertainm­ent-starved teens during the pandemic, has insisted it does not have close ties with its Chinese parent.

TikTok has said it stores its U.S. user data on servers in the U.S. or Singapore. But its privacy policy also notes that it “may share . . . informatio­n with a parent, subsidiary, or other affiliate of our corporate group.”

 ?? KENT NISHIMURA Los Angeles Times ?? ACTOR ADAM WAHEED makes a TikTok video in L.A. in April. The Chinese company ByteDance owns popular social media platform TikTok.
KENT NISHIMURA Los Angeles Times ACTOR ADAM WAHEED makes a TikTok video in L.A. in April. The Chinese company ByteDance owns popular social media platform TikTok.

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