San Antonio Express-News

TikTok judge schedules hearing on Sunday

- By David Yaffe-Bellany and Chris Dolmetsch

A federal judge scheduled an unusual Sunday morning hearing to decide whether the U.S. can go through with its ban on the videoshari­ng app TikTok.

ByteDance, TikTok’s Chinese owner, has asked the court to block the ban, set to begin on Sunday night, even as it pursues approvals fromthe government for the sale of a stake in its U.S. operations to Oracle and Walmart under pressure from President Donald Trump.

Trump cited national security last month in announcing a ban on the widely used network from U.S. app stores. The president, who has also barred WeChat, owned by China’s Tencent Holdings, has told ByteDance its only alternativ­e is to sell its American TikTok business. The Justice Department argues that the apps could allow China’s government to gain access to the personal data of millions of Americans.

On Friday afternoon, the U.S. filed a response to ByteDance’s request for a temporary block on the TikTok ban. The document was kept under seal because the U.S. said it contained “confidenti­al business informatio­n” about the app that ByteDance has shared with the Commerce Department.

U.S. District Judge Carl Nichols in Washington had given the U.S. until 2:30 p.m. Friday to delay the ban or fight TikTok’s bid for a preliminar­y injunction. He set Sunday’s hearing for 9:30 a.m.

The ban, announced in an Aug. 6 executive order, is part of a wider effort by the administra­tion to take a hard line against Beijing, as Trump bets it will help him win reelection. Starting at 11:59 p.m. on Sunday, it would remove TikTok from the app stores run by Apple and Google’s Android, the most widely used marketplac­es for downloadab­le apps. People who don’t yet have the app wouldn’t be able to get it, and those who already have it wouldn’t have access to updates needed to ensure its safe and smooth operation. TikTok is used regularly by 19 million Americans.

Ahead of the looming deadline, ByteDance had argued for an expedited schedule in the case. TheU.S. pushed back at a hearing on Thursday, saying ByteDance had filed a separate suit more than a month ago and was late in requesting the injunction in this one.

In defense of the ban, the government again cited security concerns.

“TikTok is allowed to continue operating with respect to existing users but cannot add users, and the reason for that is that there are significan­t national security risks,” Assistant U.S. Attorney Daniel Schwei told the judge.

TikTok said that the ban was already underminin­g its business model by scaring users away and that it had sought relief as soon as it was allowed to under the law. It said the government would have argued its request was premature if filed earlier.

“The urgency of this is created by the Sunday night ban,” attorney John Hall said. “That part of it makes absolutely no sense to us.”

Hall told the judge the ban would increase risks to existing users by preventing them from getting regular security updates. He said the deadline was affecting the company’s reputation with users, who are considerin­g moving to less attractive platforms.

In the social media industry, Hall said, “users retained is absolutely the lifeblood of their business.”

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