San Diego Union-Tribune

FEDERAL GOVERNMENT APPEALS INJUNCTION AGAINST TIKTOK BAN

- THE NEW YORK TIMES

The federal government on Thursday appealed a judge’s ruling that prevented the Trump administra­tion from imposing a ban on TikTok, the viral video app owned by the Chinese company ByteDance.

In a filing to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit, the Justice Department argued that a preliminar­y injunction issued last month by Judge Carl Nichols in the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia should be lifted.

A Justice Department spokeswoma­n said it had no further comment beyond the appeal. TikTok declined to comment. It was not immediatel­y clear when the court might act on the government’s appeal.

The government’s decision to appeal the injunction, which delayed TikTok from being banned in U.S. app stores, further escalates the battle between the White House and ByteDance.

The Chinese government has for years prevented its citizens from using internatio­nal apps like Facebook, Twitter and other communicat­ions services. Since President Donald Trump took office, he has repeatedly moved to stop Chinese companies from investing in and acquiring American companies. Citing national security concerns, the administra­tion has also sought to stop U.S. citizens from using Chineseown­ed apps and has worked to banish Chinese technology and hardware from American telecommun­ication networks.

Beyond TikTok, the Trump administra­tion has sought to block WeChat, the popular messaging app owned by Tencent. Last month, the Commerce Department

moved to block American companies like Google and Apple from hosting WeChat in their app stores.

Scrutiny of TikTok began after ByteDance bought its forerunner, Musical.ly, in 2017. American officials began scrutinizi­ng the deal for national security concerns last year. Trump and others have since publicly said TikTok poses a threat because it collects data on Americans.

In August, Trump issued an executive order that effectivel­y mandated that TikTok sell its U.S. operations or halt transactio­ns in the United States. ByteDance has since negotiated a deal to create a new entity, TikTok Global, in which two American companies, Oracle and Walmart, would own a 20 percent stake. But the deal has not been completed.

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