Texarkana Gazette

TikTok tells U.S. senators it is working on data-sharing practices

- Todd Shields and Jennifer Jacobs

Video app TikTok, in a letter to nine U.S. senators who accused it of monitoring U.S. citizens, said it is working to meet concerns over its data-sharing practices.

The Chinese-owned app aims “to strengthen data security around U.S. user data,” TikTok Chief Executive Officer Shou Zi Chew said in the June 30 letter obtained by Bloomberg News.

The process involves work with Oracle and Booz Allen Hamilton Holding, Chew said.

Republican Senator Marsha Blackburn of Tennessee said Friday that the letter demonstrat­es why TikTok executives need to testify before lawmakers and explain its relationsh­ip to the ruling Chinese Communist Party.

“TikTok’s response confirms our fears about the CCP’s influence in the company were well founded,” Blackburn told Bloomberg. “The Chinese-run company should have come clean from the start, but it attempted to shroud its work in secrecy. Americans need to know if they are on TikTok, Communist China has their informatio­n.”

Several senators, all Republican­s, in a June 27 letter cited a report in Buzzfeed

News that said TikTok’s U.S. consumer data was accessed by company engineers in China.

The lawmakers said in the letter that TikTok and its parent ByteDance “are using their access to a treasure trove of U.S. consumer data to surveil Americans.” The New York Times reported earlier on TikTok’s response.

The senators’ letter and pressure from a Republican member of the Federal Communicat­ions Commission “increase TikTok’s U.S. political exposure,” Paul Gallant, an analyst with Cowen, said in a note Friday.

A settlement with U.S. authoritie­s “is more likely than an outright ban,” Gallant said. “But we raise the chances of an eventual ban from 10% to 35%.”

Former President Donald Trump tried to ban the app and force ByteDance to sell TikTok’s U.S. business over what he claimed were security risks.

The action was challenged in court and President Joe Biden revoked Trump’s ban in June of 2021 and replaced it with his own executive order.

In the U.S., TikTok has been installed 321.6 million times, according to SensorTowe­r, which analyzes app growth.

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