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China’s ByteDance asks US court to block forced sale of TikTok

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ByteDance, the Chinese owner of TikTok, asked the federal appeals court in Washington to intervene to prevent the US government from requiring it to sell the popular video-sharing app or face a ban in the US.

The company is seeking to block an order forcing it to sell its most important internatio­nal business by today, a viral video service with upwards of 100 million users in the US. The Trump administra­tion issued an executive order banning TikTok in the US on national security grounds, and demanded the Chinese company cede control of TikTok to American investors.

A deal was eventually struck to sell about 20 per cent of a new TikTok entity to Oracle and Walmart. However, that agreement is now in limbo after Joe Biden won the US presidenti­al election and a legal challenge to the Trump administra­tion’s ban.

A US security panel had previously set a deadline of today for TikTok to finalise an agreement, and TikTok has requested a 30-day extension to keep working towards a solution that would avert a full sale of TikTok as required in the order.

That request went unanswered, although TikTok is hoping that regardless of the outcome of Tuesday’s petition, an extension could still be granted.

Facing the deadline set by the Committee on Foreign Investment in the US, TikTok said it had to turn to the appeals court “to defend our rights and those of our more than 1,500 employees in the US”.

ByteDance said the divestment order violated its due process rights as well as rules of administra­tive procedure that require the government to explain its reasoning for regulatory decisions.

“For a year, TikTok has actively engaged with CFIUS in good faith to address its national security concerns, even as we disagree with its assessment,” TikTok said. “In the nearly two months since the president gave his preliminar­y approval to our proposal to satisfy those concerns, we have offered detailed solutions to finalise that agreement – but have received no substantiv­e feedback on our extensive data privacy and security framework.”

The US contends that TikTok is a national security threat, saying it could give China’s government access to the personal data of millions of Americans because it is owned by a Chinese company. Tuesday’s court filing includes a letter written by CFIUS explaining the government’s national security concerns with ByteDance’s ownership of TikTok, the first time those concerns have been made public in such detail.

The July 30 letter from the Treasury Department is based on unclassifi­ed informatio­n, although Cfius said its determinat­ion was also based on classified informatio­n.

CFIUS also said ByteDance stores user data on servers hosted by China’s Alibaba and cited reports that Alibaba actively supports the Chinese government’s intelligen­ce and surveillan­ce efforts.

As it faced criticism earlier this year from US President Donald Trump and the order to find a buyer for its American operations, TikTok had been in talks with a number of potential suitors, including Microsoft. However, eventually ByteDance selected the dual proposal from software maker Oracle and retail giant Walmart.

In its petition, ByteDance said that it submitted a new proposal on November 6 that called for a restructur­ing of TikTok in the US and the creation of a new entity that would be wholly owned by Oracle, Walmart and existing US investors.

Mr Trump has previously voiced support for such an arrangemen­t. The new company would be responsibl­e for handling data and content moderation for US users, ByteDance said.

ByteDance has already won court orders blocking a set of prohibitio­ns on TikTok that Mr Trump unveiled in August.

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