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BIDEN BACKS OFF ON TIKTOK BAN IN REVIEW OF TRUMP CHINA MOVES

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The Biden administra­tion is backing off former President Donald Trump’s attempts to ban the popular video app Tiktok, asking a court to postpone a legal dispute over the proposed ban as the government begins a broader review of the national security threats posed by Chinese technology companies.

A court filing Wednesday said the U.S. Commerce Department is reviewing whether Trump’s claims about Tiktok’s threat to national security justified the attempts to ban it from smartphone app stores and deny it vital technical services.

Separately, the Biden administra­tion has “indefinite­ly” shelved a proposed U.S. takeover of Tiktok, according to a Wall Street Journal

report. Last year, the Trump administra­tion brokered a deal that would have had U.S. corporatio­ns Oracle and Walmart take a large stake in the Chinese-owned app on nationalse­curity grounds.

The unusual arrangemen­t stemmed from a Trump executive order that aimed to ban Tiktok in the U.S. unless it accepted a greater degree of American control.

White House press secretary Jen Psaki did not deny the Journal report, but said Wednesday the Biden administra­tion hasn’t taken a “new proactive step” in the process.

Psaki added that the Biden administra­tion is comprehens­ively evaluating risks to U.S. data, including those involving Tiktok. A review of Tiktok by the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States, which considers national security implicatio­ns of such investment­s, is ongoing, Psaki said. She didn’t offer a timetable for that process.

Trump targeted Tiktok over the summer with a series of executive orders that cited concerns over the U.S. data that Tiktok collects from its users.

But courts temporaril­y blocked the White House’s attempted ban, and the presidenti­al election soon took overshadow­ed the Tiktok fight.

While President Joe Biden has said Tiktok is a concern, his administra­tion hadn’t said whether it will continue to try to ban Tiktok or force a sale. Biden has so far taken a cautious approach to inheriting Trump’s China policies and hasn’t promised to scale back or cancel tariffs and other combative measures.

The Biden administra­tion appears to be creating a clearer set of criteria to evaluate which Chinese

technology platforms pose a legitimate security risk to Americans, said Samm Sacks, a China expert at Yale Law School.

“I don’t think they see Tiktok itself as a highpriori­ty issue,” she said, calling it a hypothetic­al future threat. “This one-off ban on a rotating cast of Chinese tech companies, that’s not likely to continue.”

In September, Trump gave his tentative blessing to a proposal by Tiktok’s Chinese owner Bytedance that would form a new U.S. arm of Tiktok in partnershi­p with Oracle and Walmart, who would make significan­t investment­s in the new company. The arrangemen­t aimed to hand management of the app’s U.S. user data to Oracle. CFIUS, however, has not completed its required review of the arrangemen­t. A government deadline for Tiktok to sell its U.S. operations has passed.

Tiktok has been looking to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit to review Trump’s divestment order and the government’s national-security review.

Tiktok and Oracle didn’t return requests for comment Wednesday. Walmart declined comment Wednesday and referred questions to the Biden administra­tion.

The Treasury Department, which chairs the CFIUS agency reviewing the Tiktok deal, did not reply to a request for comment. Neither did the Commerce Department, which last year had sought to enforce Trump’s orders, nor the Justice Department, which is handling the court challenges.

The Chinese government’s stance toward the deal is unclear. State media in September

criticized the proposal as U.S. bullying and extortion.

Trump cited concerns that the Chinese government could spy on Tiktok users if the app remains under Chinese ownership. Tiktok has denied it’s a security threat but said it was still trying to work with the U.S. government to resolve its concerns.

Tiktok said Oracle and Walmart could acquire up to a combined 20% stake in the new company ahead of a Tiktok initial public offering, which Walmart said could happen within the next year. Oracle’s stake would be 12.5%, and Walmart’s would be 7.5%.

Where Oracle stood to handle data management, Walmart said it would provide e-commerce, fulfillmen­t, payments and other services to the new company. Tiktok said in a November court filing that the new entity, owned by Oracle, Walmart and Bytedance’s existing U.S. investors, would be responsibl­e for Tiktok’s U.S. user data and content moderation. The Trump administra­tion’s aggressive tactics were part of a broader effort to counter the

influence of China. During his term in office, Trump waged a trade war with China, blocked mergers involving Chinese companies and stifled the business of Chinese firms like Huawei, a maker of phones and telecom equipment.

The Biden administra­tion shares many of the Trump administra­tion’s concerns about Chinese technology and trade practices, but they’re likely to use “different tactics and tone on how to achieve those strategic objectives,” said Martijn Rasser, a senior fellow at the Center for a New American Security.

“They’re taking a holistic, strategic approach to these issues and not going after these companies on a one-off basis,” he said. “It’s part of a broader reassessme­nt.”

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