The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

House approves bill limiting Tiktok, other social media

Effort aims to block access to state data by foreign nations.

- By Maya T. Prabhu maya.prabhu@ajc.com

The Georgia House voted unanimousl­y to ban social media services such as Tiktok from state devices if they’re owned by “foreign adversarie­s” including China.

The House made minor changes to Senate Bill 93, so it will go back to the Senate for its considerat­ion.

The proposal, which passed Monday on a 174-0 vote, is the latest state effort to crack down on the possibilit­y that foreign countries could snoop on state government data through social media apps. The bill now advances to the Georgia House for further considerat­ion.

Gov. Brian Kemp previously issued a directive prohibitin­g employees in the state’s executive branch from using Tiktok, Wechat and Telegram on state devices. The measure approved Monday would put those restrictio­ns into state law.

State Rep. Clint Crowe, a Republican from Jackson, said the purpose of the bill is to make sure that “foreign adversarie­s” can’t get access to state informatio­n.

“This is trying to make sure that our state-owned devices that are (used) by state employees and students are secure,” he said during Monday’s floor debate.

The bill applies to all state devices used by K-12 public school employees and by employees in the executive, legislativ­e and judicial branches of government. The bill wouldn’t ban use of apps in colleges and universiti­es.

Under the bill, which doesn’t mention Tiktok by name, the Georgia Emergency Management and Homeland Security Agency would be required to maintain a list of “foreign adversarie­s” that includes China, Cuba, Iran, North Korea and Russia to decide which social media sites should be prohibited.

Tiktok’s parent company, Bytedance, is based in Beijing, and Chinese law requires businesses to share data with the country’s government.

The social media platforms would still be allowed in law enforcemen­t investigat­ions, cybersecur­ity research and judicial proceeding­s.

 ?? ARVIN TEMKAR/ARVIN.TEMKAR@AJC.COM ?? State Rep. Clint Crowe, R-jackson, said the purpose of Senate Bill 93 is to make sure “foreign adversarie­s” can’t get access to state informatio­n. The proposal passed in the House on a 174-0 vote Monday with minor changes.
ARVIN TEMKAR/ARVIN.TEMKAR@AJC.COM State Rep. Clint Crowe, R-jackson, said the purpose of Senate Bill 93 is to make sure “foreign adversarie­s” can’t get access to state informatio­n. The proposal passed in the House on a 174-0 vote Monday with minor changes.

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