The Day

Bill to ban TikTok in U.S. reflects growing concerns

- By DANIEL FLATLEY

— A group of lawmakers has revived legislatio­n to ban TikTok in the U.S. as doubts grow about the viability of an effort to keep data it collects from falling into the hands of the Chinese government.

Sens. Marco Rubio, a Florida Republican, and Angus King, an independen­t from Maine who caucuses with the Democrats, have introduced legislatio­n that would block the popular video-sharing platform because it is controlled by China and there are fears the Beijing government could compel it to share data on U.S. users.

The fate of the legislatio­n — similar to a measure that failed in the last Congress — is unclear as it’s likely to draw opposition from the powerful tech lobby and pits lawmakers against millions of mostly young users of the platform. But the proposal reflects an emerging consensus on Capitol Hill that something must be done as questions mount about whether efforts to wall off U.S. data from people in China can succeed.

TikTok’s Chief Executive Officer Shou Zi Chew is slated to appear before the House Energy and Commerce Committee on March 23 and is expected to address questions about how the company handles user data, among other concerns.

The Biden administra­tion, through the Committee on Foreign Investment in the U.S., has been working on an arrangemen­t that would store U.S. data on servers hosted by Oracle Corp. Lawmakers and experts have raised questions about whether that setup would successful­ly keep the data from leaking to China. Under Chinese law, companies can be compelled to share data with the government.

TikTok Inc. Chief Operating Officer Vanessa Pappas during a Senate hearing in September that the company has strict controls over access to data and where it’s stored, and that the company wouldn’t give that data to the Chinese government.

The Rubio-King bill is one of many proposals that have been introduced in recent days to deal with concerns over TikTok. Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., who has been critical of TikTok in past, has not endorsed any specific measures and Sen. Mark Warner of Virginia, the Democratic chairman of the Intelligen­ce Committee, is pursuing his own legislatio­n that gives the administra­tion authority to pursue restrictio­ns on a whole host of foreign-owned apps but doesn’t specifical­ly target TikTok.

The Rubio-King bill, which was first introduced last Congress by Rubio along with Reps. Mike Gallagher and Raja Krishnamoo­rthi, D-Ill., has added a key lawmaker with King, who has been active on cybersecur­ity issues.

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