The Day

The TikTok ban is a bad idea

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Gen Zers might be about to have more free time on their hands. President Biden has promised he would sign a bill barring TikTok from operating in the United States as long as it remains under the ownership of ByteDance, a Chinese company. The House passed it Wednesday, leaving the Senate its last hurdle. Divestitur­e — which would preserve Americans' ability to freely express themselves on a favorite app and permit a competitor of Silicon Valley giants to continue operating — would be much preferable to outright exclusion under current ownership. Maybe that is the outcome Biden and federal lawmakers hope to force. But threatenin­g a one-off ban against a tech firm, arbitraril­y overriding the government's existing process for assessing foreign corporate threats, is the wrong way to achieve that goal.

The House Energy and Commerce Committee voted 50-0 last week to advance legislatio­n effectivel­y prohibitin­g apps “controlled” by a foreign adversary from operating in this country, with TikTok and its Beijing-based parent company, ByteDance, mentioned by name. The only alternativ­e the bill contemplat­es is for the executive branch to approve a divestitur­e. The proposal is drafted more carefully than previous attempts to send ByteDance packing and enjoys wide support. Still, Congress shouldn't exile a vibrant outlet for speech without a credible adjudicati­on of whether and how it poses a threat to national security.

No one should assume TikTok is nothing more than an innocent diversion for young people (and admittedly some older ones, too), merely allowing them to scroll through makeup tutorials, cute animal clips and viral challenges. The app is immensely popular, with more than 100 million active users in the United States alone — and each of those users, some of them potentiall­y people of power and influence, provides TikTok a trove of personal data that the company can theoretica­lly access and exploit. Depending on the permission­s granted to the app, that data might not be restricted to what happens on TikTok: It could also include locations visited, connected WiFi routers and more. The Chinese Communist Party has no qualms about demanding Chinese companies hand over this kind of informatio­n; ByteDance would have no choice but to acquiesce.

That's the privacy threat. Then there's the informatio­n threat. China spreads propaganda far and wide on social media sites — including TikTok, where, a report recently released by the director of national intelligen­ce's office warns, accounts run by a Chinese propaganda arm might have targeted candidates during the 2022 midterm elections. The question is whether Beijing will go further than just that, meddling with TikTok's algorithm to ensure that political narratives it prefers prevail in viewers' feeds. Discerning whether that's occurring is nearly impossible; recommenda­tion systems are generally black boxes. But reports of censorship on the app, particular­ly during pro-democracy protests in Hong Kong, give cause for concern.

There's no concrete evidence at the moment that either of these two threats has materializ­ed in the United States. There is only the risk they could. Perhaps the lawmakers who voted for the TikTok bill anticipate that the social media service will never have to be banned but that, instead, the threat of a ban will force ByteDance to divest its U.S. operations.

But such a bet would be risky and the process unfair. The proper response is for the government to deliberate­ly evaluate TikTok's dangers, then act according to its findings. This is exactly what's supposed to be occurring right now at the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States — but the process, involving a potential arrangemen­t with ByteDance that might mitigate concerns, has stopped and started and appears to be stalled. Biden has also directed the Commerce Department to devise regulation­s addressing foreign software more generally that would, if well-drafted, provide a framework for this sort of evaluation — of TikTok and any other software.

That's the right approach. The wrong approach is to skip the procedure and declare ByteDance's TikTok verboten. The bill before the House would also create a mechanism for the president easily to designate other apps as impermissi­bly subject to foreign control. This is too vulnerable to the whims of legislator­s eager for a campaign trail talking point, as well as executives seeking geopolitic­al clout. Just look at politician­s' many overheated declaratio­ns about TikTok's harms.

The government ought to set itself a high bar for dictating to Americans where they can and can't express themselves. This bill would place it too low.

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