The Mercury News

TikTok ban likely exceeded authority, judge rules

- By David Yaffe-Bellany

A federal judge in Washington said he blocked the Trump administra­tion’s proposed ban on the popular Chinese- owned TikTok app because the U.S. government likely oversteppe­d its authority.

In an opinion unsealed Monday, U.S. District Judge Carl Nichols explained his reasoning for temporaril­y blocking a ban on new TikTok downloads that was set to go into effect Sunday night. TikTok owner ByteDance would likely succeed in proving the Trump administra­tion exceeded its legal authority under the emergency-powers law it invoked in announcing the ban, Nichols said.

Trump has argued that TikTok’s Chinese ownership makes it a threat to national security. In his ruling, Nichols said the government provided “ample evidence” that China is a national security threat, but that its evidence of the threat posed by TikTok “remains less substantia­l.”

While Nichols granted a preliminar­y injunction against the download ban, he declined to halt a separate set of prohibitio­ns scheduled for Nov. 12 that are designed to further curb the app’s use in the U.S.

The judge’s reasoning for his Sunday ruling remained sealed until Monday because some of the government’s filings in the case contained confidenti­al business informatio­n. The ban would have removed TikTok from stores run by Apple Inc. and Google’s Android, the most widely used marketplac­es for apps. People who didn’t yet

have the app wouldn’t have been able to get it, and those who already had it wouldn’t have had access to updates needed to ensure its safe and smooth operation.

TikTok has been downloaded by more than 100 million

Americans.

In his opinion, Nichols said the ban would have done “irreparabl­e harm” to T ikTok , which ha s been growing at a rate of 424,000 new users a day in the U. S. “Barring TikTok from U. S. app stores would, of course, have the immediate and direct effect of halting the influx of new users, likely driving

those users to alternativ­e platforms and eroding TikTok’s competitiv­e position,” Nichols wrote.

Nichols’ eleventh-hour ruling was the second time a judge has blocked the Trump administra­tion’s efforts to crack down on popular apps with Chinese owners. Trump has called for bans on both TikTok and WeChat, owned by China’s Tencent Holdings.

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