The Washington Post

Canada is latest to ban Tiktok on government phones

- BY ADELA SULIMAN

Canada has become the latest country to ban the wildly popular social media app Tiktok from government-issued phones starting Tuesday in a decision that follows similar moves in the United States and Europe.

The Canadian government said it had carried out a review of the video-sharing app owned by a Chinese company and “determined that it presents an unacceptab­le level of risk to privacy and security.”

Tiktok will therefore be removed from all government­issued mobile devices, the Treasury Board of Canada said in a statement, and users of those devices will be blocked from downloadin­g the app in the future.

“The Government of Canada is committed to keeping government informatio­n secure. We regularly monitor our systems and take action to address risks,” Treasury Board President Mona Fortier said.

The decision is “being taken as a precaution, particular­ly given concerns about the legal regime that governs the informatio­n collected from mobile devices, and is in line with the approach of our internatio­nal partners,” Fortier added. However, she noted, “we have no evidence at this point that government informatio­n has been compromise­d.”

Tiktok faces intensifyi­ng scrutiny over concerns that it could be used by Beijing to spy on or influence its more than 1 billion global users, many of them young, as well as over data privacy concerns. The decision comes amid worsening geopolitic­al relations between China and some Western nations, including Canada and the United States.

On Monday, the White House said U.S. government agencies had 30 days to ensure the app had been removed from federal devices and systems, according to the Office of Management and Budget. In response, China’s Foreign Ministry told reporters Tuesday that the decision reflected an insecurity in Washington.

“How unsure of itself can the world’s top superpower be to fear a young people’s favorite app?” said spokeswoma­n Mao Ning. She said that such bans were an abuse of state power and “overstretc­hing the concept of national security,” and she urged the U.S. government to “respect the principles of market economy and fair competitio­n.”

Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau told reporters Monday that banning the app from government devices also would help everyday users “reflect on the security of their own data and perhaps make choices in consequenc­e.”

He added that the ban involving government-issued devices “may be a first step, it may be the only step” that the government needed to take.

Relations between Ottawa and Beijing have been strained in recent years, including over a suspected Chinese spy balloon that recently entered Canadian airspace and claims of election interferen­ce by China in 2021.

Separately, Canada’s federal privacy watchdog and its counterpar­ts in the Canadian provinces of British Columbia, Alberta and Quebec also announced last month a joint investigat­ion into Tiktok to examine whether “the organizati­on’s practices are in compliance with Canadian privacy legislatio­n.”

A spokespers­on for Tiktok said in an emailed statement that Canada had taken its decision “without citing any specific security concern or contacting us with questions,” and said it was “curious” that the move came only after the United States and the European Union took similar actions.

Tiktok is a private company with Western investors and internatio­nal offices, but its parent company, Bytedance, is based in Beijing. Western politician­s have expressed fears that the company’s ownership structure leaves it vulnerable to surveillan­ce and censorship, concerns that Tiktok rebuffs. Tiktok has previously said that it is not unique in the informatio­n that it collects from user activity and that it is not influenced by the Chinese government.

In December, Bytedance fired four employees after an internal investigat­ion found they had tracked two American journalist­s and their associates while trying to identify a company leak. TikTok has said repeatedly that employees in Bytedance’s Beijing office are restricted from accessing Americans’ data.

Last year, Congress announced a sweeping ban of the app for all employees of the federal government on their government-issued devices, citing “high risk” security concerns, and more than two dozen states have introduced similar bans.

The app also has been barred from official mobile devices at the White House, in most branches of the military and in several federal agencies, including the Homeland Security and State department­s. But people who work for the government still can use TikTok on their personal devices.

 ?? FRANK GUNN/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau speaks about the ban, as Ontario Premier Doug Ford listens, in Mississaug­a, Ontario.
FRANK GUNN/ASSOCIATED PRESS Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau speaks about the ban, as Ontario Premier Doug Ford listens, in Mississaug­a, Ontario.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States