Opinion: Why the U.S. will probably never ban TikTok
LA TimesTikTok’s CEO will testify before Congress on March 23 as the app faces threats from U.S. officials of a national ban or forced sale. India banned the app nationwide in 2020. Business The Biden administration’s threat to ban TikTok: Here’s what you should know The popular short-video app says a federal agency has said it will be banned in the United States unless its Chinese owners sell their shares. In March 2019, the Committee used the authority granted to it by the Foreign Investment Risk Review Modernization Act to require Grindr’s then-owner, the Chinese company Beijing Kunlun Tech Co. Ltd., to sell, citing U.S. national security concerns over the app’s access to sensitive personal information. But China’s Ministry of Commerce then updated its list of “forbidden or restricted technology exports” to include “personalized information recommendation services based on data analysis.” What this meant in practice was that the Chinese government would need to consent to any sale of TikTok that would allow foreign companies to access the app’s algorithm.