However, it will be important in any legal challenges under First Amendment analysis.
While there are other platforms for short-form video, TikTok’s users – content creators, consumers or small businesses – have chosen that platform as the one that best fits their needs and preferences. To overcome First Amendment concerns, the government will likely need to demonstrate that forced divestment or otherwise banning the app advances a compelling government interest and represents the least restrictive means of advancing that interest.
Regulating TikTok opens door to censoring Facebook, X
What might that compelling government interest be?
TikTok is headquartered in Singapore and Los Angeles, but its parent company ByteDance is a Chinese company. Because of this connection, some in Congress are primarily concerned with the data TikTok collects on Americans and how, if given to the Chinese Communist Party, that data could be used against U.S. interests.
Others say Beijing could manipulate the TikTok algorithm to engage in nefarious activities such as election interference or misinformation.
However, much of the data collected by TikTok is already available for purchase on the open market through data brokers, and it seems China would rather gain information that way than torpedoing TikTok altogether.
Further, the government regulating TikTok because of concerns about how it organizes its algorithm could open the door for similar regulation and censorship of U.S. companies that collect data on its users – such as Facebook and X (formerly Twitter) – should a president decide to allege their leadership is influenced by foreign adversary in some way.
National security vs. ‘our commitment to free expression’
Many have found that while there might be concerns about TikTok that lead to different individual choices around whether to use the app, the government has not yet made a strong enough case on national security.
In fact, the House Intelligence Committee’s ranking member, Rep. Jim Himes, D‑Conn., voted against the proposal, writing that he believes there is “a way to address the challenge posed by TikTok that is consistent with our commitment to free expression.”
Even in cases of known propaganda like the publication RT America, the U.S.-based broadcast of the Kremlin-backed Russia Today, the United States did not ban access to information but rather trusted Americans to choose the truth in the market of expression. Ultimately, it was the decisions of private actors and not the government that led the decade-old news outlet to go off the air in 2022 (though RT content in English can still be accessed via certain online streaming services).
Right now, we don’t know what the Chinese government is doing with TikTok data, or what if any influence it might have over decisions about the algorithm. This is why, in order to protect Americans, there are less restrictive steps Congress could consider that would have less of an impact on speech short of forced divestment.
The U.S. government has, for instance, banned TikTok from government devices. It could further consider requiring apps to post disclaimers if they have ties to the Chinese government or other adversarial nations, so that users are aware of concerns about propaganda, or it could require data be held at local sites.
These actions also have trade-offs and consequences, but they’d have less of an impact on free speech rights of TikTok’s American users.