TikTok CEO Shou Zi Chew testified before the House Energy and Commerce Committee Thursday about safety and national security concerns surrounding his social media behemoth. He was not well received.
Members of both parties grilled Chew relentlessly over TikTok’s ties to the Chinese government and its data practices because its parent company, ByteDance, is based in China. The hearing came as President Joe Biden and lawmakers in both parties are considering laws that could regulate or ban TikTok from the U.S. — a hot-button issue since nearly half of the country is on the viral video-sharing platform. While lawmakers did touch on other issues, such as whether the video’s algorithm promotes dangerous content to children, the main focus was how TikTok could be weaponized against Americans through data surveillance or algorithm manipulation.
It’s not sinophobic to ask questions about how to guard against TikTok’s misuse. It’s common sense.
Some critics responded to the harshness of the hearing as proof of bigotry. TikTok’s Chief Operating Officer Vanessa Pappas said the committee’s interrogation was “rooted in xenophobia.” Some progressive commentators have said the same. Rep. Jamaal Bowman, D-N.Y., told NBC News this week ahead of the hearing that fearmongering about TikTok was related to “xenophobia around China” and has warned against what he calls the “racist” reasoning behind talks of a ban.
There’s no doubt that the posture of some lawmakers on TikTok is racialized and grounded in a hawkish attitude toward China. But that’s not the whole story. Given what we know about how Big Tech abuses data, about how China’s authoritarian government systematically embraces surveillance as a tool of social control, and about the increasingly adversarial geopolitical relationship between the U.S. and China, it’s not sinophobic to ask questions about how to guard against TikTok’s misuse. It’s common sense.
While a ban is probably too drastic and may fail to solve all the issues at hand, regulating the company is sensible. Fortunately, one of the key ways to address some of the concerns posed by TikTok — restricting all companies’ capacity to collect data on Americans — could help us solve problems with online life that extends well beyond this social media platform.
Under Chinese law, a Chinese company is obligated to turn over personal data that the Chinese government says is relevant to its national security. Thus, it’s not hard to see how TikTok could easily be weaponized against the U.S. China-based ByteDance employees have already accessed nonpublic data about American TikTok users in the past, and spied on journalists in an attempt to crack down on leaks. It is within the realm of possibility that extremely personal data could be traced to influential political actors in the U.S. and used for blackmail, and that algorithms could be tweaked to spread political disinformation.
Chew claims TikTok would never turn over data to the Chinese government and is making efforts to create a “firewall” for U.S. data storage to prevent it from being accessed abroad — but it seems injudicious for government leaders to take his word for it. The app has 150 million monthly American users and has become a major force in American cultural life. In an era in which information warfare has the capacity to spawn enduring conspiracy theories, energize insurrections and tip elections, it only makes sense to try to anticipate how TikTok could be weaponized.
A complete ban on Tik Tok is a radical step and could potentially be challenged on First Amendment grounds. Moreover, some experts note a ban would not prevent China from buying data about American online users from data brokers and attempting to use such information maliciously. But the U.S. should find ways to regulate TikTok.









