Guest Editorials, Opinion

Congress scapegoats TikTok, but it’s no worse than others

TikTok Chief Executive Shou Zi Chew did not have a successful appearance before the House Energy and Commerce Committee on Thursday. 

He did not assuage skeptical members of Congress that his enormously popular social media platform can isolate itself from Chinese government interference. Nor did he convince them that TikTok has done enough to address misinformation, protect children from harmful material or remove content that violates its code of conduct.  

Chew’s company was lambasted for more than five hours, a show of rare bipartisan consensus that something needs to be done about TikTok, but exactly what Congress or the Biden administration can or should do remains unclear. 

It also became apparent that while TikTok is currently the target of federal inquiry, primarily because of growing anxiety with China’s power and influence, the concerns over user privacy, misinformation and impacts to children are not unique to TikTok. 

Harmful practices are baked into the business models of social media platforms, including Instagram, Snapchat, Facebook and YouTube. An increasing number of state legislatures and lawsuits are attempting to force companies to take more responsibility for building safer products. Congress too should be wielding its regulatory authority more broadly to protect consumers, not just TikTok users. 

Indeed, TikTok is similar to other social media apps that vacuum up personal data, wrote Ron Deibert, director of the Citizen Lab at the University of Toronto, which analyzed the TikTok app. He added that “most social media apps are unacceptably invasive by design, treat users as raw material for personal data surveillance, and fall short on transparency about their data sharing practices,” which is why comprehensive privacy legislation is needed. 

The immediate question before federal lawmakers is how to address the national security concerns posed by TikTok’s ties to China. Federal agencies have raised alarm because Chinese law requires that Chinese tech companies allow government access to user data. There’s also concern that with the platform’s reach — it has 150 million users — and its powerful algorithm, TikTok could be used as a tool to disseminate propaganda or disinformation. 

The Biden administration has threatened to ban TikTok unless the app’s Chinese owners sell their stakes. 

Chew tried to make the case that TikTok is a private company independent of the Chinese government and could build a firewall to ensure there is no foreign interference. But his argument was undercut by an announcement Thursday from the Chinese Commerce Ministry that would oppose the forced sale. China considers technology a national security issue and has the right under Chinese law to block the export of it. 

If a sale is off the table, the Biden administration has limited options. An outright ban would raise significant technical and legal issues. Besides, simply banning TikTok doesn’t address the larger problem. Regulations and policies that protect Americans’ online privacy and limit the potential for harm to users, young and old, are long overdue. 

This editorial first appeared in the Los Angeles Times. This commentary should be considered another point of view and not necessarily the opinion or editorial policy of The Dominion Post.