TikTok, owned by Chinese company ByteDance, went dark on Saturday but came back online Sunday.
House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) said that he plans to uphold the divest-or-ban law on TikTok as the Chinese-owned social media platform went dark on Saturday evening.
On Sunday, Johnson spoke to NBC News’ “Meet the Press” and weighed in on TikTok’s decision as well as comments made by incoming President-elect Donald Trump that he would issue an executive order on the matter quickly after taking office on Monday.
Last year, members of Congress passed the ban on TikTok, owned by Chinese company ByteDance, over concerns that the platform is collecting sensitive data and information on Americans. The law required that ByteDance, which has long had an internal Chinese Communist Party committee with its own secretary, divest from TikTok within 270 days of the law being passed, which was Jan. 19.
“It’s not the platform that members of Congress are concerned about,” Johnson told the outlet. “It’s the Chinese Communist Party.”
Also early Sunday, the president-elect that he would issue an executive order upon taking office Monday that will “extend the period of time before the law’s prohibitions take effect, so that we can make a deal to protect our national security.”
In his first administration, Trump had called for the ban on TikTok because of the risk it poses to Americans’ privacy and national security but has recently changed his tune. Trump has credited the app for helping him win the 2024 election.
At oral arguments on Jan. 10, TikTok’s lawyer, Noel Francisco, told the justices that TikTok would “go dark” in the United States if the company did not prevail in its challenge to the law.
In oral arguments this month, Francisco said the app is one of the most popular speech platforms for Americans and said it would essentially shut down on Jan. 19 without divestiture.
Also, Francisco said that the real target of the law “is the speech itself … this fear that Americans, even if fully informed, could be persuaded by Chinese misinformation. That, however, is a decision that the First Amendment leaves to the people.”
However, the justices were not swayed and upheld the ban unanimously. They agreed that the law is intended to block attempts by the Chinese Communist Party to collect intelligence on Americans.
On Saturday evening, TikTok voluntarily shut down its platform, hours before the law took effect. The law stipulates that ByteDance must divest from TikTok or be cut off from app stores inside the United States. It does not preclude users from having it on their devices.
Original News Source Link – Epoch Times
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