The incoming national security adviser said Trump’s looking for a deal that would save the app and ‘protect Americans’ data and protect them from influence.’
The incoming administration is confident it can keep TikTok running in the United States while protecting America’s national security, according to Mike Waltz, President-elect Donald Trump’s appointee for national security adviser.
Waltz said in an interview with CNN on Sunday that options to get the social media app back online range from “an outright sale” to “some mechanism of firewalls to make sure that the data is protected here on U.S. soil.”
TikTok’s fate in the United States is hanging in the balance since a ban on the app came into effect on Sunday, the day before the inauguration of Trump, who previously tried to ban the app but is now trying to save it.
Under the Protecting Americans from Foreign Adversary Controlled Applications Act, TikTok has been banned in the United States because its ultimate owner, ByteDance Ltd., is subject to the control of the Chinese communist regime, a foreign adversary of the United States, and has not divested from California-based TikTok Inc. before the deadline.
The Biden administration has said it’s up to the incoming Trump administration to implement the law, and it did not clarify whether it’s enforcing the law on Sunday.
Waltz told CNN that Trump needs “optionality” so he can “evaluate deals that are in accordance with the law but also protect our national security.”
The team is working with “various tech companies” to get TikTok back online and buy Trump more time to save the app, Waltz said, while promising any deal would also protect America from data transfer as well as “any type of foreign interference.”
“We’re confident that we can save Tiktok, but also protect Americans’ data and protect them from influence, whether that’s an outright sale, whether that’s some mechanism of firewalls to make sure that the data is protected here on U.S. soil—that’s what the president will be evaluating,” he said, denying that the move is capitulating to China.
National Security Concerns
TikTok, a spinoff of Chinese social media platform Douyin, uses a powerful proprietary algorithm to recommend videos and create personalized content feeds.
Since the app was launched in the United States in 2017, it has become immensely popular among youth, amassing more than 170 million users in the country and over a billion worldwide.
However, security experts, politicians, and government agencies have long warned that the Chinese regime can access the vast amount of data collected by TikTok, and use the app’s algorithm to shape U.S. culture and public opinion.
The filing also said Lark contained another tool that could trigger the “suppression of content” on TikTok based on the use of certain words.
“Although this tool contained certain policies that only applied to users based in China, [other] such policies may have been used to apply to TikTok users outside of China,” the DOJ’s filing reads.
However, Trump’s stance on the ban has since changed.
The Epoch Times has contacted TikTok and ByteDance for comment.
Original News Source Link – Epoch Times
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