Already highly criticized in the United States by Democrats and Republicans, TikTok begins a year under high tension after the passage of a law banning the popular video-sharing platform on the devices of civil servants.
This text, ratified last week by US President Joe Biden, also prohibits the use of TikTok in the House of Representatives and the Senate.
The increased weight in Congress of Republicans, who hold the majority in the House, risks further complicating the situation for the platform.
The elected conservatives indeed accuse TikTok, property of the Chinese giant ByteDance, of being a tool of espionage or propaganda in the service of Beijing.
TikTok is the equivalent of “digital fentanyl,” claimed Republican Congressman Mike Gallagher, one of the leading anti-China voices in Congress, likening the app to the drug that has caused many overdose deaths in the United States.
“It’s highly addictive and destructive and we’re seeing disturbing data about the devastating impact of constant social media use, especially on young American men and women,” he told NBC News.
“We have to ask ourselves if we want the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) to control what is on the verge of becoming the most powerful media group in the United States,” he added.
A spokesperson for TikTok, quoted in American media, formally denied these accusations, assuring that the CCP “has no direct or indirect control over ByteDance or TikTok”.
The US federal law follows dozens of similar bans at the state or local level.
To have a chance of continuing to be authorized on all American smartphones, TikTok USA may have to separate from ByteDance.
This was already the wish expressed by former President Donald Trump who ordered that the activities of TikTok in the United States be sold to the American groups Oracle and Walmart. His successor Joe Biden adopted a less drastic stance after taking office.
But relations with TikTok soured significantly last month when ByteDance had to admit that employees improperly accessed user data to track journalists to identify the source of media leaks.
A rain of criticism fell on TikTok, in the United States and abroad. French President Emmanuel Macron notably accused the Chinese social network of censoring content and encouraging online addiction among young people.
Attempt to agree
TikTok has been trying for months to find a long-term partnership with the US government through the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States (CFIUS).
Sources familiar with the matter revealed that TikTok and the Biden administration were close to reaching an agreement that would have spelled out strict safeguards for US user data.
“The solution CFIUS envisions is a comprehensive set of measures with multiple layers of government and independent oversight…This goes far beyond what any similar company is doing today,” spokesperson Brooke Oberwetter said. from TikTok.
But negotiations have stalled, especially as FBI Director Christopher Wray has said he continues to view TikTok as a threat to US national security.
Mr. Wray warned last month that Beijing had the ability to control the app’s algorithm, leaving American users vulnerable to a government “that does not share our values, and that has a mission that is in complete contradiction to the best interests of the United States”.
For its part, TikTok categorically denies that the Chinese government wields such influence.