TikTok is on the brink of being banned in the United States after a federal appeals court upheld a law requiring its Chinese parent company, ByteDance, to sell the app or face a nationwide ban by January 19, 2025.
The court rejected TikTok’s claim that the law violates the US Constitution, stating that it was designed to address national security concerns, not to censor content. “The law targets control by a foreign adversary, not the content or speech on TikTok,” the judges explained.
In response, TikTok has announced plans to appeal the ruling to the Supreme Court. Spokesperson Michael Hughes criticized the decision, calling the ban based on “flawed and hypothetical concerns” that would effectively silence over 170 million American users.
ByteDance has made it clear that it will not sell TikTok, describing the idea as “impossible.” US officials argue that TikTok could potentially give the Chinese government access to user data or allow for content manipulation, though no evidence has been presented to support these claims. The court maintained that the potential risks, even without concrete evidence, were sufficient to justify action.
The law also permits President Biden to extend the January 19 deadline once, but no decision has been made yet. If the ban is enforced, app stores and internet providers that continue to host TikTok could face penalties. Experts predict that platforms like Meta, YouTube, and Snapchat would stand to gain from TikTok’s removal.
American content creators have voiced concerns over the ban. One expressed, “I don’t want Zuckerberg to own TikTok. This is insane,” while another said, “I hope TikTok survives, but it doesn’t look good.”
Critics argue that the ban sets a dangerous precedent. Patrick Toomey from the ACLU warned that the government lacks evidence of harm and that a broader privacy law could address the concerns without targeting specific apps.
As the deadline approaches, TikTok’s future in the US now hinges on its appeal or a last-minute resolution. For now, the platform’s 170 million American users remain uncertain about the app’s fate.