U.S. House Republicans press TikTok on Chinese data sharing

WASHINGTON – Republican members of Congress, who will set the agenda for the Home subsequent 12 months, pressed quick video app TikTok on Tuesday over considerations the corporate could have misled Congress about how a lot person knowledge it shares with China, the place proprietor ByteDance is headquartered.

Consultant Cathy McMorris Rodgers, the highest Republican on the Home Vitality and Commerce Committee, and Consultant James Comer, high Republican on the Oversight Committee, wrote to TikTok to say info offered in a workers briefing gave the impression to be inaccurate.

“A number of the info TikTok offered in the course of the workers briefing seems to be unfaithful or deceptive, together with that TikTok doesn't observe U.S. person places,” the Republican lawmakers stated in a letter to TikTok Chief Govt Shou Zi Chew and dated Tuesday.

TikTok didn't instantly reply to a request for remark.

Following election wins earlier this month, Republicans will take management of the Home in January. The letter could possibly be an indication of powerful scrutiny they plan to use to Chinese language corporations together with TikTok, a goal of the Republican administration of former President Donald Trump.

However the Democratic Biden administration has additionally expressed concern about TikTok. FBI Director Christopher Wray stated earlier this month the Chinese language authorities may harness the video-sharing app to affect customers or management their units.

Amongst different questions, the lawmakers requested TikTok to offer drafts of any settlement being negotiated with the Biden administration to permit TikTok to stay lively in the US.

The U.S. authorities’s Committee on Overseas Funding in the US (CFIUS), which evaluations U.S. acquisitions by overseas corporations for potential nationwide safety dangers, in 2020 ordered ByteDance to divest TikTok due to fears U.S. person knowledge could possibly be handed on to China’s communist authorities.

CFIUS and TikTok have been in talks for months aiming to succeed in a nationwide safety settlement to guard the information of TikTok’s greater than 100 million customers.

President Joe Biden in June 2021 withdrew a collection of Trump government orders that sought to ban new downloads of TikTok and ordered the Commerce Division to conduct a overview of safety considerations posed by the apps.

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