- US companies fear they’d be swept up by bill’s broad language
- Conservatives join progressives warning of security overreach
US tech companies are pushing to narrow the scope of legislation that could ban TikTok in the US, creating new obstacles as the Biden administration seeks to confront
The Information Technology Industry Council, which represents companies including
The fierceness of the opposition may close down an opportunity for the Biden administration to extricate itself from a long-stalled national security review of the popular app with the goal of walling off US data from potential Chinese access.
Earlier proposals to ban TikTok by name because of its Chinese ownership created the potential of a legal challenge over singling out a particular company. Instead, the Senate bill offered last month by Democrat
Warner and Thune describe their bill as a “rules-based approach” that would put a new system in place to address threats not just from TikTok, but from future technologies as well.
“Policy is stronger if it’s not with respect to a single company, because today you worry about TikTok, tomorrow it will be another company,” Commerce Secretary
Although that approach has helped the bill win bipartisan support, it has some tech companies warning that it would give the government sweeping new regulatory power.
Tech executives, who declined to speak on the record, said they’re concerned the measure could expose their companies to national security reviews over even a minor piece of hardware or a line of code if the bill were to become law because most of their systems include some Chinese technology.
Thune said Wednesday that’s not the bill’s intent and that he’s taking feedback from the tech industry for possible amendments to narrow its scope. Still, he recognized that many US companies source technology from China, and he said if the bill becomes law, it would probably accelerate the supply chain diversification that’s already happening.
The bill as currently written “would be a significant expansion” of the Commerce secretary’s authority, according to
“It is basically an argument that security should trump economics and normal rules of trade and normal rules of doing business,” said Reinsch, who was the Commerce Department’s under secretary for export administration during the Clinton administration. “And if I were a high-tech company, I’d be very worried about that.”
Early Momentum
The legislation by Warner and Thune quickly gained momentum after it was introduced last month, drawing a strong roster of bipartisan cosponsors and riding the wave of attention that followed the House hearing last month where lawmakers took turns tearing into TikTok Chief Executive Officer
Now lobbyists across the industry, including cryptocurrency firms, cloud providers and hardware makers, are pushing to narrow the legislation’s language. The growing opposition lays bare the tricky politics for any measure in this Congress that needs to pass a Democratic-led Senate and a Republican-led House to become law.
TikTok has been lobbying hard against the bill on different grounds, arguing that Congress should take a step back and let the existing national security review run its course. The company, owned by Beijing-based
Chinese Technology
Even with US companies across the economy trying to shift production away from China, the world’s second-largest economy is still the leading manufacturer of crucial hardware for many devices. Roughly half of key components for servers, storage and networking gear come from China, according to Bloomberg Intelligence. The majority of electronics manufacturers rely on Chinese technology.
The bill includes specific categories of national security risk that could trigger a review — provisions that would prevent the legislation from being misused, according to Warner spokesperson Rachel Cohen.
The Commerce secretary “would be strictly required to focus on foreign businesses that pose significant and systemic risks to our national security, such as threats to our critical infrastructure and the integrity of our elections process,” Cohen said.
Others aren’t convinced. The Electronic Frontier Foundation, a digital civil liberties nonprofit, said the measure “would open the door to wide-ranging government bans on hardware or software from foreign countries with no explanations needed, little transparency, limited challenges via litigation and limited congressional oversight.”
Government Surveillance
House Republicans have voiced strong opposition to the approach taken by the Warner-Thune bill, saying that it would amount to a vast expansion of government power. This has produced another unlikely alliance: libertarian Republicans and progressive Democrats who have worked together previously to oppose government surveillance.
Republican Representative
“No executive branch agency can be permitted to even start down this path,” Davidson said in an interview.
Some lawmakers of both parties — from New York’s Democratic Representative
Those concerns have been amplified on conservative news channels, including by Fox News host Tucker Carlson.
Thune has responded to this criticism saying his bill “prepares for the threats of the future.” He said it would give President
(Updates with Senator Thune’s comments in ninth paragraph)
--With assistance from
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Larry Liebert
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