TikTok has made a final appeal to the US supreme court in a last-ditch effort to prevent the enforcement of a new American law that could force the platform’s Chinese parent company, ByteDance, to sell the popular video app or face a nationwide ban.
ByteDance and TikTok filed an emergency injunction request to the justices on Monday, seeking to delay a divestment order due to take effect on 19 January. Without this relief, the companies warn that they will be forced to shut down TikTok’s US operations, depriving roughly 170 million American users of access to the platform.
The contested law, passed by Congress in April, aims to address what US officials call a national security threat posed by TikTok’s Chinese ownership. Authorities claim the company’s vast trove of American user data, including location details and private messages, and the platform’s capacity to influence what content viewers see, could be exploited by foreign adversaries. The law compels ByteDance to divest TikTok by the deadline or face severe operational restrictions.
TikTok and ByteDance dismiss these security concerns, arguing that no imminent threat exists and that Americans should have the freedom to continue using the app with “eyes wide open” to any risks. They contend that the law violates the US constitution’s First Amendment, as it restricts free speech by targeting one specific platform. A lower court in Washington DC rejected these arguments earlier this month, prompting the appeal to the supreme court.
The companies warn that even a temporary shutdown would be devastating, causing the platform to lose around one-third of its US user base. They argue that a sudden closure would severely undermine TikTok’s appeal to advertisers, content creators, and employees.
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