The Daily - How TikTok Became a Matter of National Security
Episode Date: March 20, 2023TikTok, the app known for short videos of lip syncing, dancing and bread baking, is one of the most popular platforms in the country, used by one out of every three Americans.In recent weeks, the Bide...n administration has threatened to ban it over concerns that it poses a threat to national security.Guest: Sapna Maheshwari, a business reporter for The New York Times.Background reading: TikTok’s owner, ByteDance, is being investigated over possible spying on journalists.Why countries are trying to ban TikTok.For more information on today’s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily. Transcripts of each episode will be made available by the next workday.
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From The New York Times, I'm Sabrina Tavernisi, and this is The Daily.
TikTok is one of the most popular apps in the country, used by one out of every three Americans.
In recent weeks, the Biden administration has threatened to ban it.
the Biden administration has threatened to ban it.
Today, Sapna Maheshwari,
on how an app known for videos of lip-syncing,
dancing, and bread-baking,
is now seen by the U.S. government as a threat to national security.
It's Monday, March 20th.
So Sapna, you're a business reporter for The Times and you cover TikTok, which is, of course, an extremely popular app that lots of people are using.
And for many months now, it has been surrounded by lots of controversy.
And I want you to tell me about that.
Tell me what's happening.
Sure.
So TikTok is, of course, a super popular app.
It's full of short form videos.
Teens love it.
They're on it all the time.
But TikTok, while it appears on your phone with apps like Instagram and Snapchat and Twitter,
stands apart from these companies because it's owned by a Chinese company called ByteDance. And that ownership has
increasingly been raising skepticism and alarm bells with the U.S. government. And just recently,
the Biden administration reportedly told TikTok that it wants the company's Chinese ownership to sell TikTok or face a possible ban
in the U.S. So a ban seems like a pretty drastic thing, Sapna. Like, what is the fear here? What's
the government saying? So basically, for a long time now, the government has been worried about
national security concerns tied to TikTok. And when you look at TikTok and you look at what teens are watching, that may sound crazy on the face of it. But because of the company's Chinese
ownership, U.S. officials have said that there is a chance that TikTok could be used by the Chinese
government to collect information on Americans or influence them through TikTok's content.
And this moment is really pivotal because the Biden administration is saying,
hey, this is a huge risk and we're doing something about it. So Sabna, how did we get here? I mean,
how did a Chinese company create one of the most beloved apps in America? So we have to start with
the company that owns TikTok, ByteDance, with a Y. It's a company that makes apps, and it was founded in 2012 by a Chinese entrepreneur named Zhang Yiming.
This was a young man who was very much inspired by companies like Amazon, by people like Mark Zuckerberg.
And he was looking at the contributions these people had made and was thinking, you know, I want to make something like that, but from China. I'm going to make something that's global, that transcends our borders,
and put China on the map. So he wants to create products that
everyone around the world would use, like be the Chinese Mark Zuckerberg.
Yeah, exactly. And what's really interesting is he carried that dream into the ByteDance corporate culture.
He would quote tech icons like Steve Jobs.
And he was known for putting this motto on the walls that said, always day one.
It was a motivational phrase that was taken directly from Amazon.
And you could see where his aspirations were going.
So Sapna, how did he go about trying to achieve that dream? What did he do? Amazon. And you could see, you know, where his aspirations were going.
So Sapna, how did he go about trying to achieve that dream? What did he do?
So ByteDance starts out making popular apps in China. But everything really picks up a few years later when he notices a breakout app in the U.S. called Musical.ly. It was best known as an app where you could make short videos with music,
and it had this cult following with American teenagers.
He took a real interest in this, saw how it was resonating with young people,
and after trying to imitate it a bit, he goes on to try and acquire it, which he does.
So he buys Musical.ly in 2017
and then repackages it into a new app called TikTok.
And then he launches it in the U.S.
And that's kind of his stepping stone into an American audience.
Okay, so he gets this foothold into the American market
through this other app, Musical.ly.
But there's a lot of apps out there, right?
Like, what does he do to make this one breakthrough?
There's all these different things that make TikTok so accessible.
People are really able to just take out their phone and start filming.
You can do things like reaction videos.
You can apply different clips of music or sounds to your videos, and then other users can
remix them. And TikTok is less about connecting with your family and friends and more about
getting you to watch all these short videos. And it really sought to be more like television,
less of a sort of traditional social media app. When you open the app, you're immediately served this unending
stream of really short videos. And very quickly, the app starts paying attention to what you do
next. It looks at how long you watch that video, what second you switch away from it.
If you comment on that video, if you send it to a friend, it's keeping track of all of that
information. And it's using that to
quickly tailor the next video you see and the next and the next after that. And its algorithm
is excellent at figuring out what you liked and serving you more of that. Okay, so its special
sauce is its algorithm and the fact that it's serving up these short, very tailored to my taste
videos like potato chips that people are just eating and
eating and eating. So what happens out there in the world when people start using it?
So TikTok starts picking up a following. People seem to really like the app,
but the real game changer comes in 2020 when, as we all know, the pandemic hit and it just blows up.
the pandemic hit and it just blows up. Okay, I'm bored in the house and I'm in the house bored.
Bored in the house and I'm in the house bored.
People are turning to TikTok for entertainment
and they're discovering how easy it is to make videos.
So I have a decent amount of experience making bread in high school.
I actually had.
They're doing all their quarantine activities on there.
They're making bread and playing with makeup.
So that's what I'm going to do first.
I'm just putting bronze all over my nose.
But they're also doing quirkier things that start to take off as trends.
How to make pancake cereal.
They're making pancake cereal, which is mini pancakes poured into a cereal bowl and eaten like cereal.
My dad's flipping them with toothpicks.
Like really small little pancakes.
Yes, it becomes super popular. My dad's flipping them with toothpicks. Like really small little pancakes.
Yes, it becomes super popular.
Different fashion trends take off.
Cottagecore probably credits some of its success to TikTok.
What is Cottagecore?
Put a finger down if you own more than three flower-printed clothing items,
have more than two glass bottles in your room. It's like this very
whimsical pastoral aesthetic that
makes it look like you just stepped out of a
cottage in the forest and you spend
your time wearing flowy dresses and
making flower crowns. The one good thing
about this quarantine is that my wardrobe
can now consist completely of my vintage
nightgowns. And there's also
all kinds of dance challenges.
There's a million examples, but one of them is the Savage Challenge from Megan Thee Stallion.
One TikTok user choreographed a dance to it. Another one started imitating it in their own videos. And then all of a sudden, Savage goes viral and hits number one on the Billboard charts.
all of a sudden Savage goes viral and hits number one on the Billboard charts.
And so it starts really affecting the mainstream culture. And you start to see some of the popular dancers or people who are just doing interesting things on the platform start to become really
famous. Dancing was always a part of my life. There's this one personality, Charlie D'Amelio.
She started out making dance videos in her bedroom.
She gains a ton of fans.
And a year later, her family has their own Hulu show.
Whoa.
Where the?
D'Amelio.
And you really start to see TikTok play this role in the real world.
Hmm. Interesting.
And then, as TikTok gets more and more users,
it starts to wade into the topic of current events.
If you've been paying attention to the news,
you know that Donald Trump is planning on holding
his first political rally post-quarantine.
And there's this notable event in June of 2020
where ahead of this big Trump rally...
Somebody on another TikTok post commented
that he was offering two free tickets on his campaign website.
A ton of TikTok users and Korean pop fans register for thousands of seats.
And the administration then gets ready for this event.
They prepare all this seating, overflow seating.
The event comes and it's largely empty.
There is a lot of Twitter traffic that says he was played by young people and K-pop fans.
I remember this.
Like all of these kids pranking the president of the United States, basically.
Exactly.
And they claim their victory on, where else?
TikTok.
I think I've done theater shows in high school that have more
of an audience than that. You gotta play it. And we'll do it again, baby. So essentially that speaks
to the muscle the app has, right? That like, it's not just about, you know, bread baking or dancing.
It's also having an effect on politics. Yes. And it just keeps growing and growing. And by August of 2020, TikTok was saying it had more than 100 million active monthly users in America.
So that's just huge, right? I mean, one in three Americans using the thing. At this point, it seems like ByteDance's founder kind of got what he wanted, right?
I mean, he's built this global tech company and all of these people are on it.
He's arrived.
Exactly.
But the problem is that as TikTok became this undeniable success story,
it was also catching the attention of the U.S. government.
Lawmakers start talking about how maybe we should be taking a look at TikTok
and the fact that such a popular app is connected to China.
And then...
We're looking at TikTok. We may be banning TikTok.
We may be doing some other things.
Trump starts talking about banning TikTok.
We are looking at a lot of alternatives with respect to TikTok. And this
is a really big moment. He issues two executive orders. One is effectively banning TikTok and the
other forces ByteDance to sell TikTok to an American company. So the message is very clear,
and that is that TikTok is now being seen as a threat by the U.S. government. And actually,
as it turns out, the Committee on Foreign Investment in the U.S.,
this really important government committee known as CFIUS,
that's in charge of looking at deals that involve foreign companies,
has already been investigating TikTok for a while.
And Sapna, what exactly is it investigating?
So there's two big concerns around TikTok.
One is the data that they have
on American users, and the other is misinformation and censorship. So let's look at the data part.
Think about all the information that you share with an app on your phone. It's IP addresses,
it's location, it could be your whole contacts list. Right. The concern here is that there's a Chinese law that requires
private companies in China to confidentially turn over information requested by the Chinese
government. So in other words, China could actually get data from 100 million Americans
and it can do it legally. That's the concern. And Sapna, what are we worried that China might
do with that data? Like, why is it bad that China would get American data?
So the fear is that the Chinese government could potentially use it to spy on certain Americans, to harass or blackmail them.
This kind of data is so personal and sensitive that it could be misused in maybe ways that we can't even conceive of.
And what about the second concern?
misused in maybe ways that we can't even conceive of. And what about the second concern? The other big concern is really about the actual videos that are getting shown on TikTok. This is about
content moderation and whether the Chinese government could potentially harness TikTok to
spread misinformation or censor certain content and basically influence what Americans are thinking.
People are worried, for example, that the Chinese government could use TikTok to promote or suppress certain content
when it works in their favor, say, U.S. elections or news about China.
But isn't this a problem with American companies, too?
I mean, Facebook famously has these problems with data and misinformation, right?
Yes, definitely. These are things that the U.S. government is worried about with U.S. companies. But the difference here is that this is a Chinese
company and the fear is that they have to answer to the Chinese government at the end of the day.
Okay, so these are the things that the U.S. government is worried about,
data gathering on Americans, misinformation and censorship. But does the Trump administration have proof that these things are actually happening?
So at this point, there's not a lot of proof that TikTok is actually mishandling data or manipulating videos.
And Trump's attempts to ban TikTok also face legal challenges right away.
And courts say that he doesn't have the authority to ban the app.
courts say that he doesn't have the authority to ban the app.
And then it seems like a new day for TikTok when Biden takes office.
He shelves the plan to sell TikTok to American companies.
He revokes Trump's executive orders.
And he replaces them with a more general order to keep investigating foreign-controlled apps like TikTok.
It even seems like the Biden administration and TikTok
could reach a deal around how to address
some of these national security concerns.
But then in 2022, there are some new revelations
that show that some of these fears
are actually grounded in reality. We'll be right back.
So Sapna, you just told me that in 2022, we started to see some real there there when it came to, you know, actual security risks from TikTok.
What were we seeing at that time?
So there's some reporting from BuzzFeed News that comes out that starts really exploring the relationship between ByteDance in China and TikTok in the United States.
and TikTok in the United States.
BuzzFeed reports that China-based employees of ByteDance have repeatedly accessed non-public data about U.S. TikTok users.
It shows that apparently employees of ByteDance in China
have been getting their hands on the data of U.S. users.
And this kind of data was accessed repeatedly
by employees who are based in China.
Potentially exposing Americans' personal information
to China's government.
And the reporting at BuzzFeed News
makes this allegation based on
internal recordings at the company.
Employees can be heard saying phrases like
everything is seen in China
and also refer to Beijing-based engineers as the master admin who have access to everything.
And a few months later it emerges that ByteDance employees actually went on to try and track this
journalist and figure out where she was getting these leaks.
I don't know when they first tried to track me.
Wow, so that does seem like the kind of thing
that the U.S. government was worried about, right?
That's right.
And ByteDance basically admitted that four of its employees
had been obtaining the data of this journalist using her IP address.
That means the company knows the IP address of my house,
which I'd rather they didn't.
But they
say they fired these bad actors and these are isolated incidents and they try to move on.
So it does feel vindicating to hear that the company has acknowledged that they did this
and that they're taking responsibility for it. But at the end of the day, there's really no
putting a genie back in the bottle. Once it is accessed in Beijing,
the idea that there's a clawback or way to control or limit access, it just doesn't make sense.
And all of a sudden, this gives a lot of ammunition to lawmakers who have already
been concerned about TikTok. This company should be banned. I don't know why they're
allowed to operate in the United States. And around this time, everything just really starts escalating.
in the United States.
And around this time,
everything just really starts escalating.
You have the FBI director warning that the Chinese government
could use TikTok for influence operations.
All of these things are in the hands of a government
that doesn't share our values
and that has a mission that's very much at odds
with what's in the best interest of the United States,
that should concern us.
A growing list of states just starts banning TikTok
on any devices that come from the government.
Nebraska was first to do this in 2020,
but now South Dakota, South Carolina, Texas, and Maryland
all joining in just this week.
And what's unique here is that this is really a bipartisan effort.
Initially, the states that are trying to ban TikTok are led by Republican governors.
But before long, it includes Democrats, too.
At least 31 states, including Texas, have enacted some sort of TikTok ban,
mainly on government-owned phones and computers.
And then Biden signs a ban of TikTok on all government-provided federal devices.
The White House announcing Monday that government agencies have 30 days
to delete TikTok from their devices and systems.
The White House officials say the guidance is part of the administration's commitment
to protecting the American people's security and privacy.
Like basically the Biden administration is saying, you know, TikTok is
dangerous enough that if you have anything to do with the government, you shouldn't be using it on
your government held device. Yeah, it's basically saying that it's a national security threat to
have TikTok on a phone that the government gave you. And then around the same time, you have a
bunch of different U.S. lawmakers who start to introduce bills that are
designed to essentially ban TikTok nationally, even for the regular everyday users of TikTok.
Okay, so there's this bipartisan flurry of bans of TikTok. What's TikTok saying about all of this?
I think, first of all, that we take all these concerns very seriously.
We have been studying them.
And for the last couple of years, we've been working with CFIUS and with our engineers
to try and solve what we think is a very solvable problem.
So TikTok is saying that all of these accusations are
really unfair and that it's never turned over data to the Chinese government, that it's
never manipulated what Americans are watching to promote any Chinese government goals.
Now for us, you know, no foreign government has asked us for U.S. user data before.
Really, to heaven. And if they did, we know, no foreign government has asked us for U.S. user data before. Really, to heaven.
And if they did, we would say no.
And they really step up their efforts in Washington. They start meeting with lawmakers who have been critical of the app to defend themselves.
And at the same time, they've been negotiating this plan with the Biden administration through this body that we talked about called CFIUS. They have
submitted this plan to this group that basically details how they can continue to operate in the
U.S. while addressing these national security concerns and remaining under Chinese ownership.
And this plan is really detailed. It's 90 pages long. It describes how U.S. user data will be stored, how it will prevent access from employees in China. It says that there will be this special oversight and transparency around its content recommendation algorithms.
algorithms. And they're saying that they're going to spend billions of dollars on this plan,
one and a half billion dollars initially, and then up to a billion dollars annually after that.
And then just last week, the news emerges that the Biden administration is actually pressuring the company's Chinese ownership to either sell or face a potential ban.
Right, which of course brings us back to where we started this conversation, right?
So the Biden administration doesn't seem to be convinced by TikTok's plan.
And now, in a way, it's trying to finish what Trump started, right?
That's right. But this time around, you have both Republicans and Democrats who are united in this effort against TikTok, which is really different from 2020.
And there's even one interesting new bill that's gaining a lot of traction right now called the Restrict Act that could give more power to the Biden administration to potentially either ban or force a sale of the app.
So some people are looking to this as a potential game changer this time around for taking action
against TikTok. Okay, so the Biden administration could have more authority now than the Trump
administration had. It's possible. But experts think that the Biden administration is going to run into a lot of the same problems that the Trump administration did.
You already have groups like the ACLU that have come out and said that a ban on TikTok would threaten the First Amendment rights of Americans.
And then when it comes to a potential sale, there are just so many questions around what that looks like.
TikTok could be
incredibly expensive. There may not be that many companies in the United States that could
afford it. You know, some of the companies that could afford it, like Google or Facebook,
might run into antitrust issues. They may not want to take on a company like TikTok,
even though it's so popular.
And there's also the question around, you know, what China will allow.
There could be rules from the Chinese government that prevent the export of TikTok's algorithm,
the thing that makes it so compelling and so popular.
And so it's going to be really fascinating to watch this play out because there's a lot of uncertainty around the shape that this takes.
So stepping back here for a minute, I mean, it strikes me that, you know, whether you see TikTok
as a wholesome app meant for dancing and bread baking or a security risk really depends on how
you see the world right now. And I think the
way that the U.S. sees the world right now increasingly is that China is a threat. So,
you know, in many ways, it seems sort of inevitable that the U.S. is taking this approach,
even though it's pretty weird, right? Because this is an app where teenagers have fun.
And the U.S. government is bringing down its entire weight on it. Exactly. And I think that this debate around TikTok is
really a barometer for the tensions between the U.S. and China right now. The Biden administration
seems to be looking at TikTok as a loaded gun. And the U.S. is basically saying that it doesn't trust this kind of technology company that's based in China to remain immune from the demands or influence of the Chinese government.
And that's a really big deal for relations between the two countries.
relations between the two countries. It's interesting because we started this episode with a story of a Chinese entrepreneur, right, who wanted to create a truly global tech company,
one that could be as successful in the U.S. as it was in China. But if the U.S. ends up
banning TikTok or forcing the sale of TikTok, What does that say about whether what the founder of this company wanted
is even possible at this point?
Not just for this company, but for any Chinese company.
Well, this is definitely challenging that dream.
And it raises a lot of questions around what kinds of social media companies
and technology companies can flourish in America in the future.
And it's worth noting that for years now, China has banned platforms like Facebook or YouTube.
And a lot of people never thought that that kind of thing would happen in the U.S.
But that could be the road that we're going down.
Sapna, thank you.
Thanks.
On Thursday, TikTok CEO Shou Zichu will testify in Congress before the House Energy and Commerce Committee.
He will face questions about TikTok's ties to China and concerns that it delivers harmful content to young people.
The scheduled hearing comes after news outlets, including The New York Times, reported that the Department of Justice is investigating the surveillance of journalists by ByteDance last year.
We'll be right back.
Here's what else you should know today.
Over the weekend, former President Donald Trump warned his supporters that he could be arrested as soon as tomorrow
over a case stemming from the payment of hush money to an adult film star during his 2016 campaign.
In a message posted on the social media platform Truth Social,
Trump urged supporters to protest
what he described as his impending indictment.
But the indictment is not a certainty.
Prosecutors in the Manhattan District Attorney's Office,
which is handling the case,
have signaled an indictment could be imminent,
but have given no precise timetable
from when it might come.
And the Times reports that at least a year
before the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank,
the Federal Reserve had warned the bank that its finances appeared risky.
Despite those warnings, Silicon Valley Bank did not fix the problems.
Finally, Credit Suisse, the beleaguered Swiss bank, was taken over by a rival bank on Sunday
in a hastily arranged deal that was supported by the Swiss government
and intended to reassure investors.
UBS agreed to buy Credit Suisse
after Switzerland's central bank
lent it 100 billion Swiss francs
to support the purchase.
It was the most consequential fallout to date
from the turmoil that spread
from the implosion of Silicon Valley Bank.
Today's episode was produced by Stella Tan, Shannon Lin, and Michael Simon Johnson.
It was edited by Liz O'Balin with help from Lisa Chow.
Fact-checked by Susan Lee, contains original music by Marian Lozano, Alicia Baetube, Dan
Powell, and Diane Wong, and was engineered by Chris Wood. Our theme music is by Jim Bunberg and Ben Landsberg of Wonderly. That's it for The Daily.
I'm Sabrina Tavernisi.
See you tomorrow.