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How TikTok’s arrogance sealed its fate in America

In Opinion
13 5 月, 2024
TikTok CEO Shou Zi Chew listens during his testifmony before the House Energy and Commerce Committee hearing on “TikTok: How Congress Can Safeguard American Data Privacy and Protect Children from Online Harms” on Capitol Hill, US, on March 23, 2023

TikTok is one of the biggest stories in business and geopolitics. US President Joe Biden has just signed a law that will ban the massively popular app in nine months if its Chinese owner, ByteDance, does not sell it to a non-Chinese entity.

TikTok, for its part, has called the law “political theatre”, and it is probably right: there is always some theatrics in politics, and bashing China is one of the most popular shows in town. Almost no other issue can unite the two major parties.

But, given the arrogance TikTok exhibited in the weeks and months leading up to the bill’s passage, the company’s leadership clearly has a fundamental misunderstanding of America and Americans.

Compared to policymakers in other countries, US lawmakers are usually reluctant to regulate business, and many had previously opposed a forced sale of TikTok for fear of creating a perception of corruption, reducing business and investor confidence, and undermining free speech. Most agree that any regulation should clear the relatively high bar of serving the public interest.

Until a month ago, the main public interest concern was data privacy. Questions such as who can access user data, and whether that data can be put to malignant uses, are pertinent to all large social media platforms. Over the past decade, Congress has held many hearings on the issue, often targeting large US companies such as Meta and Google.

But these concerns are amplified in TikTok’s case, because many US lawmakers assume the Chinese government can force TikTok to hand over its American users’ data. Under laws China enacted in 2017 and 2021, all Chinese organisations are required to help the government’s intelligence gathering and counter-espionage work, if asked.

TikTok promised it would store Americans’ data on servers outside China. That did not satisfy US lawmakers and security officials, who continued to worry about “back doors”, an issue that contributed to the US Federal Trade Commission’s decision two years ago to ban equipment made by Huawei.

Still, at one point, there was hope for a workable solution whereby US regulators would conduct detailed examinations of the company’s technology.

Since data privacy is an industry-wide concern, TikTok could have played the issue to its advantage, such as by investing in data safeguards and supporting independent research of its platform. It could have met US lawmakers halfway, and approached the issue proactively, transparently and in the spirit of collaboration.

TikTok could have been a positive force for change in the US tech industry.

Instead, TikTok adopted an aggressive stance, hired expensive lobbyists and, in a catastrophic misstep, even mobilised its (predominantly young) American users to call their representatives in Congress. Pop-up messages urged users to: “Let Congress know what TikTok means to you and tell them to vote NO.” Some congressional offices received more than 1,000 calls in the space of a day.

On the surface, this may have seemed like a savvy strategy, given Uber’s earlier success in mobilising its users to lobby against legislation it opposed. But TikTok overlooked a crucial difference: Uber is an American company. By intervening in the US political process, TikTok made the situation much worse for itself, highlighting a second major threat that its critics say it could pose to the public interest.

Over the past decade, ordinary Americans and lawmakers have grown increasingly concerned about social media’s undue influence on users’ beliefs, behaviours and voting decisions, and on how hostile foreign actors can exploit the major platforms for their purposes. This risk strikes at the heart of American democracy, and it is not just hypothetical. We know that Russia and other governments regularly try to interfere in US and European elections.

Given this context, TikTok’s mobilisation of its users wasn’t just an annoyance to elected officials’ staff; it was an alarm bell. Many of those who responded to the call seemed to not even know what they were protesting against.

A foreign-owned company had brazenly demonstrated just how easy it is to manipulate its users to serve its interests, confirming it knew all along how much political influence it could exert. Suddenly, and understandably, the focus in the US shifted from Russian voter manipulation to Chinese voter manipulation.

Perhaps nothing could have saved TikTok from the forced-sale legislation, given the geopolitical climate. We will never know what could have been. But it is clear that the company’s aggressive strategy backfired. TikTok launched what many saw as an attack on American democracy, and ended up ensuring the majorities needed to push the bill through Congress.

TikTok’s future in America is uncertain. Before it weighs its moves, the company should fire its lobbyists and consultants, who should have advised it to be more respectful of Americans’ legitimate concerns about data privacy and threats to democracy. And all other non-US firms should learn from TikTok’s recent missteps on what not to do.

Nancy Qian, professor of economics at Northwestern University, is co-director of Northwestern University’s Global Poverty Research Lab and founding director of China Econ Lab.