TikTok Law Threatening A Ban If The App Isn’t Sold Raises First Amendment Concerns

from the classic-prior-restraint dept

TikTok, the short-video company with Chinese roots, did the most American thing possible on May 7, 2024: It sued the U.S. government, in the person of Attorney General Merrick Garland, in federal court. The suit claims the federal law that took effect on April 24, 2024, banning TikTok unless it sells itself violates the U.S. Constitution.

The law names TikTok and its parent company, ByteDance Ltd., specifically. It also applies to other applications and websites reaching more than a million monthly users that allow people to share information and that have ownership of 20% or more from China, Russia, Iran or North Korea. If the president determines that such applications or websites “present a significant threat to the national security,” then those apps and websites, too, must either be sold or banned from the U.S.

TikTok’s suit says that the law violates the First Amendment by failing to provide evidence of the national security threat posed by the app and for failing to seek a less restrictive remedy. Despite legislators’ claims to the contrary, the law forcing the divestiture of TikTok – the Protecting Americans from Foreign Adversary Controlled Applications Act – implicates First Amendment interests. In our view, it does so in ways that ripple beyond this specific case.

As a company incorporated in the United States that provides an online publishing platform, TikTok has a right protected by the First Amendment to select what messages – in this case, user videos – it chooses to publish.

A ban appears to us, scholars who study law and technology, to be a massive prior restraint, which is generally barred by U.S. courts. Prior restraint is action by the government to prevent speech, typically some form of publication, before it occurs.The First Amendment limits what the government can do to censor speech.

Speech in the crosshairs

The law’s backers say that it is not a ban – all TikTok has to do is sell itself. These supporters describe the bill as a divestiture, a purely economic regulation that they say should insulate it from First Amendment challenge. After the sale, users could happily keep on using TikTok, not caring who owns the company. But the law seems to us an attempt to control speech by mandating a change in ownership.

Changing the speech content on the app is the express goal of some of the law’s backers. The principal author of the bill, former U.S. Rep. Mike Gallagher, who stepped down from office in April to join a venture capital firm partly backed by Microsoft, explained to The New York Times that he was principally concerned about the potential for the Chinese Communist Party to spread propaganda on the app. The Times and The Wall Street Journal have reported that Congress passed this bill in part because of unsubstantiated accusations that TikTok was unfairly promoting one side in the Israel-Hamas war.

Imagine if the government told Jeff Bezos that he had to sell The Washington Post because it was worried that he might push a particular agenda using his control of the newspaper. Or to use a digital analogy, what if the government told Elon Musk that he had to sell X, formerly Twitter, because it didn’t like his content moderation of legal speech? Those scenarios clearly have a connection to First Amendment protections.

Ownership matters

Transferring TikTok’s ownership from one company to another matters greatly for the purposes of First Amendment analysis.

Supreme Court Justice Elena Kagan observed during oral arguments in a case unrelated to TikTok’s ownership that ownership can make a difference in an app. She noted that the sale of Twitter to Elon Musk changed the character of the app. Kagan said, “Twitter users one day woke up and found themselves to be X users and the content rules had changed and their feeds changed, and all of a sudden they were getting a different online newspaper, so to speak, in a metaphorical sense every morning.”

Indeed, The Washington Post found a rightward tilt after Twitter changed hands.

By forcing the sale of TikTok to an entity without ties to the Chinese Communist Party, Congress’ intent with the law is to change the nature of the platform. That kind of government action implicates the core concerns that the First Amendment was designed to protect against: government interference in the speech of private parties.

U.S. Rep. Raja Krishnamoorthi, co-sponsor of the House bill on TikTok, pointed to another instance where the U.S. government ordered a Chinese company to sell a U.S. app. In 2019, the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States ordered the new Chinese owners of Grindr to sell the dating app, which the Chinese owners did the following year. In that case, the foreign owners could not assert First Amendment rights in the United States, given that they were outside the U.S., and thus no court considered this issue.TikTok is claiming First Amendment protection against the law forcing its sale or ban.

National security claims

The government hasn’t disclosed to the public the national security concerns cited in the TikTok law. While such concerns, if accurate, might warrant some kind of intervention, some Americans are likely to decline to take claims of national security urgency on good faith. To address skepticism of secret government power, particularly when it involves speech rights, the government arguably needs to present its claims.

U.S. Sens. Richard Blumenthal and Marsha Blackburn, both of whom supported the TikTok law and have seen the government’s secret evidence, called for the declassification of that information. We believe that’s a vital step for the public to properly consider the government’s claim that a ban is warranted in this instance. In any case, the courts will ultimately weigh the secret evidence in determining whether the government’s national security concerns justified this intrusion upon speech.

What seems likely to happen, absent judicial invalidation or legislative repeal of the law, is a world in which TikTok cannot effectively operate in the United States in a year’s time, with mobile app stores unable to push out updates to the software and Oracle Corp. unable to continue hosting the app and its U.S. user data on its servers. TikTok could go dark on Jan. 19, 2025, in the United States.

Anupam Chander, Professor of Law and Technology, Georgetown University and Gautam Hans, Associate Clinical Professor of Law, Cornell University

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

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Companies: bytedance, tiktok

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Comments on “TikTok Law Threatening A Ban If The App Isn’t Sold Raises First Amendment Concerns”

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37 Comments
31Bob (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:

To quote Mark Cuban, they could be giving Biden last rights and I’d still vote for him over Mango Mussolini, the keeper of stupid, holder of assholery, and apparently shielded for his entire shitfilled life from any and all consequences.

Fuck Trump voters. Every fucking one needs to be beaten with pool cues until their retinas detach.

Rocky says:

Re: Re: Re:

I’ll just point out that insane isn’t actually a medical term – it’s a legal one loosely defined as unable to fully understand their actions and/or an inability to distinguish fantasy from reality and/or an inability to conduct their affairs due to psychosis or other mental afflictions. The definition varies a bit depending on jurisdiction.

So it is just fine to call Trump insane since it isn’t at all unfair to people with psychiatric disabilities which are considered to be medical in nature.

Rocky says:

Re: Re: Re:3

Not any more, but it did use to be.

That are a lot of words that used to mean something different and using that as an argument is just an etymological fallacy which renders said argument null & void.

What has never been a medical condition, however, is ignorance, meaning there’s no cure for yours.

What would that ignorance entail? Be specific.

I’ll await your answer while pondering if you are a troglodyte or not.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:4

That are a lot of words that used to mean something different and using that as an argument is just an etymological fallacy which renders said argument null & void.

A lot of people in Black communities use the n-word to refer to themselves and other black people, but the fact that it used to be used to classify slaves means that no white person can use it even now, so it’s actually your argument that’s null and void.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:3

The fact the it use to be undermines your original comment. Medical conditions have been renamed and redefined with time as we’ve learned more than we once understood.

The fact you doubled down on a term no longer in use suggest that you are disregarding the advancements in both knowledge and society that made the term defunct.

Arianity says:

Re:

If you arent going to pass a law forbidding the sales of data

Technically, the same bill also includes a ban on selling data to China, under “DIVISION I—PROTECTING AMERICANS’ DATA FROM FOREIGN ADVERSARIES ACT OF 2024”. In practice it’ll probably by bypassed, since it’s not a comprehensive privacy bill. But it’s there, and it’ll probably come up during the case.

But even without the data issue, there’s still the foreign influence concerns.

That said, China’s government has been pretty clear it isn’t willing to let them sell, even to someone else that would give them the data.

Anonymous Coward says:

Disclosure: I do not use TikTok, so my mouth may be writing checks my ass can’t cash. You’ve been warned.

So many things wrong here, but not all on the authors – some of it will devolve to the Legislative and Administration branches.

First, that bit about 20% ownership? Why choose that for a ‘magic’ number? Why not 1%, or some other number? In fact, no 20% owner can demand that propaganda be inserted into a page, simply because the remaining 80% ownership won’t allow it.

But here’s the real kicker…. no matter who owns what portion of the business, any amount of inserted ‘speech’ (propaganda) is self-published speech, and is therefore not a matter of merely holding and transmitting stored data sourced from someone else. This bypasses S 230 and goes straight to 1A, wherein the gov’t can’t censor private speech. So, is the gov’t censoring speech by this law?

No, for the same reason that anyone kicked off of Twitter wasn’t canceled (but was censored) – they could just as easily go somewhere else and post their opinions. Same thing here – neither the ownership (partners) of ByteDance nor their users are censored (or cancelled, if their MAGA-asshats), they can just as easily go elsewhere.

So what claim does ByteDance have? Easy: The Constitution itself, Article 1, Section 3, Clause 9. I quote:

“No Bill of Attainder or ex post facto Law shall be passed.”

For those willfully ignorant of what constitutes a bill of attainder, it’s simply a legislative action that singles out a specific name (or several such) for punishment without benefit of a trial or any other required Due Process. Here we see the punishment in the form of an act of Congress that is threatens “We’re going to punish you, unless you do such and such”. Traditionally, that role belongs to the Judicial branch, as the founding fathers were afraid of exactly this type of behavior… they’d seen enough of it from the King, up close and personal for many of them.

This is one particular clause of the Constitution that even the current Supreme Court must uphold. To do otherwise not only threatens a future of government action against anyone who that gov’t perceives as undesirable, it also puts the court system out of business. Not a good idea.

tl;dr

If ByteDance loses this case, then we’re all in jeopardy of going straight to jail, not passing Go, and not collecting 200 dollars.

sumgai

Diogenes (profile) says:

Re: thats not how 1A works

“No, for the same reason that anyone kicked off of Twitter wasn’t canceled (but was censored) – they could just as easily go somewhere else and post their opinions.”

“They can just say their piece somewhere else” is not a valid defense for 1A violations. If I setup a soapbox in the park and the police tell me I have to go to a park on the other end of town that isnt ok.

Diogenes (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re: yes within reason AND for good cause

Government needs a really good reason to deny 1A. Its not like they can just say “you have other places to go so that makes it ok”.

If the park is closed for the night thats one thing, but they cant just say “we dont want you speaking in this park because we dont want it here”.

Arianity says:

Re:

First, that bit about 20% ownership? Why choose that for a ‘magic’ number? Why not 1%, or some other number?

It’s supposed to be a “significant” investor, and you have to pick some number.

The 20% number is commonly used in a lot of other places, like US GAAP, Schedule 13D filing, NASDAQ uses it, for presumption of significant influence. It’s very much the norm, for common stock. For some other things like LLCs, it can be as low as 3-5%. They’re following existing law for this, though.

In fact, no 20% owner can demand that propaganda be inserted into a page, simply because the remaining 80% ownership won’t allow it.

Generally speaking, a 20% owner will have significant pull with the board/rest of the company. It doesn’t have to be a 51% owner.

This bypasses S 230 and goes straight to 1A, wherein the gov’t can’t censor private speech. So, is the gov’t censoring speech by this law?

The government is censoring speech with this law. The question is whether it survives strict scrutiny, which is the bar for bypassing things like 1A.

For those willfully ignorant of what constitutes a bill of attainder, it’s simply a legislative action that singles out a specific name (or several such) for punishment without benefit of a trial or any other required Due Process. Here we see the punishment in the form of an act of Congress that is threatens “We’re going to punish you, unless you do such and such”.

While the Bill does call out TikTok/Bytedance by name, it does also lay out specific criteria for any other companies to qualify, as well as a government interest. It’s not at all clear it’d be seen as a BoA, given those.

Anon says:

Needto Understand...

The concern here is not TikTok propaganda. The concern here is that like every other enterprise – Google, Facebook, etc. – TikTok builds a database of users. This database contains a massive amount of information that can be dissected by those with access.

You watch TT at home – they now know where you live, if you have location enabled for the app or your internet IP address is accessible. You use it at work. They now know where you work or go to school, if even one of your co-workers has location enabled for the same IP address. Who works in the state department building? Who travels to where? Who lives at the same address? Does your userid coincide with a same ID on other public platforms where you may have expressed opinions or posted photos? What do you like to watch, what do you search for?

Worse yet, Google and Meta are commercial services that may sell your data so the TikTok owners can expand their data on you.

It would be no worse than Facebook or Google, but the concern of the US government is that this is a databank accumulated by the state apparatus of China (which TikTok disputes) thus giving them a massive window into the population’s details.

I have a contrary view – all this does is demonstrate how the internet’s ability to collect data has gone much too far; if it’s bad for China to have this data, it’s bad for any commercial enterprise to have it, let alone have it to market. (Where China could buy it in pieces) Whatever protections western governments want to place against China’s data hoovering, should also apply to big business. There’s no reason for any entity to have this much data. Shoving one genie back in the bottle is a waste of time when the others are still flying around the internet.

Limit the collection and storage of any data by any entity.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re:

The concern here is not TikTok propaganda. The concern here is that like every other enterprise – Google, Facebook, etc. – TikTok builds a database of users. This database contains a massive amount of information that can be dissected by those with access.

Which is why this law is so fucking stupid because it doesn’t address the actual problem.

Considering the last time when a forced sale of TikTok was pondered, look at who wanted in on that action. It is entirely possible it’s the same people that are responsible for pushing through this law behind the scenes that want to buy up TikTok at a very steep discount so they can get access to all that meta-data to use as they wish.

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