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Days following a similar decision by the European Commission, the White House on Monday set a 30-day deadline for US federal agencies to ensure that the Chinese company-owned TikTok app does not appear on any device used by people. their employees.
U.S. federal agencies must clear their devices of the TikTok video app within 30 days, the White House Office of Management and Budget (OMB) ordered on Monday (February 27).
Owned by the Chinese company ByteDance, TikTok has been targeted by US lawmakers, who consider the application a threat to national security and had banned its use on civil servants’ devices in a law passed in late December. The OMB’s order is taken pursuant to this law, ratified in early January by President Joe Biden.
In a memorandum, the director of this office, Shalanda Young, called on government agencies to “remove and prohibit installations” of the application on devices owned or managed by them, and to “prohibit Internet traffic ” from these devices to the application.
“Censure”
The ban does not apply to non-federal US entities or the millions of individuals who use TikTok. But the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) lamented the new law, saying it amounted to “effectively banning TikTok”.
“Congress must not censor entire platforms and deny Americans their constitutional right to free speech and expression,” ACLU senior policy adviser Jenna Leventoff said in a statement. “We have the right to use TikTok and other platforms to exchange our thoughts, ideas and opinions with people across the country and around the world,” she added.
EU and Canada too
The ultra-popular platform of short and viral videos is increasingly scrutinized by Westerners, who fear that Beijing might thus access the data of users around the world. This ban in the US federal government comes days following a similar decision by the European Commission, which banned TikTok from its staff to “protect” the institution.
The Government of Canada also announced Monday that it will ban TikTok from the mobile devices it provides to its staff starting Tuesday, citing an “unacceptable level of risk” to privacy and security. TikTok has already been among the Chinese apps banned in India since 2020.
With more than a billion active users worldwide, TikTok is the sixth most used social platform, according to We Are Social’s latest digital evolution report, published in January. TikTok acknowledged in November that some employees in China might access European user data, and admitted in December that employees had used that data to stalk journalists. But the group denies any Chinese government control or access to its data.
With AFP