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A solution would prevent the app’s shutdown from defining the incumbent president’s final day in office, the outlet has said
The outgoing administration of US President Joe Biden is exploring ways to keep TikTok operational in the US as a federal law threatens to shut down the short-video app on Sunday, NBC has reported. The legislation signed by Biden last year mandates the sale or shutdown of TikTok.
The White House is considering various options to keep TikTok running for its reported 170 million American users, the outlet said on Wednesday, citing people familiar with the matter.
If the administration proceeds with the plan, the article said, it would prevent the app’s shutdown from marking Biden’s final day in office and shift responsibility to Donald Trump, who is set to be sworn in on Monday. The move would be a reversal from Biden’s previous efforts to ban TikTok. Last year, he signed legislation requiring ByteDance, TikTok’s Chinese parent company, to divest from its US operations by January 19, 2025. Failure to comply will result in TikTok being removed from US app stores and losing access to essential infrastructure, effectively ending its operations in the country.
Read more“Americans shouldn’t expect to see TikTok suddenly banned on Sunday,” an administration official told the outlet, adding that lawmakers are “exploring options” for how to implement the law so TikTok does not go dark.
The law also reportedly grants the president the authority to issue a one-time 90-day extension if “significant progress” has been made toward divestment.
The measure was enacted to address US national security concerns, with lawmakers arguing that users’ data could be accessed by China or that Beijing could manipulate Americans by controlling TikTok’s content. The company has repeatedly dismissed the allegations as unfounded.
TikTok and ByteDance have reportedly sought a delay in the enforcement of the law, arguing that it violates the First Amendment to the US Constitution, which protects freedom of speech.
Read moreLast week during oral arguments, US Supreme Court justices appeared skeptical of TikTok’s free speech claims. During the hearings, Chief Justice John Roberts emphasized a finding by Congress that ByteDance is bound by Chinese laws requiring it to assist in intelligence-gathering efforts.
Lawmakers were “not saying TikTok has to stop,” NBC quoted Roberts as saying. “They’re saying China has to stop controlling TikTok.”
TikTok has already devised a plan to “go dark” on Sunday with anonymous sources telling Reuters that American users would see a pop-up message explaining the ban and offering an option to download their data.
Meanwhile, President-elect Donald Trump is also reportedly exploring options to delay the ban, including an executive order to extend the compliance deadline by 60 to 90 days to allow more time for negotiations.