TikTok
goes dark in the US ahead of ban
App no
longer available on US Apple and Google stores after supreme court upholds
lawmakers’ ban
Blake
Montgomery
Sun 19 Jan
2025 04.09 GMT
https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2025/jan/19/tiktok-us-ban
TikTok
stopped working in the US late on Saturday, shortly before a federal ban on the
Chinese-owned short-video app was due to take effect.
The app was
no longer available on Apple’s iOS App Store or Google’s Play Store. The US
Congress passed a law in April mandating that parent company ByteDance either
sell TikTok to a non-Chinese owner or face a total shutdown. It chose the
latter.
TikTok said
that divestment “is simply not possible: not commercially, not technologically,
not legally”. The company held that line until the very end.
The app’s
disappearance has been five years in the making. Donald Trump first proposed a
ban on TikTok in mid-2020 via executive order, which did not succeed. Various
members of Congress proposed measures that would do the same, only one passed.
The Protecting Americans from Foreign Adversary Controlled Applications Act
became law, mandating TikTok be sold or be banned.
“A law
banning TikTok has been enacted in the U.S. Unfortunately, that means you can’t
use TikTok for now. We are fortunate that President Trump has indicated that he
will work with us on a solution to reinstate TikTok once he takes office.
Please stay tuned,” a message to users attempting to use the app said.
TikTok’s
attorney told the supreme court that the app would “go dark” on 19 January.
After TikTok disappears from app stores, preventing new downloads and updates,
it will gradually obsolesce while the ban remains in place. Without regular
maintenance, the app’s smooth functionality will suffer glitches and may become
vulnerable to cyber-attacks.
TikTok
fought the act tooth and nail in court, arguing that blocking an app beloved by
so many would violate their free speech rights, a losing argument. It seemed
the bill might disappear before enacted, as a similar provision did in Montana,
which banned TikTok within its borders in 2023, the first in the US to do so.
The state’s law was overturned before it took effect.
Two days
before the deadline for ByteDance to sell the popular app, used by 170 million
Americans, the US supreme court ruled that the law was constitutional and that
its provisions should stand. Biden said he will leave enforcement of the bill
up to Trump. The White House said in a statement on Friday that TikTok “should
remain available to Americans, but simply under American ownership”.
In response
to the ruling, TikTok chief Shou Chew angled for the president-elect to save
his app. “On behalf of everyone at TikTok and all our users across the country,
I want to thank President Trump for his commitment to work with us to find a
solution that keeps TikTok available in the United States,” he said in a video
posted to TikTok.
Trump tried
to intervene on TikTok’s behalf in its supreme court case at the 11th hour,
though he himself is the father of the ban. He took a shine to the app during
his 2024 presidential campaign after finding a large audience there. He will be
inaugurated on Monday and may order the justice department not to enforce the
bill, though he said the supreme court decision should be “respected”. It is
unclear whether he can totally circumvent a TikTok ban.
Trump said
on Saturday he would “most likely” give TikTok a 90-day reprieve from a
potential ban after he takes office on Monday.
“The 90-day
extension is something that will be most likely done, because it’s
appropriate,” he told NBC. “If I decide to do that, I’ll probably announce it
on Monday.”
TikTok users
in the US have been defecting not to YouTube Shorts or Instagram Reels, though
both of those products will likely see a post-ban boost, but to Xiaohongshu,
otherwise known as RedNote, a Chinese video-sharing app.
As one user
put it: “I’d drop-ship my DNA to the front door of the Chinese Communist party
before I watch an Instagram Reel.”
Reuters
contributed reporting
Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário