Trump on Track to Stop TikTok as Microsoft
on Takeover Path
By going after TikTok , the U.S. is expanding a fight against Beijing using
Chinese- style restrictions on tech companies in a move that could potentially
have enormous ramifications for the world’s biggest economies.
The Trump administration’s threat to ban ByteDance
Ltd.’s viral teen phenom and other Chinese-owned apps
could significantly hamper their access global user data, which is an immensely
valuable resource in a modern internet economy. Any U.S. decision on a wider
restriction, which Secretary of State Michael Pompeo said would come “shortly,”
is likely to be followed by a similar pressure
campaign that prompted some allies to ban Huawei Technologies Co. from 5G
networks.
Even if Microsoft
Corp. or another U.S. company purchases TikTok’s American operations by a Sept. 15 deadline imposed
by President Donald Trump, the episode is the culmination of a bifurcation of
the internet that began when China walled off its own online sphere years ago, creating an
alternate universe where Tencent Holdings Ltd. and
Alibaba Group Holding Ltd. stood in for Facebook Inc. and Amazon.com Inc.
It is also splitting many in the industry: Some decry the
betrayal of values like free speech and capitalism, while others advocate doing
whatever it takes to subdue a geopolitical rival and its pivotal tech industry.
“This sets a dangerous precedent for the U.S.,” said Samm Sacks, a fellow on cybersecurity policy and China
digital economy at the New America think tank. “We are moving down a path of
techno-nationalism.”
Washington’s moves underscore how quickly the concept of
an internet decoupling is becoming a reality even as the world is still figuring
out its consequences. India showed
the way when it banned dozens of Chinese mobile apps including TikTok and Tencent’s WeChat,
while Australia and Japan are reportedly looking at similar options.
At issue is who controls the data --- everything from
private details like locations and emails to sophisticated mined information
such as personal profiles and online behavior. Like India, Washington worries
that TikTok could be funneling that trove to Beijing,
potentially undermining national security by building databases on its
citizens.
Worryingly for Beijing, it’s
unclear where the U.S. would draw the line given the extent to which data is
essential for companies these days. While Washington’s curbs against Huawei may
have some grounds in terms of national security, the argument for banning TikTok is “very weak,” according to Yik
Chan Chin, who researches global media and communications policy at the Xi’an Jiaotong-Liverpool University in Suzhou, a city near
Shanghai.
“It’s not a reasonable argument -- it’s like a blanket
ban on Chinese companies,” she said. “How can Chinese companies ever do
business in America?”
President Xi Jinping may have himself to blame. China has
long championed cyber sovereignty, shutting out services like Twitter, forcing
foreign firms to secure local partners and distributors in areas from mobile
games to cloud services, or curtailing investment in areas such as online
banking. Microsoft Corp.’s Bing and LinkedIn, which both censor content in
China, remain the only major search engine and social network allowed to
operate in China.
“We should respect every country’s own choice of their
internet development path and management model, their internet public policy
and the right to participate in managing international cyberspace,”
Xi told attendees at a high- pro le internet conference in 2015. “There should
be no cyber-hegemony, no interfering in others’ internal affairs, no engaging,
supporting or inciting cyber-activities that would harm the national security
of other countries.”
Now it’s China that wants the
world to embrace its companies and eschew overly broad interpretations of
national security. Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman
Wang Wenbin said Monday the Trump administration “has
been stretching the concept of national security without any evidence and only
based on presumption of guilt,” and called for it to “create an open, fair,
just and non-discriminatory environment for businesses of all countries.”
China’s past statements on cyber-sovereignty reflected
its weakness at the time, and that view has evolved substantially since then,
according to Zhao Ruiqi, vice director of School of
Marxism at the Communication University of China in Beijing.
“Trump’s move is threatening to split the internet, and
this is something the world should avoid,” Zhao said. “Countries should sit
down and discuss the limits of national security when it comes to internet
governance.”
While some of Trump’s actions are
regarded to be motivated by re-election considerations, others say going
after TikTok has deeper significance. Already the
world’s most valuable startup with a price tag potentially of $140 billion, ByteDance and its best-known product epitomizes the can-do
spirit of a generation of consumer tech companies that may follow Alibaba and Tencent.
By hooking hundreds of millions of addicted youngsters
from New Delhi to Denver, founder Zhang Yiming’s
shown a cohort of entrepreneurs how a Chinese startup can make it to the big
time and someday stand shoulder-to-shoulder with America’s largest
corporations. Today, it serves some 1.5 billion monthly active users across a
family of apps ranging from social media to games and education.
“TikTok symbolizes Chinese tech
companies’ ability in algorithms, artificial intelligence and the ability to go
viral and gain profits within a short period of time,” said Wang Sixin, a professor at the Communication University of
China.
Now U.S. restrictions would force a contingent of
up-and-coming stars in areas from gaming to livestreaming and media to reassess
plans to expand globally just as they were starting to gain traction abroad.
While TikTok is the first Chinese- made internet
service to succeed globally, there are a host of
others close behind.
Among the most downloaded Chinese apps over the past 12
months in the U.S. are Joyy Inc. platforms Bigo and Likee and Alibaba’s AliExpress shopping app, according to Sensor Tower. TikTok rival Likee, which also
stresses it operates from outside China, this year
made the U.S. a top priority for its global expansion, with plans to pour more
money and people into the region.
Launched in May, short video company Kuaishou’s
Zynn has topped U.S. app downloads at times. And WeChat -- used by more than a billion people worldwide --is
popular among the Chinese diaspora and U.S. executives with dealings in the
world’s No. 2 economy.
If the administration decides data is the key
determinant, then even some of the world’s most popular games may get ensnared. Tencent’s Call of
Duty: Mobile, co-created by Activision Blizzard Inc., PUBG Mobile and its
Supercell subsidiary’s Clash Royale are all popular
with Americans.
Like other Chinese entrepreneurs, Zhang must now figure
out how to sustain ByteDance’s sizzling pace of
growth while largely confined to its own home market. Though ByteDance’s first breakout hit was a news app called Toutiao, it was TikTok
that attracted hundreds of millions of users around the world. With 165
million installs, the U.S. is the app’s largest market after India, as well as
its most lucrative one in terms of user spending, according to Sensor Tower
estimates.
It’s a stinging retreat for a company that’s tried to offer a
haven for the highest-paid artificial intelligence engineers. Zhang fought to
remain independent from the country’s tech triumvirate of Baidu Inc., Alibaba
and Tencent, making him a rarity in the industry.
Now Zhang may find himself on the wrong side of
nationalism in both the U.S. and China. With hashtags about TikTok’s
U.S. episode trending on China’s largest microblogging platform Weibo, Zhang
hid all his posts from the public after users flooded his account with comments
slamming his decision to sell.
“Zhang Yiming kneeled fast,”
one blogger wrote. “Our country didn’t even have the chance to help him.”