China has accused the United States of spreading disinformation after reports emerged that the Biden administration had called for ByteDance, Ltd., the Chinese owner of TikTok, to sell its stakes in the app. Foreign Ministry spokesperson Wang Wenbin told reporters that America has not presented evidence that Tiktok threatens national security and was using data security as an excuse to suppress foreign companies.
The Wall Street Journal reported that the Committee on Foreign Investment in the U.S. is threatening a ban on the app unless ByteDance divests. Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Wang Wenbin demanded that American stop “spreading disinformation about data security” and provide an open, fair, and non-discriminatory environment for foreign businesses.
TikTok’s popularity is soaring among teenagers in the United States with two-thirds reportedly using it; however controversies surrounding their data collection methods have sparked concerns regarding user privacy and possible misuse by governments. Earlier this month, US National Security Agency director Paul Nakasone warned about Tiktok’s algorithmic control over users’ data collection leading to government surveillance.
ByteDance claims that changing ownership will not solve any problems relating to safeguarding US user data flows or access as algorithms remain under company control regardless of ownership changes issued by governments wishing to suppress their production processes.
The Treasury Department declined to comment on the matter as tensions between China and America continue escalating over tech industry giants such as Huawei and ZTE being banned from trade with US firms due to national security concerns.