The Daily Signal - INTERVIEW | How US Government Could Ban TikTok
Episode Date: December 22, 2022Chinese-owned TikTok has made headlines over the past few weeks as bipartisan support grows to ban the popular app. A bipartisan, bicameral trio of lawmakers introduced legislation Dec. 13 aimed at ...banning TikTok nationwide. The next day, the Senate unanimously passed another bill that would ban the app on government devices. Brendan Carr, a Republican member of the Federal Communications Commission, has been one of the most outspoken critics of TikTok and particularly highlights two national security concerns related to the ruling Chinese Communist Party. "One has to do with all of this sensitive, private, nonpublic data that has been accessed from inside Beijing. So for years, TikTok officials told regulators like me and told Congress, 'Don't worry about it, none of this data is stored inside China,'" Carr says. "Well, over this past summer, there was a bombshell BuzzFeed News story that showed those representations had been nothing other than gaslighting. BuzzFeed News got a hold of internal TikTok communications that showed, in fact, quote, 'everything is seen in China.'" "The second is, once they have that, they can use it for foreign influence, for espionage, other types of campaigns. And in fact, we're already seeing that," Carr warns. Carr joins this episode of "The Daily Signal Podcast" to discuss a potential TikTok ban in America, how the U.S. government would be able to enact and implement a ban, and how parents can protect their children. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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This is the Daily Signal podcast for Thursday, December 22nd.
I'm Samantha O'Sheris.
You've probably heard us talk about the popular app TikTok on this podcast before.
Just recently, a bipartisan trio of lawmakers introduced legislation aimed at banning TikTok
nationwide.
The following day, on December 14th, the Senate unanimously passed a bill that would ban the
popular app on government devices.
Commissioner Brendan Carr of the Federal Communications Commission has
been one of the most vocal supporters of a ban, and he joins the podcast today to discuss
why. He also shares how parents can protect their children from potentially harmful content
on TikTok and how the U.S. would go about banning the app. We'll get to my conversation with
Commissioner Carr right after this. As conservatives, sometimes it feels like we're constantly
on defense against bad ideas. Bad philosophy, revisionist history, junk science, and divisive politics.
But here's something I've come to understand.
When faced with bad ideas, it's not enough to just defend.
If we want to save this country, then it's time to go on offense.
Conservative principles are ideas that work.
Individual responsibility, strong local communities, and belief in the American dream.
As a former college professor and current president of the Heritage Foundation,
my life's mission is to learn, educate, and take action.
My podcast, The Kevin Roberts Show, is my opportunity to share that journey
with you. I'll be diving into the critical issues that plague our nation, having deep conversations
with high-profile guests, some of whom may surprise you. And I want to ensure freedom for the next
generation. Find the Kevin Roberts Show wherever you get your podcast. Joining today's podcast is Brendan Carr.
He is a commissioner of the Federal Communications Commission and has been one of the most outspoken
advocates for banning the popular app, TikTok. Commissioner Carr, thank you so much for joining us today.
Good to be with you. Thanks for having me.
Of course. Now, as I just mentioned in the past, you have been very outspoken about TikTok,
and you have called for the U.S. government to ban the app.
First and foremost, how exactly would the U.S. be able to do that?
How would it work for existing users, for example?
Well, legally where the process sits is the Biden administration's Treasury Department
has an organization there called Sipheus, the Committee on Foreign Investment.
And that's the one that we would expect direct action from.
And what they do is they have jurisdiction over TikTok's purchase of musically,
which has enabled them to, you know, have the TikTok operation here in the U.S.
There's a lot of tools at their disposal that they could do to everything from ban the app outright
to force a sale or divestiture of it to an entity that doesn't have the same types of ties back to the CCP.
There's a lot of options that the Biden administration could take at this point if they choose to go down that path.
And how would it work, I guess, like if it's already on someone's phone, would the app store then remove it from their phone or would users have to be, you know, I guess given the opportunity to delete it?
Like, how would I guess that work for people who already have it on their phones?
There's a couple different ways that it could work.
You know, one way is to remove it from the app stores.
In fact, I've separately called for Google and Apple to remove it from the app store on their own, which they haven't done at this point.
And there's precedent for this India, for example, as a country.
has banned TikTok. So there's ways of doing this that ultimately results in the app not being able to work here anymore.
And I guess also another question, you know, we have TikTok now. And if it is banned, moving forward,
how can the U.S. government prevent a similar app from being created?
Well, it's good question. And, you know, the way I look at this from the FCC's perspective is it's a natural extension
of a lot of the work we've done in the physical real world space
when it comes to combating threats posed by communist China.
So, for instance, a couple years ago,
we started taking action on Huawei and ZTE,
insecure network gear.
And we've done that on a bipartisan basis.
And frankly, as good as those steps are in the physical space,
unless you pair that with action, the digital space,
the app space, then you're really leaving yourself exposed.
So if we have a prohibition on insecure network gear, but yet we're allowing insecure apps to run on those networks, then we're leaving our self-exposed.
We've got to pair that physical world, bipartisan action with action in the digital space.
And TikTok in particular poses just a tremendously unique threat, both from national security perspective, but also from the perspective of the health and well-being of children.
I actually had national security threats as one of my follow-up questions.
If you could expand on that and walk us through some of your concerns regarding TikTok and national security threats,
as well as you just brought up the well-being of its users.
Yeah, I mean, in the main, there's two national security sets of issues here.
One has to do with all of this sensitive, private, non-public data that has been accessed from inside Beijing.
So for years, TikTok officials told regulators like me and told Congress, don't worry about it.
None of this data is stored inside China.
Well, over this past summer, there was a bombshell BuzzFeed News story that showed those representations had been nothing other than gaslighting.
BuzzFeed News got a hold of internal TikTok communications that showed, in fact, quote, everything is seen in China.
And now, what that means is not the funny video that you upload.
a lot of people just look at TikTok and they say, what's the big deal?
You know, okay, they get to see this dance meme or this music video I uploaded.
That's not it at all.
That's just the sheep's clothing.
Underneath, it operates as a very sophisticated surveillance technology.
It's pulling or potentially pulling search and browsing history, keystroke patterns,
potentially biometrics like face prints and voice prints.
And again, all that's going back to Beijing.
That's the first national security concern.
The second is once they have that, they can use it for.
for foreign influence, for espionage, other types of campaigns.
And in fact, we're already seeing that.
In fact, we're seeing sort of in some ways the nightmare scenario already.
There was a Forbes story that talked about TikTok's parent company, ByteDance, having officials
in Beijing that we were either tracking or attempting to, planning to track the location of
specific Americans based on their usage of the TikTok app.
Similarly, in the run up to our most recent midterm elections, there was the CCP's propaganda arm that was standing up TikTok accounts without disclosing that and using it to target specific U.S. politicians, Republicans and Democrats, for criticism ahead of the midterm election.
So between location tracking, between all this data that's going back to Beijing to using it for foreign influence campaigns with respect to
elections, that's deeply troubling. But again, that's separate from the health and well-being of
children. So two-thirds, if you can believe it, two-thirds of all teens are on TikTok right now.
Wow. And for their parents, I think they naturally think that TikTok operates the way that,
you know, parents and boomers think of social media, which is like Facebook and Twitter and
similar things, which is to say, you choose a network, it's your friends, and you're just
sharing news with each other. That is not at all how TikTok works. As soon as you sign up,
It's Beijing in a Beijing-based algorithm that's feeding content directly to teenagers.
There was a report just out that the New York Times recently cited that showed that an account's set up for 13-year-old girls were shown within 30 minutes of signing up for the account, eating disorder content, self-harm content.
Walshirt Journal did a separate study about unhealthy exercises.
So this content is being fed to your kid.
It's not your kids looking at other kids in their class.
And the real tell here is that none of that content, the eating disorder, self-harm,
none of that is being shown to kids inside China.
The version of the app that's available there called Doyan shows kids educational material,
museum exhibits, science experiments.
And again, in the U.S., we're getting things called like the Blackout Challenge,
which is content encouraging young kids to strangle.
themselves to get some sort of euphoric short-term high. And we have seen over a dozen kids in
this country do the blackout challenge and ended up killing themselves. So again, stepping
back, there's the whole national security thing. But I think what needs to truly be emphasized
for parents is this isn't like Twitter or Facebook, where it's your kids' friends. This is content
coming straight from Beijing that is very harmful. Yeah. And two points I want to talk more about there
is you brought up, you know, two-thirds of teens are on TikTok.
That's a lot of teens.
And I think one question I have for you is how do you get this message of surveillance technology, of location tracking, the threats that we just talked about with TikTok posing toward teenagers and toward Americans more broadly, how do you get that message across to its user base?
Yeah, there is a degree of apathy.
Like a lot of people even will say, well, doesn't China already have my social security number and everything?
There's these OPM leaks.
There's these bank leaks.
What's the big deal?
And I'd say, well, it is a big deal.
And part of the reason why is the type of data that they're getting off of TikTok is a level of richness and sophistication that is so far beyond, you know, your social security number or maybe your bank account information.
They're layering in there, really intimate detail knowledge is.
What do you stop that? What do you pause at? What moves you? And they're able to add that to potential that other data set that they've stolen. And so it's a real problem. It's really, you know, again, sort of scary stuff when you think about the content that is being put right into the ears, right in the eyes of kids. It's not just two-thirds of teens. It's the average user is spending something like more than 90 minutes a day on the application. It is a tremendous amount of quote-unquote news, information and data.
that is going, again, outside of parental views right into the kids.
And the separate other sort of national security thing that we should pause to note is
Beijing has said they want to dominate the world in artificial intelligence or AI
by 2030. And their version of artificial intelligence is for authoritarian purposes,
for malign purposes. And every single time a US user swipes on TikTok,
you know, looks at a paragraph. What you're really doing is your feet,
training and improving Beijing's AI.
And I also wanted to ask you about from the parental standpoint,
how do you tell your kids who will, you know, more likely than not, be with classmates,
be with friends on TikTok, maybe making, you know, silly dance videos and not thinking, you know, anything of it,
how do you, from a parent's perspective, have that, you know, serious talk with your kid,
hey, you got to get off of this. It's not good. I know your friends are maybe on it,
but I don't want you to be on it. Yeah. Thankfully, in my particular circumstance, my oldest kid is nine,
my youngest is three. I got three boys, so none of them are old enough to be on there. So I haven't had
deal with that. Yeah, but yeah, would you have to talk to kids about it, let them know about
there is certainly a degree of parental oversight that is necessary, both with this app and with all
apps generally. I mean, again, you know, some of these kids are getting harmed through the blackout
challenge and otherwise, they're young. I mean, they're 12 years old or younger. And I think
parents really need to step up. Again, I think from a parental perspective, it's this misperception
that TikTok is just like Twitter or Facebook and it's okay. It's their friends. It's their network.
And it's completely not that type of application. So we have to do a better job of educating
parents. Then parents, you're right, have to exert a bit better oversight of where their kids
are going on the internet. And as many of our listeners probably know, and I'm sure you know,
Congress is working on this massive spending bill to fund the government. The text of the bill was
released early Tuesday morning. It's more than 4,000 pages long, and it includes the No TikTok on
Government Devices Act, which Senator Josh Hawley introduced and it was passed unanimously in the
Senate last week. Commissioner, are you surprised to see this in the spending package?
Well, I'm pleased to see it. Frankly, you know, kudos to Senator Hawley, you know, at least the public
reporting is that he negotiated a deal to get this included in the Omni. I think that's great news,
because it seems to me that while we're recording here before the Omni has passed, it looks like
it's basically a done deal that it will pass with the TikTok ban on federal device in it.
And that's a significant win because that's a bipartisan decision, Republican Democrats,
saying not just that social media shouldn't be on federal devices, but TikTok should not be
given the unique national security threats of TikTok. That's going to be a very significant win
when that gets done. Of course, it's not a complete win. We need to now pivot and focus, again,
on not just federal devices, but the application nationwide. But frankly, it's very difficult
to square a bipartisan, bicameral decision that TikTok poses a threat with the Biden administration,
then going ahead and blessing the continued operation of TikTok. So again, stepping back,
the Biden administration, Treasury Department right now is empowered to take an action beyond
federal devices that deals with the app globally. I think they should. And what the reporting is,
including from Politico, is that right now the Biden administration is roiled in controversy,
meaning the national security officials are increasingly speaking out publicly and saying,
hey, there's a problem here with TikTok that can't be addressed through mitigation measures.
You've got the CIA Director Burns recently saying he has genuine concerns about TikTok.
You have FBI director Chris Ray saying the FBI has serious national security concerns.
the director of national intelligence, Averill Haynes, saying that parents should be concerned.
So there's a lot of officials in the Biden administration right now that are speaking out of the national security side.
But we need to make sure that the economic portion of the Biden administration, including the Treasury Department itself, does the right thing here.
Because frankly, this is just a basic IQ test.
Do you trust that we can put protections in place to guarantee that Beijing won't be able to use this app and access to the data?
for nefarious purposes. And if you're inside the Biden administration, signing off on a deal that
lets TikTok continue to operate here means that you own every single malign conduct that Beijing does
through that application. I think that'd be a mistake. And why do you think if we've seen this
pushback, if we've seen these warnings coming from the FBI and the CIA, why do you think the Biden
administration hasn't come out with, you know, a ban, at least at the government level yet?
It's a good question. And as best I can tell, everyone that's speaking out on this is from the national security side and they're raising alarms. What usually happens in DC in these types of situations is you have the economic entity. So Treasury, for instance, commerce, for instance, that, you know, want good trade relations and good economic relations and they tend to be more hesitant to engage in actions like this. Because standing up to TikTok would be a very significant step. It would be likely that China may try to take some type of measure.
counter response, but it is the right thing to do.
But I do think there's some hesitancy on the economic side and potentially the political side.
You know, there's a lot of Democrats, some Republicans as well, that look to TikTok as a vehicle
for reaching out to younger voters.
But it's telling, for instance, when the White House brought in TikTok influencers as some
sort of summit, TikTok itself is not allowed inside White House grounds on White House devices.
So I think that's a telling example of why we're going to be.
we need to step up why the administration needs to reach a final decision on TikTok and do one
that protects our national security. Yes, I think that is a very good point that you just made,
that TikTok is banned from the White House. And yet there were, I guess, TikTok stars, you could
call them, that came to the White House earlier this year. Commissioner Carr, any final thoughts on
this topic before we go? Well, look, I think it's important to keep both pieces in mind. There's the
national security threat, which is all that data going back to Beijing, including feeding
and training their artificial intelligence operation, which can be used against us.
But there's an entire separate issue of why parents need to be very concerned about TikTok.
Again, it doesn't operate like, you know, other social media they may be used to.
This is content being designed in Beijing by their algorithm being pushed to teenagers in many cases.
And it's a real problem that we need to take head on here.
Well, Commissioner Carr, thank you so much for joining us today.
I really appreciate your insight and look forward to having you back on in the future.
Thanks so much.
Thanks.
And that'll do it for today's episode.
Thank you for listening to my interview with Commissioner Brendan Carr.
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