The Daily Signal - INTERVIEW | TikTok's 'National Security Threat Is So Grave,' Tech Policy Expert Says
Episode Date: March 22, 2023A leading technology policy expert is calling for "a wholesale ban on TikTok" a day before the Chinese-owned social media app's chief executive officer will testify before Congress. TikTok faces bipar...tisan scrutiny at both the state and federal level. More than 30 states, led by both Democrat and Republican governors, have taken action to ban the app on some or all state-issued devices and networks, The Daily Signal previously reported. TikTok’s chief executive officer, Shou Zi Chew, will appear before the House Energy and Commerce Committee on Thursday. "I think the TikTok national security threat is so grave, so immediate, that TikTok should be banned outright," says Kara Frederick, director of the Tech Policy Center at The Heritage Foundation. (The Daily Signal is the news outlet of The Heritage Foundation.) Frederick, whose research focuses on emerging technology policy and Big Tech, adds that she is calling for "a wholesale ban on TikTok, not just on government devices." She talks about the danger of "allowing U.S. user data to get in the hands of the [Chinese Communist Party]." Frederick joins today's episode of "The Daily Signal Podcast" to further discuss the TikTok CEO's testimony, what she would ask Shou if she were in the hearing, and The Heritage Foundation's "Moms Against TikTok" rally, which is also on Thursday. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
At the Heritage Foundation, we were saying that, hey, this is the next Huawei.
This is the next Trojan Horse.
This is the Daily Signal podcast for Wednesday, March 22nd.
I'm Samantha Sherris, and that was Kara Frederick.
Kara is the director of the Tech Policy Center here at the Heritage Foundation,
where her research focuses on big tech and emerging technology policy.
And today, we will be discussing Shoggi Chu's appearance before Congress tomorrow.
He's the CEO of TikTok.
We'll also be discussing the moms against TikTok rally also happening on Thursday and much more.
We'll get to my conversation with Kara right after this.
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Joining today's podcast is Kara Frederick.
Kara is the director of the Tech Policy Center here at the Heritage Foundation,
where her research focuses on big tech and emergency technology policy.
Kara, thank you so much for joining us.
Of course. Thanks for having me.
So before we discuss the TikTok CEO's testimony on Thursday,
I want to take a step back and walk through how we ended up here in the first place.
Now, as many of our listeners probably know, you've been one of the leading voices, you know, sounding the alarm over the dangers of TikTok and national security concerns.
So can you take us back to when this conversation around TikTok really began?
Yeah, so I think it sort of entered popular consciousness when the Sipheus Review was announced around 2019.
And that's the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States where they're charged with assessing and evaluating
the national security concerns surrounding transactions, something, and, you know, digital platforms
like TikTok. That's not their only remit, but that's the one that's relevant here. And what the Trump
administration tried to do the next year in 2020 was issue executive order effectively banning TikTok.
And we chat another digital application that we can or we can talk about in this conversation.
but I think it's understandably drawn the most I or TikTok, that is,
because most of the next generation of Americans
and the younger generation of Americans use it.
And people sort of know, okay, my kid, my niece, you know,
my young cousin is using this little video chat app,
and there seems to be some murkiness around it.
And then when the Sipheus review was announced back in 2019,
people were kind of like, all right, what's the deal with?
like it seems harmless, that kind of thing.
So that was when we, you know, at the Heritage Foundation in the Davis Center, they were looking
very seriously about the connection to the Chinese Communist Party via its parent company
Bite Dance.
And in other national security circles, we were sort of saying that, hey, this is the next
Huawei.
This is the next Trojan horse.
We know Huawei is a Chinese company that sought.
to build out our next generation wireless networks in America.
And the Trump administration rightfully put a stop to that,
saying that, hey, there's the idea that back doors,
it could be built into these networks to get American data
that potentially bug doors, which are programming vulnerabilities
that could be purposefully or even inadvertently turned on
and designed into these networks.
So I think the concern, the hard security concerns were very apparent with something like that.
But when you take a cute little dance app and you say, no, there's a legitimate national security,
there's a legitimate national security interest in stopping what's going on here,
then people start to say, are you sure? Are you sure you're not just fearmongering?
But that's when it sort of broke into the national consciousness.
Senator Hawley was in a lot of ways, is a leader when it comes to exposing the dangers of TikTok
and its relationship to the CCP.
So he presided over a hearing in November 2019 discussing how corporations are using your data and exploiting your data.
And there's a China angle to a lot of this as well.
So that was a Senate Judiciary Subcommittee on Crime and Terrorism hearing where the chair for the TikTok representative sat open next to a Heritage Fellow who was testifying, myself who was testifying, and another member of a think tank testifying as well as a Microsoft representative.
So that was sort of the first big push.
Marco Rubio, Senator Marco Rubio was warning about this as well.
And then it kind of faded a little bit.
But as it was fading, as the Sifius review was ongoing for years, TikTok just skyrocketed in popularity.
And now, I think because of the scale of that growth, because of its grip on, you know, the American populace and especially the youngest among us, I think that is something that people are starting to understand matters in a big way.
and it's broken again into the popular consciousness with a lot of these legislative efforts put forth by not only, you know, our federal legislators in Congress, but also by states who are, you know, one by one banning it on government devices, which is great.
A proposal by Josh Hawley passed in the omnibus last year to ban it on federal government devices as well.
So in between that, you know, we've gotten a lot of momentum, but in between where we are today, where we were back then in 2019, and in the summer of 2021, Joe Biden rescinded Trump's executive order that would effectively ban TikTok and WeChat and replaced it with some, you know, vague promises to sort of look into the, you know, digital platforms that would pose specific threats to things.
they meant specific criteria going forward, which I think is a good idea generally. We have to prep
for the next TikTok. I've been saying that since 2019 with a risk-based platform that's flexible,
that you know you have to have your criteria listed out and then there has to be a rule set that
triggers policy action if certain criteria are met. But at the same time, I think the TikTok
national security threat is so grave, so immediate that TikTok should be banned outright.
A wholesale ban on TikTok, not just on government devices, because it's not going to be the solution
to not allowing U.S. user data to get in the hands of the CCP, and we can talk about those
gradations and third parties and whatnot all we want there, but you have to stop the bleeding.
You have to stanch the wound, and that is the only way to do that is with a wholesale ban of TikTok
from operating in the U.S. market, full stop.
Now, just before we get any further,
I wanted to just give you the chance to explain WeChat.
I know you brought it up in your last answer,
but just for some of our audience members
who might not be aware of WeChat
and sort of those concerns with Weechat as well.
Yeah, so WeChat is a digital platform
that a lot of the Chinese diaspora uses,
and it's something that Elon Musk has even discussed
in terms of how he sees Twitter growing
in the future, it's sort of like the everything app. You can, you know, communicate through direct
messages, you can, you know, pay for things on it, you can watch things on it, and it's, it's an app that
encompasses all of those functions, like a pocket knife of a digital application. And it's not just
something like TikTok, which is primarily just videos and a data collection platform, frankly,
but it's something that a lot of, especially people of, you know, Chinese ethnicity here in the U.S.
used to communicate with, you know, family members throughout the diaspora.
So it's a big sort of everything app that, you know, payments, videos, entertainment, buying, selling, e-commerce, etc.
Yeah. Wow.
Well, moving ahead to tomorrow, the CEO of TikTok's testimony before the House, Energy,
Commerce Committee. This is the first time that the CEO will appear before Congress. What do you
think it's important to hear from him specifically about? Yeah, so I am not sanguine about
hearing the truth. I'm not sanguine about hearing that, you know, we will institute
proper safeguards against the exploitation of American user data because TikTok executives ad nauseum
and representatives have promised us over and over and over again that safeguards are in place,
that it is not easy for engineers, say, in China, working for the parent company Bightance to access
American user data. That's been proven wrong.
Frankly, on Jake Tapper's show, a TikTok executive couldn't even admit that there are,
you know, genocidal atrocities being committed in Xinjiang.
in that region in China against the Muslim minority Uighur people.
So I do not, I expect more of the same.
So I'm not looking for him to provide assurances, though he will.
I'm looking for him to actually make good on those promises.
Unfortunately, given what we've seen through their conduct,
through their data collection practices,
through the fact that they have repeatedly said that, you know,
we don't access US user data because that's stored in, you know, US and Singapore, and that's been,
you know, proven to be not true. I'm not really looking for him to say anything that is going to
assure me that TikTok can be trusted. And thus, I think the ban is the only option. They've been
given the opportunity to clean up their act, and they've made overtures, but they're not
those overtures like Project Texas and whatnot, which gives, you know, third-party oversight, you know,
ideas toward divestment, which, you know, Bytance said they already wouldn't even give up the source
code. They would, you know, retain it in that Beijing headquartered company. It's not enough.
It's absolutely not enough. So I'm not really looking for him to come out with any gems.
I'm looking for him to basically sit there while.
the House members expose some of these practices to the American public.
Yes, and just speaking of that, I wanted to give you the opportunity.
I asked Keith Krocke, he was just on the show on Friday,
and I just asked him the same question.
I want to get your thoughts on this.
I'm curious, if you were a lawmaker in the hearing,
given the opportunity to ask the TikTok CEO a question,
what would you ask him?
Yeah, that's a good question.
I would ask them how they plan
on addressing their efforts to recruit preteens and the younger and younger generation of Americans.
I would ask them, him, how tied in the CCP is with the manipulation of the algorithm and the
source code. You have Director Ray coming out on multiple occasions saying that China, China has the ability to
control the algorithm that China has the ability to control the software on the devices where
TikTok is downloaded. I would want more granularity from him on that. I don't think again,
these guys are coached. I'm sure he's been coached for weeks and weeks. Again, they equivocate with
the best of them. They totter the line between truth and falsehood very well. And I don't expect us to
get any good answers. But I do expect the members.
to expose some of these practices to Americans that maybe haven't, they've been unaware.
And that is something, you know, that is they're intentionally, TikTok, bite dance,
they intentionally obfuscate these connections between, you know,
who's controlling the source code, who's accessing what data,
how are these internal tools used to potentially access the data?
Senator Holly's letter to Janet Yellen, since she's, you know, the top person when it comes to the Sifias Review was assessing through a whistleblower that toggling between U.S. data and data at bite dance was, you know, headquartered in China, was like flipping a light switch due to a specific internal tool.
So we've been assured that there are safeguards,
that it's very difficult to, you know,
there's things akin to firewalls that are creating friction
between accessing American data and that appears to be false,
not just through this whistleblower testimony,
but that corroborates a lot of what we've heard from,
again, BuzzFeed reporting, Forbes reporting, et cetera, et cetera.
Now also on Thursday, the Heritage Foundation is hosting a Moms Against TikTok rally.
I wanted to give you the opportunity to tell us a little bit
bit more about it and, you know, why it's being held. Yeah. So I think this is the thing that those of us
who are used to sort of the national security implications and diving into that area, we tend to
consider the potential mental health harms more squishy. And this whole idea of, you know,
social contagions being supercharged by this platform, you know, less relevant to the hard cyber
concerns to the potential influence operations that could be tailored directly to these users.
but I think it's actually the most important.
I think it speaks to, you know, what the federalist Emily Dachinsky says is, you know, the social fabric of our nation and how this is really trying to, it's really tearing at that fabric and it's doing it through our young people.
And even, you know, the Surgeon General, who is part of the Biden administration, he, I think laid this out very clearly.
he was speaking generally about social media platforms,
but he basically said between kids and the designers of these social media platforms,
it's not a fair fight.
You're pitting children up against the best designers in the world,
the best programmers, the best engineers in the world,
and you're telling them to control themselves and exercise some discipline,
or, you know, you're telling parents that they need to be better.
And, you know, that is an element.
But I think you also have to understand the,
deliberate nature of the targeting, intrinsic to, you know, the business models of specific
platforms, not just TikTok, but TikTok, Bytance, in particular, given the CCP connections, which we can
talk about it, you know, one of three board members of Bydance's domestic, main domestic
subsidiary is a card carrying Chinese official. You have 300 plus LinkedIn profiles of ByteDance
professionals saying that they have a relationship to Chinese state media, either former or current,
and over and over again. So there's that aspect of it too. And I think it's most clearly
articulated in a question that many people have now posed. If you were China, you know,
and you wanted to destroy your greatest adversary, America, would you be doing anything different
with this platform, you wouldn't.
Because it seems to be effectively, you know,
pushing gender dissatisfaction, gender dysphoria,
eating disorder content, suicidal, self-harm content.
And again, a lot of social media platforms have this problem,
but I sort of like to say that the new face of teen despair is here,
and it's coming through a Chinese algorithm.
Wow, that was heavy.
Sorry.
It's okay.
We're wearing black, I figured it.
So I also wanted to talk a little bit about the fact that there's been these TikTok influencers in Washington this week.
You know, trying to persuade lawmakers not to ban the app.
There's been, as we've been talking about, this bipartisan push to ban the app.
Now, the Washington Times reports that the TikTok influencers assembling in Washington are people who use the platform for trying to make a living and
put food on their tables. That's according to a TikTok spokesperson, Jamal Brown. What are your
thoughts on that? Yeah, I think that's, it makes me sad. It doesn't necessarily just, you know,
make me laugh. It makes me sad because we've seen the effects that TikTok in particular has on
American young people. And I understand that everybody wants to put food on the table, but these
TikTok influences aren't doing that. You know, they just want their next designer handbag.
and they're unwilling to take one for the team when it comes to exposing children to not only, you know, the filth on these platforms, but exposing them to exploitation by the CCP.
I think most of them probably know what they're doing and push it back to the corner of their mind and justify it in some way.
But, you know, you can always go to another social media platform, but the Pennsylvania mother whose daughter accidentally killed her.
by attempting the blackout challenge, 10-year-old daughter,
she's never going to get her daughter back.
Never going to get her daughter back.
But you could always go to another social media platform
and try your hand at making money there and putting, you know,
even if it's not the most expensive food on the table, you know,
you can, again, as I said before, you can take one for the team.
And a lot of these effects, I think, are,
are now becoming concrete.
You have certain outlets in the UK who are running these experiments,
registering on the platform as 13-year-olds,
and finding the self-harm content that's pushed to them by TikTok's insanely successful algorithm
is much different and more effective, I think, than a lot of these other social media platforms.
It's why they're trying to copy the algorithm thus far on.
successfully. You know, you find the suicidal content, you know, once some Western media outlets,
they, this is the New York Post, actually, a woman, a journalist there created accounts of
registering as a 14-year-old and she found that she got self-harm and suicidal content within
five minutes, depression and mental illness within similar time frames, the UK outlets registered
as 13-year-olds, and they got tens of thousands of weight loss videos within weeks and just
similar techniques.
13-year-old registered users got eating disorder content within eight minutes of joining the app.
So this is TikTok.
This is effective.
And, you know, you want to talk about the impact of these influencers saying, you know,
they said, this is going to have, you know, real-world impacts on us.
Yeah, it's already having real-world impacts, and they aren't good.
Yeah.
Yeah, well, Kara, just before we go, I wanted to give you the opportunity to share any final thoughts.
Yeah, so I think because it requires explanation, I think most Americans don't understand the threat.
So the easiest way to explain it is to say that TikTok, by virtue of its parent company, Bightams, which is headquartered in Beijing, is subject to the laws and policies that governs.
these platforms and they are governed by the Chinese Communist Party. And the easiest one to talk about
is the 2017 National Intelligence Law, which compels any private entity to cooperate with state
intelligence work. So we say bite dance is going to turn over data or provide access to the Chinese
Communist Party if they ask for it. Now TikTok says we will never do that if Beijing asks,
they can do it through bite dance.
And we know that bite dance, again, has,
because of their domestic subsidiary,
at least one of the three board members
is a card carrying member of the Chinese government.
And they're, again, seating these companies with not just individuals,
but with strategy.
They have internal committees that deliberate over some of the workings of the platforms.
The Trump Justice Department came out
with a memo that explained to that.
You know, we know that the CCP is intimately involved with bite dance, bite dance on TikTok.
It'd be like saying if, you know, alphabet, which is the parent company to Google, you know, we are so separate from them.
But you know that they're working hand in glove.
They've proven that they're working hand in glove.
Leaked master messaging PR documents even indicate that they want to downplay the relationship between China and TikTok, the relationship.
the relationship between bite dance and TikTok and the relationship between artificial intelligence and TikTok,
which is a conversation for another day.
But equip yourselves properly, America, and get yourselves off TikTok.
Well, Kara, thank you so much for joining us today.
Always a pleasure to speak with you.
Thanks so much.
Of course. Thanks for having you, Sam.
And that'll do it for today's episode.
Thank you for listening to my interview with Kara Frederick.
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