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TikTok's CEO says demands from the Biden administration for its Chinese owners to sell up won't solve security fears in the US

Pete Syme   

TikTok's CEO says demands from the Biden administration for its Chinese owners to sell up won't solve security fears in the US
  • The Biden administration has demanded that TikTok's Chinese owners sell their shares, or face a US-wide ban.
  • But the app's CEO, Shou Zi Chew, says this wouldn't actually solve anything.

The $4 won't solve the government's security concerns, the app's CEO, Shou Zi Chew, told $4

Chew said that's because TikTok is proposing to spend billions on storing American users' data in the US by partnering with Oracle. That would also prevent any Chinese influence over which TikToks US users see, per the WSJ.

"I do welcome feedback on what other risk we are talking about that is not addressed by this," Chew told the newspaper. "So far I haven't heard anything that cannot actually be solved by this [his plan for US data storage.]"

$4 but now officials are threatening a full-scale ban on the short form-video app for all citizens if its Chinese stakeholders don't divest.

Governments around the world are worried that the fact TikTok is Chinese-owned means the Chinese government could access sensitive data, but a spokesperson for the app says bans "have been based on misplaced fears and seemingly driven by wider geopolitics."

The company has launched "Project Texas," as well as "Project Clover" in Europe, to try to convince legislators that it wouldn't hand over users' data to the Chinese government. Those efforts have so far been unsuccessful.

On Thursday, $4 on government devices. That was despite $4 and the cybersecurity intelligence agency to try to allay concerns – as well as building more data centers on the continent.

Then Grant Shapps, the British energy minister often praised as the government's "best communicator" per $4, shared a "The Wolf of Wall Street" $4 joking about refusing to leave the app. He added that he had only ever used the app on personal devices.

Chew also told the Journal the app isn't currently profitable "because I spent so much money building these data-sovereignty projects around the world."

The White House did not immediately respond to Insider's request for comment, sent outside US working hours.



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