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2024/03/13

The Morning: Should China own TikTok?

Plus, the Biden documents case, Malaysia and a mysterious monolith.
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The Morning

March 13, 2024

Good morning. We're covering a bipartisan effort to end TikTok's Chinese ownership — as well as the Biden documents case, Malaysia and a mysterious monolith.

An iPhone displaying TikTok and other social media apps is held in someone's hands.
Matt Cardy/Getty Images

Magnifying divisions

To understand why the House of Representatives will vote today on a bipartisan bill to force TikTok's Chinese parent company to sell the platform, it helps to look at a few recent news stories:

  • Despite low unemployment and falling inflation, TikTok is full of viral videos bemoaning the U.S. economy. One popular group of posts uses the term "Silent Depression." The posts falsely suggest that the country is in worse shape today than it was in 1930. (My colleagues Jeanna Smialek and Jim Tankersley reported on the posts late last year.)
  • After Hamas's Oct. 7 terrorist attack, TikTok flooded users with videos expressing extreme positions from both sides of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, tilted toward the Palestinian side, a Wall Street Journal analysis found. "Many stoked fear," The Journal reported. In November, videos praising an old Osama bin Laden letter also went viral.
  • In December, a Rutgers University research group concluded that videos about topics the Chinese government dislikes — including Tibet, Uyghurs, Hong Kong protests and the 1989 Tiananmen Square crackdown — were strangely hard to find on TikTok. All were more prominent on Instagram. "It's not believable that this could happen organically," a Rutgers expert told my colleague Sapna Maheshwari.
  • On Monday, the top U.S. intelligence official released a report saying that the Chinese government had used TikTok to promote its propaganda to Americans and to influence the 2022 midterm elections. This year, the report warned, China's ruling Communist Party may try to influence the presidential election and "magnify U.S. societal divisions."

There does not seem to be any historical precedent for TikTok's role in the United States today. The platform has become one of the country's biggest news sources, especially for people younger than 30, and has collected vast amounts of information about Americans. TikTok is also owned by a company, ByteDance, that's based in a country that is America's biggest rival for global power: China.

A Soviet NBC?

ByteDance executives say that they operate separately from China's government and that they regularly remove misleading content from TikTok. But many independent experts are skeptical that ByteDance is truly independent.

China's government has a well-documented history of treating companies as extensions of its ruling party, especially under Xi Jinping, the current leader. And Xi has made clear that he views the U.S. as a threat to China's interests. The most likely scenario, experts say, is that officials aligned with the Chinese government shape TikTok's algorithm to influence what content Americans see.

People stand in front of a big screen showing Xi Jinping in a suit.
In Beijing. Greg Baker/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

With any one viral video or trending hashtag on TikTok, it is impossible to know whether China's government is playing a role. Some of the videos go viral on Instagram too, for instance. But there does seem to be a pattern. The most sensitive subjects for Beijing — such as Tibet and the Uyghurs — are hard to find on the platform. Information that is consistent with Beijing's narratives — such as its pro-Hamas tilt and its criticism of the U.S. economy — circulates more widely than the opposite.

(Related: After experts noted the platform's apparent bias in the Israel-Hamas war, TikTok curtailed the tool that had made the analysis possible.)

As an analogy, imagine if a U.S. company with close ties to Washington were a leading source of news in China today. Or imagine if a Soviet organization owned a U.S. television network in the 1960s — and it was a leading news source for Americans under 30.

50-0

For all these reasons, bipartisan support has grown for a bill that would force ByteDance to sell TikTok. Without a sale, the platform would effectively be banned. Last week, a House committee voted unanimously, 50 to 0, to advance the bill, and the full House is scheduled to vote on it today. President Biden has said he will sign the bill if Congress passes it. Already, many federal workers are not allowed to use the TikTok app on government phones.

There are still big hurdles to the bill's becoming law. Donald Trump has reversed his previous support for a ban and now opposes one. A ban would anger younger Americans, Trump said, and help Facebook (which Trump doesn't like). Journalists have pointed out that Trump's flip-flop came after he met with a Republican donor and TikTok investor who might lose money if the bill passes.

Others object to the bill because it would interfere so aggressively in the private sector. This opposition could complicate passage in the Senate or lead to later legal challenges.

It's not clear what will happen. But the chances of the U.S. government acting against TikTok have risen significantly in recent months.

Make up your mind: The A.C.L.U. and Tyler Cowen make the case against forcing a sale. Noah Smith and Matthew Yglesias make the case in favor.

Related: Read how the legislation to ban TikTok would work.

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THE LATEST NEWS

2024 Election

  • Biden and Trump swept last night's primary elections. They both have enough delegates to win their parties' presidential nominations.
  • On social media, Trump wrote that if elected he would free people convicted over their role in the Jan. 6 Capitol attack, whom he called "hostages being wrongfully imprisoned."
  • Robert F. Kennedy Jr., who is running for president as an independent, approached the N.F.L. quarterback Aaron Rodgers and the former Minnesota governor Jesse Ventura as possible running mates.
  • Trump has used racist stereotypes against Black Americans. Yet his campaign courts those voters with some success, polls suggest.
  • Representative Ken Buck, a Colorado Republican who broke from his party over impeaching Biden's homeland security secretary, plans to leave Congress next week. Republicans will have a tiny majority.

The Biden Documents Case

A man in a suit sits in front of a microphone. Donald Trump is on a screen behind him.
Special Counsel Robert Hur Haiyun Jiang for The New York Times
  • House Democrats released the transcript of an interview with Biden about his handling of classified documents. The investigation's report said Biden was "elderly man with a poor memory." The transcript tells a more nuanced story.
  • The report said Biden did not remember when his son died. In the transcript, Biden remembered the date of Beau's death, May 30. Other people in the room specified the year.
  • The special counsel leading the investigation, a registered Republican, testified to Congress yesterday. He rejected Democratic claims that politics had colored his report and pushed back on Republicans who selectively quoted it. Read more takeaways.
  • Stephen Colbert discussed the testimony on "The Late Show."

Israel-Hamas War

Russia and Ukraine

A man working on a railroad running through open country with hills in the background. The tracks split in three behind him and three vehicles sit on the rails.
Part of a new railroad in Azerbaijan. Sergey Ponomarev for The New York Times

More International News

Workers inside a lab wearing protective clothing. The lighting makes the room appear yellow.
A plant in Malaysia. Jes Aznar for The New York Times

Business

  • A day before the door plug blew out on an Alaska Airlines flight, technicians called for the plane to come out of service.
  • A Boeing whistle-blower who reported problems at the company's 787 Dreamliner factory in South Carolina was found dead. Officials said the cause appeared to be a self-inflicted gunshot wound.
  • Airbnb will ban the use of indoor security cameras in its listings. The company's current policy allows the devices in common areas like living rooms.

Other Big Stories

Opinions

The Justice Department should stop using special counsels, who allow attorneys general to avoid public scrutiny for their role in U.S. elections, Jack Goldsmith writes.

Here are columns by Bret Stephens on why Israel must continue its war against Hamas and Thomas Friedman on Israel's planning for a postwar Gaza.

Discover more of the insight you value in The Morning.

The Times is filled with information and inspiration every day. So gain unlimited access to everything we offer — and save with this introductory offer.

MORNING READS

An upright slab of metal stretches vertically from a brown, grassy landscape.
In Wales. Craig Muir

Mystery: A shiny silver monolith was found in Wales. It is similar to the mysterious objects placed around the world in late 2020.

The heavier sex: There's a longstanding narrative that male mammals are generally larger than female ones. A new study dispels that notion.

Four years: Readers shared memories of the first time they realized Covid would change their lives.

Lives Lived: Eric Carmen was the preternaturally melodic frontman of the Raspberries, pioneers of the genre known as power pop. After the group broke up, Carmen found success as a soft-rock crooner with hits like "All By Myself" and "Hungry Eyes." He died at 74.

SPORTS

Dog days: Dallas Seavey, who was penalized last week for failing to properly gut a moose, won a record sixth Iditarod sled race.

N.F.L.: The Dallas Cowboys quarterback Dak Prescott accused a woman of extortion in a lawsuit.

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ARTS AND IDEAS

A close-up of a baseball player in uniform shows that the label of his jersey is visible through his pants.
The Miami Marlins pitcher Sixto Sánchez. Jeff Roberson/Associated Press

The new white: Preseason conversation among baseball fans has been dominated by the apparent translucence of new uniform pants designed by Nike and produced by Fanatics. "Buying my wife Fanatics baseball pants instead of lingerie," one social media poster joked. Fanatics says the pants are made from the same material as last year's uniforms, but many players are dubious.

More on culture

Two women, one with graying hair, walk down runways.
At Paris Fashion Week. Carlo Scarpato/Gorunway, MONIC

THE MORNING RECOMMENDS …

A view of slices of coffee cake from above.
Julia Gartland for The New York Times

Make a boozy Irish cream coffee cake.

Play one of these video games.

Back up your digital life.

GAMES

Here is today's Spelling Bee. Yesterday's pangram was confirm.

And here are today's Mini Crossword, Wordle, Sudoku and Connections.

Thanks for spending part of your morning with The Times. See you tomorrow. — David

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