Supreme Court slams First Amendment arguments by TikTok as app gives last ditch effort to stop US ban
Supreme Court justices slammed First Amendment arguments made by TikTok as the popular social media app tries to avoid a U.S. ban in the coming days.
Lawyers for ByteDance, the parent company of TikTok, went before the Supreme Court on Friday in a last-ditch effort to prevent the app from vanishing. The government passed a ban on the app, unless it is sold, citing national security concerns given TikTokās ties to Chinaās communist party.
TikTok has argued that the app should be able to exist in the U.S. under free speech claims.
TikTok is one of the most popular social media applications in the U.S. with more than 170 million monthly users and more than half are under the age of 30.
āCongress doesnāt care about whatās on TikTok,ā Chief Justice John Roberts said during oral arguments. āThey donāt care about the expression. Thatās shown by the remedy. Theyāre not saying TikTok has to stop. Theyāre saying the Chinese have to stop controlling TikTok.ā
Justice Amy Coney Barrett questioned lawyers and noted they kept referring to the so-called āshutting downā of the app. The Trump-appointed Justice stated TikTok didnāt have to close, just that it needed to find a new owner.
Fellow Trump-appointed Justice Neil Gorsuch questioned the free speech issues and argued the countryās answer to problematic speech is counter-speech.
It wasnāt just conservative justices that attacked the TikTok arguments.
Newest, and Biden-appointed, Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson asked: āIām trying to understand what the burden is that you are articulating and really whether itās about association and not speech...What youāre really complaining about is the inability to associate with ByteDance and its algorithm.ā
Even Obama-appointed Justice Elena Kagan said ByteDance doesnāt have the same rights as everyday Americans.
āThe law is only targeted at this foreign corporation, which doesnāt have First Amendment rights,ā Kagan stated.
The harsh tone justices took toward TikTokās argument have some believing that it is likely the ban will be upheld. But, it will be up to a future Supreme Court ruling to signal where the justices fall.
Many of the appās Gen-Z users are not happy with a potential ban.
āWe are starving, we are dying, people are in jail for f***ing marijuana charges, weāre in a war that we should not be in in the first place and TikTok is our most pressing concern? I donāt think so,ā Make-up artist James Charles said in an interview with NBC in March.
The law, Protecting Americans From Foreign Adversary Controlled Applications Act, was passed by Congress in April with bipartisan support ā something that justices found compelling.
Lawmakers were concerned that the Chinese government could obtain Americansās data and ācovertlyā manipulate what U.S. users see or spread misinformation and propaganda.
One example, used on Friday, outlined the possibility of the Chinese government collecting the data of a young TikTok user who eventually grew up to become a member of the military or federal government. Now, the Chinese have data on a person who could hold a key position.
That argument seemed to get the justicesā attention.
Some First Amendment proponents agree with TikTok and say itās a massive platform with a highly unique algorithm that essentially functions as a public square. Muting it would restrict Americansās speech, they argue.
Ramya Krishnan, an attorney and senior staff attorney at the Knight First Amendment Institute, focuses on issues related to government transparency, censorship and social media. She and her colleagues, who submitted and amicus brief in the case, believe the governmentās case does not justify outright banning the app.
āTo the extent that the government is concerned that there is covert manipulation, the most direct way to address that concern is disclosure,ā: Krishnan told The Independent. āIf the concern is with foreign government speech or propaganda, as we argue in our brief, that kind of concern canāt justify a flat-out ban on Americans access to speech from abroad.ā
TikTokās lawyers made that point during arguments, saying the platform could add a ādisclosureā on its app ā essentially informing people every time they go on it that their data could be used by the Chinese.
The government believes thatās not good enough because itās not specific and thus people would just ignore it.
Solicitor General Elizabeth Prelogar suggested China could ācovertlyā manipulate what videos people see as a means to generate chaos and arguments. Justices did not seem convinced that was a compelling reason, that is, after all, how algorithms work on every other platform.
āYou get what you get and you think āthatās puzzlingā,ā Kagan said to laughter. āItās all a little bit of a black box.ā
Regarding the governmentās concerns about protecting Americansā sensitive data, Krishnan says it is a ācompelling interestā but there are still other ways to achieve that such as āpassing a comprehensive data privacy law.ā
Creators are seemingly preparing for a world in which TikTok disappears by diversifying their content mediums. Whether itās starting a YouTube channel or podcast, opening a new business or moving their short-form videos to Instagram.
The government says TikTok could be reinstated, even after January 19, so long as ByteDance divests from it. They believed the current deadline would light a match under ByteDance to work harder to find a U.S. operator.
The court could also place a pause on the law taking effect and wait for President-elect Donald Trump to take office ā something he asked the court to do. Despite Trump trying to ban TikTok during his first term, he now claims he will save it.