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TikTok creators are holding signs in support of the app and against a ban in Washington, D.C., on March 12, 2024, ahead of a scheduled vote tomorrow in the House of Representatives that would ban the social media app until it divests from Chinese ownership.

Photo by Aaron Schwartz/NurPhoto via Reuters

Clock ticks on TikTok

The US House voted to ban Chinese-owned video-sharing app TikTok on Wednesday, sending the bill to the Senate, where it faces an uncertain fate. Democratic Senate Leader Chuck Schumer has not committed to bringing it to a vote.

Republican and Democratic representatives — who voted 352 to 65 to pass the bill — argue that China could use TikTok’s algorithm to feed propaganda to Americans and collect intelligence about users. Intelligence experts have warned for years that Westerners should be skeptical of assurances that the company does not share intelligence with the Chinese government. TikTok says such concerns are ridiculous.

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