TikTok Asks Court To Declare Ban Unconstitutional
Congress is "silencing the 170 million Americans who use the platform to communicate," the company argues.

A new law banning TikTok if it doesn't divorce its parent company is "obviously unconstitutional," TikTok Inc. and ByteDance argue in a new federal court filing.
The Protecting Americans From Foreign Adversary Controlled Applications Act, passed and signed into law late last month, singles out ByteDance and its subsidiary TikTok Inc., requiring the former to divest itself of the latter within 270 days. If ByteDance doesn't, the TikTok app will be banned in the U.S.
Congress is "silencing the 170 million Americans who use [TikTok] to communicate," and "crafted a two-tiered speech regime" that is unconstitutional, TikTok argues.
You are reading Sex & Tech, from Elizabeth Nolan Brown. Get more of Elizabeth's sex, tech, bodily autonomy, law, and online culture coverage.
The new law allows a similar ultimatum to be applied to other social media platforms with ties to "foreign adversaries" if the president deems them a threat. But this process requires at least some nominal checks and balances that don't apply in TikTok's case. And no other app or company is explicitly named in the new legislation.
"For the first time in history, Congress has enacted a law that subjects a single, named speech platform to a permanent, nationwide ban, and bars every American from participating in a unique online community with more than 1 billion people worldwide," states TikTok's petition to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia.
The company is asking the court to review the constitutionality of the law, which it argues is both a violation of the First Amendment and an unconstitutional bill of attainder. Bills of attainder, which regulate or punish a particular entity (without the benefit of due process), are barred by the Constitution.
TikTok also argues that the law violates its "rights under the equal protection component of the Fifth Amendment's Due Process Clause because it singles Petitioners out for adverse treatment without any reason for doing so."
An American Company With American Rights
Opponents of TikTok often argue that as a Chinese company, TikTok is afforded no free speech protections and the First Amendment doesn't apply here.
This is wrong in two ways. First, because American TikTok users have First Amendment rights which are not in question here.
Second, because TikTok Inc. is a U.S. company. It's incorporated in California and has its main office there, with additional offices in New York, San Jose, Chicago, and Miami.
TikTok Inc. is a subsidiary of ByteDance, which is incorporated in the Cayman Islands (not China) and its leadership is based in Singapore and the U.S. (not China).
ByteDance was founded in China back in 2012. But today, ByteDance's founder—a Chinese national based in Singapore—only has a 21 percent ownership stake in the company. Another 21 percent is owned by employees of the company (including around 7,000 Americans, per the petition) and 58 percent is owned by institutional investors, including BlackRock (an American company), General Atlantic (an American company), and Susquehanna International Group (headquartered in Pennsylvania).
It's hard to pin down TikTok (the platform, not the American company) as belonging to any particular nation. But the idea that it's purely a "Chinese app" is demonstrably false.
A Ban By Any Other Name
TikTok rejects the idea—often cited by politicians in support of the law—that this isn't a ban and therefore isn't actually censorship.
"Banning TikTok is so obviously unconstitutional, in fact, that even the Act's sponsors recognized that reality, and therefore have tried mightily to depict the law not as a ban at all, but merely a regulation of TikTok's ownership," notes the petition. "They claim that the Act is not a ban because it offers ByteDance a choice: divest TikTok's U.S. business or be shut down."
"But in reality, there is no choice," the company argues. "The 'qualified divestiture' demanded by the Act to allow TikTok to continue operating in the United States is simply not possible: not commercially, not technologically, not legally. And certainly not on the 270-day timeline required by the Act."
The petition lays out multiple reasons why divestiture isn't feasible, including the fact that the source code is massive and complicated, making "moving all TikTok source code development from ByteDance to a new TikTok owner…impossible as a technological matter."
"It would take years for an entirely new set of engineers to gain sufficient familiarity with the source code to perform the ongoing, necessary maintenance and development activities for the platform," states TikTok's petition. "Moreover, to keep the platform functioning, these engineers would need access to ByteDance software tools, which the Act prohibits." The petition also notes that "the Chinese government has made clear that it would not permit a divestment of the recommendation engine that is a key to the success of TikTok in the United States."
"Like the United States, China regulates the export of certain technologies originating there," notes the petition. "China's official news agency has reported that under these rules, any sale of recommendation algorithms developed by engineers employed by ByteDance subsidiaries in China, including for TikTok, would require a government license." The petition notes that "China adopted these enhanced export control restrictions between August and October 2020, shortly after President [Donald] Trump's August 6, 2020 and August 14, 2020 executive orders targeting TikTok."
No Due Process
Even if divesture could happen, the act "would still be an extraordinary and unconstitutional assertion of power," TikTok argues. It opens the door to the government simply declaring that companies they don't like must divest of particular products—including platforms for speech—or else those products will be banned. "If Congress can do this, it can circumvent the First Amendment by invoking national security and ordering the publisher of any individual newspaper or website to sell to avoid being shut down."
"By banning all online platforms and software applications offered by 'TikTok' and all ByteDance subsidiaries, Congress has made a law curtailing massive amounts of protected speech," it concludes. But "the government cannot, consistent with the First Amendment, dictate the ownership of newspapers, websites, online platforms, and other privately created speech forums."
In this case, the lawmakers' ploy to ban TikTok has been undertaken without a single non-hypothetical finding of danger by Congress, nor any consideration of less restrictive means of allaying any concerns, the company argues.
TikTok Inc. "worked with the government for four years on a voluntary basis to develop a framework to address the government's concerns," it points out. As part of this engagement, the company "voluntarily invested more than $2 billion to build a system of technological and governance protections—sometimes referred to as 'Project Texas'—to help safeguard U.S. user data and the integrity of the U.S. TikTok platform against foreign government influence."
The company also committed to a draft National Security Agreement developed with the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States. "Congress tossed this tailored agreement aside, in favor of the politically expedient and punitive approach of targeting for disfavor one publisher and speaker (TikTok Inc.), one speech forum (TikTok), and that forum's ultimate owner (ByteDance Ltd.)," the petition states.
TikTok Inc. and ByteDance are now asking the court to "issue a declaratory judgment that the Act violates the U.S. Constitution" and an order stopping the U.S. Attorney General from enforcing the act.
More Sex & Tech News
The best technology and kids take: Sundials are ruining the Youth.
From a Roman adaptation of a Greek play, 3rd century BCE, in Kerr's "The Ordered Day" via @ewzucker pic.twitter.com/vRx9TYtKFU
— Ethan Mollick (@emollick) May 7, 2024
• Check out Reason's new Artificial Intelligence issue.
• The fight over an Idaho "abortion trafficking" law continues in a federal appeals court.
• Alabama's Attorney General "cannot constitutionally prosecute people for acts taken within the State meant to facilitate lawful out-of-state conduct, including obtaining an abortion," writes U.S. District Court Judge Myron Thompson, declining to dismiss a case against Attorney General Steve Marshall's pledge to prosecute people who help Alabama residents obtain out-of-state abortions. Reason's Emma Camp has more.
• Microsoft is building an AI tool to compete with OpenAI's ChatGPT and Google's Gemini.
• Minnesota "spends $100 million a year to detain about 750 individuals who are deemed 'likely' to commit sex offenses," notes Jacob Sullum.
Today's Image

Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
Do sex workers use tik tok?
Do people with pink hair and nose piercings use tik tok?
Is the Pope racist?
Does Trump have bigly hair?
It is unconstitutional, but that doesn’t matter because CHINA! If you don't want to ban TikTok you're a commie! You hate America! You support China! You hate children! You're a Democrat! You, you, you!
So many fucking ideas!
You really can't do any better than this, can you? Just nonstop strawman slaying from Sarcasmic the Strawman Slayer. 🙁
If I was slaying strawmen I would have said done a Jesse and accused a specific person of saying that, argued against it, and then called the person a liar when they defended themselves from the lies.
No, my post was a mockery of the ad hominems that pass for persuasive arguments in these comments.
And you know your ad hominems!
They're easy to spot because they either contain the word "you," or use a snide third person that really means "you."
Poor sarc
Sarc is a student of the pee-wee herman school of logic.
I agree that this law is unconstitutional, but I do see the irony in China suddenly being an advocate for free speech!
The only reason for the ban is the the refusal to install backdoors that let the US deepstate read all traffic.
Why bother with the company?
If tik tok is such a national security issue, just arrest all the users for treason.
fact that the source code is massive and complicated, making "moving all TikTok source code development from ByteDance to a new TikTok owner…impossible as a technological matter
Dropbox? Google docs? Data stick? 2 Tb hard drive?
Employment contracts? Offices? United Van Lines?
As a consultant, I never said something was "impossible as a technological matter".
I just said, "If you have the budget, we will get you a proposed timeline next week.
Good, fast, or cheap. Pick two.
Yeah, whether or not it is good idea is one thing. Saying it is "impossible" sounds like an excuse, since the code exists.
I’ve had to completely rewrite lots of code because it was so poorly written the first time I just couldn’t fix it. Had to start over. Some people do that intentionally for job security, though in the cases that comes to mind one developer was fired and another quit. Maybe that’s what they mean.
Oh, so you're a programmer?
Sure.
Soon as your opinion matters I'll let you know. Feel free to hold your breath.
Just another in a long line of “sarc-ecdotes”
Congress is "silencing the 170 million Americans who use [TikTok] to communicate,"
Probably oversells it a bit. But freedom of the press is freedom of the press. I don't see any foreign influence exception in the 1st amendment.
Coming from the same leftists that have no problem with the feds silencing Americans they disagree with on every other topic I'm not inclined to give their crocodile tears any credence.
I don't care one way or another what those people think.
Meanwhile, in the actual petition, tiktok admits that China will not permit the sale.
Completely and totally undermining the idea that they don’t own it.
And the inherent tension betwen dealing with a relatively free market and an unfree market as if there were on an equal basis.
TBF, how many times does Uncle Sam forbid the sale of a company.
Wait, shit…
Not allowing Kroger/Albertsons (or midsize ish grocers) to compete with Costco/Walmart/Target is popular nowadays, or steel mills to be run efficiently with lower final prices.
https://www.djournal.com/news/national/doj-supports-colorados-challenge-to-kroger-albertsons-merger/video_ebb1aeed-c445-5480-ab09-fb1fa07eb099.html
right. So if China controls the company, TikTok is an unregistered agent of a foreign power.
And this isn't a ban, it's a mandate to divest. Which is a pretty basic tool of the feds.
I can see how they might win a Due Process claim, but they aren't going to win the argument that the Feds don't have the power to sever a company from ownership by a foreign power.
Best they can hope for is that they have to be broken up for having a monopoly on Chinese-owned social media.
China is refusing to allow them to export the engine that runs TikTok, which they developed. Doesn't mean they own the company. The ownership is listed right in this article. For example, the U.S. could forbid OpenAI to export their LLM model. Doesn't mean they own that model. Glenn Greenwald had a good show going more into this yesterday.
People with Pink hair, nose piercings hardest hit.
If only.
Squatters with bolt cutters in for second place.
simply not possible: not commercially,
Share buybacks happen all the time. And they have the money to do it, they couldn’t operate otherwise.
not technologically,
The source code for both the app and servers exists somewhere, in some repository. Get the fuck out of here with that 1972 attitude.
not legally.
Debatable.
That’s 0.5 for three.
The source code for both the app and servers exists somewhere, in some repository. Get the fuck out of here with that 1972 attitude.
I’m sure it does, but when we start talking about systems with hundreds of thousands of lines of code or more, the learning curve is pretty steep. If you add onto that things like poor documentation and crappy naming conventions, or worse naming conventions in a foreign language (I mean like Chinese, not Java), then that makes it even more difficult. The people taking over have to go through all of that, figure out what it means, and understand it enough to fix and modify it. That’s not a easy task.
The legality is pretty straight forward. The Constitution prohibits bills of attainder.
Democrats would like to do this to Fox News.
The D.C. consensus wants Substack/Rumble
Why doesn't the government just use eminent domain to purchase Tik Tok? Under Kelo v. New London, a government has the authority to acquire property and then sell it to another. So acquisition by condemnation is constitutional, and has a better legal standing than a ban.
To make sure it fits under Kelo, they could declare TikTok to be a fictional place first. You know, like Palestine.
The Vote. YEA - NA
Republican 186 25
Democratic 174 33
Well one thing interesting is [D] certainly isn't against it by any speak-able margin. I don't believe TikTok poses any national security threat so I call BS and lean towards it being just a measure for domestic spying ability.
The 1st Amendment doesn't 'entitle' anyone to media platforms (government doesn't grant rights) it actually prohibits Government interference in 'peaceably assemble' so until TikTok is facilitating a violent assembly I'd say it's entirely UN-Constitutional.
It is driven entirely and solely by the lack of deepstate backdoors. Everything else is a smokescreen.
The deepstate backdoors are just for the wrong deepstate.
Kinda ironic though. China claiming 1st amendment violations and no due process. Maybe they'd like to send over their Uighur representatives to straighten this issue out.
We are all pots and kettles here.
If the law singles out ByteDance and TilTok by name, that would be an unconstitutional “bill of attainder”. The thing is, though, such a provision could be easily rewritten to describe who it applies to in a way the specifies no names, but will in fact apply only to ByteDance and TikTok. So overturning it on those grounds would only delay it, and require that Congress pass it again with the necessary changes.
>Congress is "silencing the 170 million Americans who use the platform to communicate," the company argues.
I am told that I have the freedom to travel - but any specific method of travel can be curtailed or controlled.
Given that, how is removing access to one specific method of communication, while leaving a multitude of others, unconstitutional?
How is removing access justified in the face of destroying the peoples right to "peaceably to assemble"? I hear it's foreign data collection but I fail to see any sign-up data that could be used in a manner of national defense.
TikTok shares user data with China and compromises our national security.
I'm just not seeing a case there.
volunteered name, age, phone number, email when people sign up for the service.
How is that information a matter of national security especially when all of it can be faked except the phone-number of which usually can be found in a phone book.
All protected data of U.S. users will be stored by default in the Oracle Cloud Infrastructure in the U.S. As of June 2022, 100% of U.S. user traffic is routed to the Oracle and TikTok U.S. Data Security (“USDS”) infrastructure instead of our data centers in Virginia and Singapore. In March 2023, we began the process of deleting U.S. user protected data from the Virginia and Singapore data centers.
“...I think people, when they're worried about TikTok doing something, they should ask themselves whether they should be worried about American companies doing the same thing.”
https://dot.la/what-data-does-tiktok-collect-2657689460.html?utm_campaign=post-teaser&utm_content=iak550ch
What is his book of phones?
Ok, boomer
What are the prognostications here regarding the eventual sale? Does TikTok win in court, or are they forced to divest/shutdown? I thought its an easy case for them to win, but another commenter elsewhere said that since Congress has plenary power over foreign firms in the U.S., the courts will throw this out.
“…Congress is “silencing the 170 million Americans who use the platform to communicate,” the company argues.”
By that logic, wouldn’t banning people from the platform or modifying their posts be a violation of their 1st Amendment rights?