TikTok
— an
app
used
to
by
170
million
Americans
— now
has
its
future
resting
in
the
hands
of
three
judges.
The
company
fought
for
its
life
during
oral
arguments
on
Monday
only
for
the
judges
to
express
a
great
deal
of
skepticism
towards
TikTok’s
case.
Attorneys
for
TikTok
and
a
group
of
creators
suing
to
block
the
law
popularly
known
as
“the
TikTok
ban”
made
their
case
before
a
panel
of
three
judges
on
the
DC
Circuit
Court
of
Appeals.
Though
the
bill
seeks
a
divestment
of
the
app
from
its
Chinese
owner
ByteDance
by
a
January
19th
deadline,
the
company
says
the
ultimatum
is
in
truth
a
ban
that
would
stifle
the
speech
of
TikTok
and
its
creators,
and
improperly
limit
the
information
Americans
are
able
to
receive.
The
Department
of
Justice
defended
the
law,
saying
that
it
takes
appropriate,
targeted
action
against
a
company
that
poses
a
national
security
risk
because
of
its
alleged
exposure
to
a
foreign
adversary
government.
The
judges
—
Obama
appointee
and
Chief
Judge
Sri
Srinivasan,
Trump
appointee
Judge
Neomi
Rao,
and
Reagan
appointee
Judge
Douglas
Ginsburg
—
seemed
to
lob
more
questions
toward
counsel
for
TikTok
than
the
DOJ.
During
TikTok’s
arguments,
both
Rao
and
Ginsburg
seemed
at
times
to
squint
or
rest
a
hand
on
the
side
of
their
head.
Srinivasan
played
his
cards
closest
to
the
chest,
directing
questions
to
both
sides
and
nodding
along
to
answers
from
both.
The
DC
Circuit
is
an
appeals
court
that
tends
to
deal
with
cases
involving
federal
agencies.
The
fact
that
the
bill
is
an
act
of
Congress,
rather
an
agency
action,
was
not
lost
on
the
judges.
Rao
told
TikTok’s
counsel
Andrew
Pincus
that
Congress
is
“not
the
EPA”
and
doesn’t
have
to
enact
findings
like
an
agency
—
their
findings
are
borne
out
by
the
fact
they
were
able
to
pass
the
law.
Later,
Rao
said
that
many
of
Pincus’
arguments
sounded
like
he
wants
the
panel
to
treat
Congress
“like
an
agency.”
The
judges
questioned
the
practicality
of
requiring
a
lesser
means
of
action
from
TikTok,
such
as
disclosures
from
the
company
about
their
data
and
content
moderation
practices.
That
would
depend
on
trusting
the
very
company
the
government
is
worried
is
a
pawn
of
a
covert
foreign
adversary,
Rao
and
Srinivasan
pointed
out.
Ginsburg,
who
didn’t
pipe
up
until
toward
the
end
of
TikTok’s
argument,
pushed
back
on
Pincus’
assertion
that
the
law
singles
out
the
company.
Instead,
Ginsburg
said,
it
describes
a
category
of
companies
controlled
by
foreign
adversaries
that
could
be
subject
to
the
law,
and
specifically
names
one
where
there’s
an
immediate
need
based
on
years
of
government
negotiations
that
have
failed
to
go
anywhere.
Jeffrey
Fisher,
who
argued
on
a
behalf
of
a
group
of
creator
plaintiffs,
said
that
upholding
the
law
could
ultimately
lead
to
other
limits
on
Americans’
ability
to
produce
for
other
media
companies
with
foreign
owners,
from
Politico
to
Spotify
to
the
BBC.
Fisher
said
the
content
manipulation
justifications
the
government
gave
—
including
some
lawmakers’
fears
about
TikTok’s
content
recommendations
around
the
war
in
Gaza
—
“taints
the
entire
act.”
But
the
judges
also
questioned
whether
creators
really
have
a
First
Amendment
interest
in
who
owns
TikTok.
Justice
Amy
Coney
Barrett’s
musings
in
the
recent
NetChoice
case
about
how
foreign
ownership
could
change
the
First
Amendment
calculus
also
came
up,
and
the
judges
noted
the
law
is
about
foreign
adversary
nations,
not
just
foreign
ownership
broadly.
Still,
the
judges
also
pushed
DOJ’s
Daniel
Tenny
on
whether
the
US
entity
TikTok,
Inc.
has
First
Amendment
rights.
Tenny
said
it
does,
but
they’re
“incidental”
in
this
case
because
they’re
not
the
target
of
the
law.
The
government
has
sought
to
show
the
court
certain
classified
documents
while
at
the
same
time
withholding
them
from
TikTok,
because
it
fears
exposing
them
would
further
harm
the
very
national
security
risks
the
government
is
worried
about.
These
documents
did
not
come
up
during
the
roughly
two
hours
of
oral
arguments.
Instead,
the
attorneys
and
judges
focused
on
what
level
of
First
Amendment
scrutiny
should
be
applied
to
the
case,
and
how
to
assess
the
role
of
a
foreign
owner
over
TikTok.
Kiera
Spann,
a
TikTok
creator
and
petitioner
in
the
suit,
told
reporters
during
a
press
conference
after
the
arguments
that
she
found
the
platform
to
be
“the
least-censored
and
most
authentic
source
of
information,”
and
said
she’s
not
found
the
kinds
of
conversations
she’s
had
on
TikTok
on
other
social
media
platforms.
Jacob
Huebert,
president
of
Liberty
Justice
Center
which
represents
separate
petitioner
BASED
Politics,
told
The
Verge
outside
the
courthouse
he
was
“not
surprised”
the
judges
had
“challenging
questions
for
both
sides,”
including
ones
for
the
DOJ
about
how
far
the
foreign
ownership
question
could
go
when
it
comes
to
speech.
Huebert
called
it
a
“mistake”
to
read
too
much
into
the
number
and
type
of
questions.
An
estimated
150
people
packed
the
courtroom
Monday
to
hear
from
the
judges
who
could
decide
TikTok’s
fate.
Whatever
the
outcome,
it
can
be
appealed
to
the
Supreme
Court
—
but
the
clock
is
still
running
out
with
the
January
19th
deadline
for
divestment
fast
approaching.
Original author: Lauren Feiner
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