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Clock is ticking: US gives TikTok six months to leave, but Australia won’t follow suit

Australia has no plans to block TikTok as the social media app faces a nationwide ban in the US amid national security concerns.

 

Mar 14, 2024, updated Mar 14, 2024
TikTok has been given six months to wrap up its operations in the U/s. Photo: ABC

TikTok has been given six months to wrap up its operations in the U/s. Photo: ABC

The short-form video app, which is owned by Chinese company ByteDance, is one of the fastest growing platforms in the world with more than 170 million users in the US and 8.5 million Australian users.

But national security concerns have led the US House of Representatives to pass a bill on Wednesday that would give ByteDance six months to divest from the app and sell to a company that is not based in China.

Failing to do this, Apple’s App Store and Google Play store would be barred from hosting TikTok, effectively banning its use across the US.

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said on Thursday the Australian government was not expected to emulate the US.

“We’ll take advice but we have no plans,” he told WSFM Sydney.

“You’ve always got to have national security concerns, front and centre, but you also need to acknowledge that for a whole lot of people, this provides a way of them communicating.”

In Australia, TikTok is only banned on government devices, which prevents public servants from downloading the app on their work-issued phones.

US politicians claim the app poses a security risk as Americans’ data could be shared with the Chinese government due to ByteDance’s affiliations with the country.

But TikTok’s CEO Shou Zi Chew has repeatedly told Congress US data is held in Singapore, not China.

TikTok’s fate now rests in the hands of US senators, who will review the legislation.

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