TikTok a CCP ‘Intelligence Weapon’: Experts Sound Alarm on Threat
TikTok a CCP ‘Intelligence Weapon’: Experts Sound Alarm on Threat

By Andrew Thornebrooke

News Analysis

Social media giant TikTok is aggressively lobbying in Washington ahead of congressional hearings on the company’s ties to China’s communist regime.

TikTok and its China-based parent company, ByteDance, spent more than $5 million on lobbying efforts in the United States last year and might spend even more in 2023 if recent events are any indicator.

The company has hired an in-house lobbying and public affairs team led by former congressional staffers with deep ties to the Biden administration, and it’s also sponsoring content in major U.S. media outlets.

Those employed by the tech giant include consulting firm SKDK, whose founder is now a senior adviser to President Joe Biden. Media purchases include dozens of pieces of sponsored content in Axios, Politico, and The Washington Post. The company also is paying for dozens of influencers to descend on the capital for three days to give speeches in favor of the company.

The flurry of activity is happening in the days before TikTok CEO Shou Chew is scheduled to make his first congressional appearance on March 23 at a House Energy and Commerce Committee hearing, which will examine the company’s data practices and relationship to the Chinese Communist Party (CCP).

“We look forward to hearing from Mr. Chew directly and continuing Energy and Commerce’s efforts to bring Big Tech CEOs before the committee to answer for their companies’ destructive actions.”

A woman walks past the headquarters of ByteDance, the parent company of video-sharing app TikTok, in Beijing on Sept. 16, 2020. (Greg Baker/AFP via Getty Images)

‘TikTok and ByteDance Are One and the Same’

It’s no secret that members of the committee have concerns over TikTok and its relationship to the CCP through ByteDance. Multiple committee staffers held a press call on March 20, speaking about the issue on the condition of anonymity.

“Over and over again, we have heard TikTok say that it is safeguarding our data from the Chinese Communist Party, but the facts certainly tell us otherwise,” one aide said. “CCP national intelligence laws require that Chinese companies like ByteDance spy on their behalf, and we know that TikTok and ByteDance are one and the same.”

The issue of how much control the CCP-affiliated ByteDance has over TikTok has been a constant source of concern for lawmakers and security experts.

Although many tech companies track information about users, those originating in China are of particular concern because CCP law defines data as a national resource and therefore makes all data stored in China available to the regime upon request.

That’s a real problem for Americans given the sheer volume of data that TikTok seeks to collect.

It was discovered in August 2022, for example, that TikTok’s browser contained code for conducting keylogging, meaning that the app records all of a user’s keystrokes on the device they are using the in-app browser with, including in their email and passwords.

Casey Fleming, CEO of security advisory firm BlackOps Partners, said at the time that the functionality essentially turned TikTok into an “espionage application” for the CCP.

“When you’re actually doing keystrokes, typing each letter, each number, those are being recorded back in China, and under supervision of the Chinese Communist Party,” Fleming said during an interview with NTD, The Epoch Times’ sister media outlet.

“What you’re texting, who you’re texting, passwords, email accounts, everything on your phone, anything that you’re typing in emails or texting, that keylogging is recording each word, each password, and so on.”

One Energy and Commerce aide spoke similarly, saying that TikTok’s attempts to surveil every single thing about a user are cause for concern, particularly given ByteDance’s control over the TikTok algorithm.

“TikTok surveils everything and everyone,” the aide said. “Names, ages, locations, what you do outside of TikTok, the text you copy, who you talk to, passwords, browsing history, biometric data like your face, voice, prints, and more.

“TikTok uses all of this to build its algorithm, which has the power to shape what we see, hear, and ultimately believe. … ByteDance controls that algorithm. There’s no question on that. TikTok cannot even refute that. That is one area where they refuse to be transparent.”

TikTok maintains that the app is safe for Americans and that it won’t pass on U.S. users’ data to the CCP. ByteDance, however, is bound by Chinese laws that don’t allow a firm to refuse to provide data when asked.

TikTok CEO Shou Chew on stage at The New York Times DealBook Summit in New York on Nov. 30, 2022. (Photo by Thos Robinson/Getty Images for The New York Times)

Chew, in his prepared congressional testimony that was released ahead of the hearing (pdf), stated that no such request by Chinese authorities has ever been made of TikTok. However, he didn’t clarify whether the CCP had requested ByteDance to hand over data originally received from TikTok.

Chew also says in the prepared testimony that TikTok is an essential part of American culture and empowers youth to live authentically and businesses to thrive in unpredictable times.

That sway over the nation’s youth and small businesses, he says, “cannot be replicated on any other platform or in any other medium.”

The current version of the app, Chew also claims, doesn’t track specific location information, and the idea that TikTok is controlled by the CCP is “emphatically untrue.”

Chinese Trackers Planted on US Government Sites

While the sheer volume of data collected by TikTok and seen in China has alarmed experts and lawmakers, some may brush off the practice as the cost of using the app. There is one glaring problem with that assumption, however.

“TikTok has your data even if you don’t have the app,” one committee aide said.

That’s because ByteDance and TikTok make heavy use of tracking pixels, which follow users and non-users alike across the internet, measuring usage and building profiles.

While such pixels are regularly used by tech companies to measure the effectiveness of advertising campaigns, the fact that these pixels are operated by a company with extensive ties to the CCP is cause for concern.

But where these trackers are found is even more alarming.

A March report by IT firm Feroot Security found that 30 U.S. state government websites contained tracking pixels created and maintained by ByteDance, meaning that the CCP could have gained access to personal data from Americans who did nothing more than visit the website of their local government.

What’s more, some of those sites with tracking pixels belong to state governments that had banned TikTok from government devices.

That’s a problem, given the fact that, according to a March 14 report presented to the Australian government, ByteDance is a “party-state-controlled entity,” and its employees have used the company’s data and TikTok’s to conduct illicit work against U.S. citizens.

The TikTok app on a smartphone in this illustration from July 13, 2021. (Dado Ruvic/Illustration/Reuters)

Censoring and Stalking Americans

ByteDance employees have sought to silence those critical of the company’s ties to the regime, and they’ve used TikTok to do it.

Late last year, ByteDance employees illicitly stalked American journalists by cross-referencing private geolocation data from TikTok, including the journalists’ IP addresses, to identify whether the journalists had frequented the same areas as ByteDance employees suspected of being whistleblowers.

What’s more, the team that oversaw the surveillance campaign was actually ByteDance’s Internal Audit and Risk Control department, a Beijing-based unit responsible for conducting investigations into potential misconduct by current and former ByteDance employees.

Chew, in the prepared testimony, states that TikTok employees also were involved in the incident but that they are no longer with the company.

The stalking incident is nevertheless reportedly being investigated by the FBI and is just one of many examples of how ByteDance has used TikTok to suppress views critical of China’s communist regime abroad.

In 2020, for example, a TikTok executive acknowledged that the app was used as a “blunt instrument” to censor content critical of the regime, including coverage of the ongoing persecution of the Uyghurs and other minority groups, which the United States recognizes as a genocide.

At the time, TikTok’s internal documents even used Tibet and the Tiananmen Square Massacre as examples of content that needed to be taken down from the platform, although the company stated that this is no longer its policy.

Then, in 2021, TikTok paid $92 million to settle a class action lawsuit alleging that the company illegally harvested Americans’ data and transferred the data to China-based entities.

In 2022, TikTok employees said that key company decisions appeared to be delegated to ByteDance by CCP officials in China before being delivered to TikTok.

According to one Energy and Commerce aide, ByteDance employees regularly access TikTok’s data, and “many of TikTok’s employees report directly to Beijing.”

“Everything is seen in China.”

TikTok an ‘Intelligence Weapon for the CCP’

TikTok’s long history of promoting the CCP’s interests, both directly and through parent company ByteDance, is becoming increasingly well known by the public. More concerning for some, however, is the company’s steadfast refusal to abandon its links to China.

Since 2020, TikTok has resisted U.S. demands that it be sold to an American company, even though it would earn ByteDance a hefty profit. Then-President Donald Trump had ordered ByteDance to sell TikTok to a U.S. company because of national security concerns, resulting in a proposed deal with Texas-based Oracle that ultimately fell through.

Recently, the company confirmed that the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States (CFIUS), a federal panel tasked to review foreign acquisitions for national security risks, had asked its Chinese owners to sell their stake in the company or face a total ban. In response, TikTok maintains that divestment “doesn’t solve” the national security concerns.

“[A] change in ownership would not impose any new restrictions on data flows or access,” a TikTok spokesperson said.

For Nicolas Chaillan, former chief software officer of the U.S. Air Force and Space Force, ByteDance’s steadfast refusal to sell TikTok at any price is a red flag that demonstrates the CCP’s control over the app.

“No company in the world has fought so hard not to be sold or bought by somebody,” he told The Epoch Times.

“That’s because it’s an intelligence weapon for the CCP and it has no price high enough for that prospect to be even remotely interesting, because it was never about money.

“Obviously, they’re owned by the Chinese, and China doesn’t want to lose it, so they’re putting pressure on their teams to ensure this doesn’t happen.”

The White House previously demurred on whether it would support congressional efforts to ban TikTok nationally, and the Biden administration has been in a holding pattern amid TikTok’s ongoing negotiations with CFIUS that seek to resolve the app’s security concerns.

The administration began to take a more assertive stance earlier in March, however, with national security adviser Jake Sullivan saying that President Joe Biden would welcome a bipartisan bill to ban the app and other foreign-owned companies from the United States.

“This legislation would empower the United States government to prevent certain foreign governments from exploiting technology services operating in the United States in a way that poses risks to Americans’ sensitive data and our national security,” Sullivan said.

But to Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.), a noted China hawk, the administration’s actions haven’t been enough.

“The Chinese Communist Party will never miss an opportunity to exploit the openness of America’s political and economic systems,” Rubio said in an email. “And the Biden Administration will never miss an opportunity to pull a punch against the Chinese Communist Party.”

“They already have the authority to prevent a Chinese-owned and -controlled TikTok from operating in the United States,” he said. “After two years in office, they have done nothing.”

TikTok officials didn’t respond by press time to a request by The Epoch Times for comment.

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