TikTok is on a rampage, expanding into music, online purchases, search engines, fulfillment centers, and warehouses to rival not only Instagram, Facebook, and Google, but eventually Spotify, Apple Music, and Amazon. TikTok, and the Chinese regime that controls it, would like to be America’s “everything app,” an idea that Elon Musk is thinking about, too.
Bad ideas come in pairs, and just as TikTok and Musk seek to control your phone and purchases, they also promote the increasing control of Beijing over Taiwan. The regime has a powerful influence over Musk and TikTok because they both have close business ties to China.
TikTok is owned by ByteDance, headquartered in Beijing. If Musk owned Twitter, that place of moderate free speech could converge with and eventually be eclipsed by TikTok through the same kind of pressure from Beijing that likely led to Musk’s kowtow on Taiwan.
We can expect new TikTok content and sales algorithms to serve sanitized media and products, with no “Free East Turkistan” music or “End the Genocide” T-shirts easily accessible. Spotify and Amazon could become a thing of the past, replaced by an algorithm that gives us Chinese Communist Party slogans and Xi Jinping “wisdom” every third song.
Spymasters shouldn’t be more naive than their bosses in the White House or 10 Downing Street.
Fleming appears to have painted all social media with the same lenient brush. But his boss, the British prime minister, was smarter in calling for an unequivocal “crackdown” on companies such as TikTok.
A private company in a market democracy using teen data and purchases is far less dangerous than a company ultimately controlled by a totalitarian and genocidal dictatorship that seeks global hegemony, including through the step of using social media as everything apps adopted en masse by guileless teenagers in the West.
If Beijing doesn’t allow Google and Twitter in China, we definitely shouldn’t allow TikTok in the United States. Lack of reciprocity is one of many reasons to ban the app.
Like Amazon, TikTok could eventually get into the physical delivery business to customer front doors, to compete with UPS, FedEx, and the venerable U.S. Postal Service itself.
Just imagine if current trends continue, and our Postal Service is displaced by a cheaper alternative from China. How far will unmitigated free traders push their self-destructive ideology before they realize not to rely on the enemy for strategic goods such as communications and basic delivery services?
Sadly, the Biden administration and some allies are asleep at the switch. They should be leading the way in removing all of China’s apps from U.S. devices, as India is in the process of doing. The kind of intellectual property and personal data theft that TikTok enables must end.
Instead of a tough defense of America’s social media and e-commerce, what we hear from Washington on the issue of the gradual takeover of America’s digital everything is close to crickets.