
TikTok is actively campaigning against a proposed ban by spending millions on marketing, including ads and PR initiatives. Lawmakers have received numerous calls from concerned citizens. Various opinions highlight concerns over potential censorship and the impact on journalism. Former Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin aims to buy TikTok without its algorithm, a move that faces skepticism. Lawmakers are debating changes to bills that could affect the crackdown on TikTok.
TikTok is only part of a much larger problem: the lack of an affirmative model of data governance that protects privacy and civil liberties, write @HarvardWCFIA’s Aaron Glasserman and @OpenSociety’s Monica Greco. https://t.co/unjGrxVL36
Some lawmakers backing a crackdown on TikTok worry that overly broad changes to a House bill by the Senate could significantly delay the effort or derail it permanently https://t.co/0UffTB66vG via @WSJ
Early Clues Emerge on Senate’s Plans for TikTok - WSJ https://t.co/aAL6y2CaaP


















