When it comes to protecting the personal information of American citizens, Warner agrees with the opinion of other federal officials.
Democrat Mark Warner from Virginia’s senate has said that Trump “was warranted” in his criticism of the Chinese company that owns the popular video-sharing app TikTok.
In an interview with Fox News Sunday’s Shannon Bream, Warner said that the app poses a “severe threat” to the privacy of American citizens. He also cautioned parents against letting their children use the software.
“On this point, Donald Trump and I agree. This suggests that there is a risk of damage from using TikTok.” Get Warner to relay a message to Bream. “If my child were using TikTok, it would cause me serious anxiety as a parent. Your child’s data, including inputs and outputs, is being sent to and stored in Beijing.”
Warner adds his voice to the rising number of US lawmakers and officials demanding that something be done about the TikTok video-sharing platform. FBI Director Christopher Wray said the software helps China become the world’s largest data thief, and FCC Commissioner Brendan Carr has also urged a ban in the United States.
When testifying before Congress last week, Wray asserted that China is the world’s most sophisticated cyber operation and is responsible for more thefts of sensitive American information than any other country. According to him, the Chinese government could potentially utilize TikTok to conduct influence operations and manage data collection on millions of users.
Wray’s comments come only a few weeks after US Attorney General William Carr called for a complete ban on TikTok. In Carr’s opinion, a separate American branch of the company from its Chinese parent would be impossible.
Axios reported at the time that he had said, “There is no universe in which you could come up with such protection on the data that you could have adequate confidence that it’s not making its way back into the hands of the [Chinese Communist Party].” To paraphrase, “there is no future for anything other than a prohibition.”
TikTok responded to Carr’s claims on FOX Business, saying the commissioner has no bearing on the company’s conversations with the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States (CFIUS). Due to the FCC’s lack of authority, critics like Carr have called on other federal agencies and Congress to regulate TikTok.
The corporation claims its clients’ information is secure, but representatives have testified under oath that it can be accessed from China.
A recent extensive study by BuzzFeed also indicates that this access is extensively utilized. Over eighty internal TikTok meetings were filmed and released to the public, proving that American personnel were prevented from seeing user data and instead relied on their Chinese counterparts.