TikTok: Technology Overview and Issues 
June 30, 2023 
TikTok is a globally popular video-sharing smartphone application (app) owned by ByteDance 
Ltd., a privately held company headquartered in Beijing, China. It is under increasing scrutiny by 
Patricia Moloney Figliola 
the U.S. government as a potential privacy and security risk to U.S. citizens. This is because 
Specialist in Internet and 
ByteDance, as with all technology companies doing business in China, is subject to Chinese laws 
Telecommunications 
that require companies operating in the country to turn over user data when asked by the Chinese 
Policy 
government. Researchers differ over how TikTok data collection compares with other social 
  
media apps and whether TikTok poses a threat to the privacy and security of its U.S. users. 
 
TikTok launched in the United States in August 2018. The app is available in about 150 countries 
in 75 languages and has approximately one billion monthly active users. In the United States, the app has approximately 150 
million monthly active users. TikTok’s appeal lies heavily in what has been called its “addictive” video feed, called the “For 
You” feed. The app builds this feed through a “recommendation engine” that uses artificial intelligence (AI) technologies and 
data mining practices. According to the company, the recommendation engine relies on a complex set of weighted factors to 
recommend content, including hashtags and videos watched previously, as well as the kind of user device. TikTok critics cite 
problems with how much data TikTok collects from and about its users and with how that data is stored—and could be 
shared. Some critics have also raised concerns about how TikTok promotes certain content to users and the potential to 
spread misinformation or propaganda.  
On August 6, 2020, then-President Trump signed an executive order aimed at stopping TikTok from doing business in the 
United States. If the order had gone into effect on September 27, 2020, as scheduled, it would have prohibited any U.S. 
company or person from “transacting” with ByteDance. On August 14, 2020, President Trump issued a second executive 
order stating that ByteDance must divest from all assets that support TikTok’s U.S. operations and destroy all previously 
collected U.S. user data. Divestiture may be accomplished by finding a U.S. buyer for TikTok. The requirements were 
designed to limit the Chinese government’s access to current and future data from U.S. TikTok users. ByteDance did not 
want to divest from TikTok and sued the Trump Administration. In 2021, President Biden rescinded both executive orders, 
but his Administration is still considering options to curtail TikTok’s ability to operate in the United States.  
On September 14, 2020, Oracle announced that it had reached an agreement with ByteDance to “serve as [the company’s] 
trusted technology provider” in the United States. It is unclear whether this deal would have satisfied the conditions in 
President Trump’s now-rescinded executive orders. Then-Secretary of the Treasury Steven Mnuchin said that the Committee 
on Foreign Investment in the United States (CFIUS) would review the proposal and present President Trump with its opinion. 
Negotiations between TikTok and CFIUS remain ongoing. 
During the 118th Congress, some Members have introduced various bills that would affect TikTok’s ability to continue 
operating in the United States. For example, Representative Michael McCaul introduced the Deterring America’s 
Technological Adversaries (DATA) Act (H.R. 1153) on February 24, 2023, which was reported favorably by the House 
Foreign Affairs Committee on May 16, 2023 (H.Rept. 118-63); Representative Kat Cammack introduced the Chinese-owned 
Applications Using the Information of Our Nation (CAUTION) Act of 2023 (H.R. 750) on February 2, 2023; Representative 
Ken Buck introduce the No TikTok on United States Devices Act (H.R. 503) on January 25, 2023; Senator Josh Hawley 
introduced the No TikTok on United States Devices Act (S. 85) on January 25, 2023; Representative Brian Babin introduced 
the Terminate TikTok on Campus Act of 2023 (H.R. 231) on January 10, 2023; and Representative Jack Bergman introduced 
the Protecting Personal Data from Foreign Adversaries Act (H.R. 57) on January 9, 2023. Additionally, the House Committee 
on Energy and Commerce held a hearing on TikTok on March 23, 2023, titled “TikTok: How Congress Can Safeguard 
American Data Privacy and Protect Children from Online Harms.”  
Some stakeholders believe TikTok and other Chinese-owned apps pose a serious security risk to the United States, because 
Chinese companies are subject to China’s laws that require compliance with Chinese government requests for data. Others 
believe that TikTok has fallen into “the crosshairs of a global technology battle” based on technology trade protectionism. 
Similar situations may arise in the future with other apps created by foreign companies. At least 15 countries have partially or 
completely banned the TikTok app. Options that Congress may consider include (1) developing an overarching legal and 
regulatory framework to protect the security and privacy of U.S. citizens’ data and communications, and (2) developing a 
uniform, transparent process to assess and mediate risks from foreign apps. 
Congressional Research Service 
 
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Contents 
Background ..................................................................................................................................... 1 
What Is TikTok? .............................................................................................................................. 1 
TikTok’s Recommendation Engine ........................................................................................... 2 
Data Collection, Storage, and Sharing by TikTok ..................................................................... 3 
Data Collection ................................................................................................................... 3 
Data Storage ........................................................................................................................ 4 
Data Sharing ....................................................................................................................... 4 
White House TikTok Executive Orders ........................................................................................... 5 
China’s Cybersecurity Law and Export Rules ................................................................................. 5 
Status of Potential Oracle Partnership with TikTok ........................................................................ 6 
Discussion ....................................................................................................................................... 7 
Threat to Security ...................................................................................................................... 7 
Technology Trade Protectionism ............................................................................................... 8 
Congressional Action in the 118th Congress .................................................................................... 9 
Legislation ................................................................................................................................. 9 
Hearing .................................................................................................................................... 10 
Conclusion ...................................................................................................................................... 11 
 
Tables 
Table 1. “For You” Feed Factors and Elements ............................................................................... 2 
  
Appendixes 
Appendix. Related Congressional Activity—117th Congress ........................................................ 12 
 
Contacts 
Author Information ........................................................................................................................ 14 
 
 
Congressional Research Service 
TikTok: Technology Overview and Issues 
 
Background 
TikTok is a popular video-sharing smartphone application (app) owned by ByteDance Ltd., a 
privately held company headquartered in Beijing, China. The app has been under intense U.S. 
government scrutiny for the past few years as a potential privacy and security risk to U.S. users. A 
major concern is that ByteDance is subject to Chinese laws that require companies operating in 
China to turn over user data when asked to by the Chinese national government. Researchers 
differ over how TikTok’s collection of user data compares with other social media apps and 
whether TikTok poses a unique threat to the privacy and security of its U.S. users, who include 
many minors. 
This report describes the underlying technology and programming of the TikTok app and 
recommendation engine, as well as how TikTok collects, stores, and shares user data. 
Additional information about restricting the use of TikTok, including the legal history, current 
legislative proposals, considerations for Congress, and a discussion of recent data privacy and 
national security concerns, can be found in the following CRS products: 
•  CRS Legal Sidebar LSB10940, Restricting TikTok (Part I): Legal History and 
Background, by Stephen P. Mulligan; 
•  CRS Legal Sidebar LSB10942, Restricting TikTok (Part II): Legislative 
Proposals and Considerations for Congress, by Stephen P. Mulligan and Valerie 
C. Brannon;  
•  CRS Insight IN12131, TikTok: Recent Data Privacy and National Security 
Concerns, by Kristen E. Busch; and 
•  CRS Legal Sidebar LSB10972, Montana’s TikTok Ban and Pending Legal 
Actions, by Sanchitha Jayaram and Madeline W. Donley. 
What Is TikTok? 
On August 2, 2018, U.S. users of the Musical.ly app, a short-video service headquartered in 
Shanghai, China, with a U.S. office in Santa Monica, CA, found that their accounts had been 
merged into TikTok. Musical.ly had been acquired by ByteDance, the owner of TikTok, in 
November 2017 for $1 billion as a means for ByteDance to enter the U.S. market. The TikTok 
app is available in about 150 countries in 75 languages, and has approximately one billion 
monthly active users.1 In the United States, TikTok has approximately 150 million monthly active 
users,2 and the company maintains offices in Los Angeles and New York. When ByteDance first 
released the TikTok app in September 2016, videos could be no longer than 15 seconds, but now 
users are allowed to create videos up to 10 minutes.3 ByteDance is currently estimated to be 
worth $220 billion.4  
 
1 Brendan Doyle, “TikTok Specifics,” Wallaroo.com, March 21, 2023, https://wallaroomedia.com/blog/social-media/
tiktok-statistics/. 
2 Ibid. 
3 Adam Birney, “What Is the Maximum Length for a TikTok Video? A Look at How TikTok’s Time Lengths Have 
Changed and Why,” January 18, 2023, https://www.androidauthority.com/how-long-are-tiktok-videos-3163309/. 
4 “For Top VCs, ByteDance’s Historic Windfall Remains A $220 Billion Mirage,” Forbes, May 4, 2023, 
https://www.forbes.com/sites/alexkonrad/2023/05/04/bytedance-scrutiny-leaves-midas-investors-waiting-billions/. 
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TikTok’s Recommendation Engine 
TikTok’s appeal relies on what has been called its “addictive” video feed, For You.5 For You is 
filled with endless curated content selected using TikTok’s recommendation algorithm. It is 
similar to Instagram’s Explore page and other recommendation-based app designs. However, 
while both apps consider the videos that a user has interacted with in the past, the accounts and 
hashtags they have followed, their location and language preferences, and the content the users 
themselves create, the apps have different methods to prioritize what users see when they open 
the app. On Instagram, the main feed contains content shared by the people that users follow; the 
Explore page is a secondary tab, and to see it, users must click away from their main feed. On 
TikTok, that is reversed: For You is populated with videos selected by TikTok’s algorithm, mostly 
from creators the user doesn’t know. 
The app builds this feed through a “recommendation engine” using artificial intelligence (AI) 
technologies and data mining practices. How each user’s feed is constructed had been a tightly 
held secret until June 2020, when TikTok published a blog post, “How TikTok Recommends 
Videos #ForYou.”6  
The company says its algorithm relies on a complex set of weighted factors to recommend 
content based on user preferences, including hashtags and videos watched; videos “liked,” shared, 
and commented on; as well as the kind of device a person is using. Each user’s feed is unique to 
the individual. Table 1 lists the specific factors used for recommendations, according to TikTok. 
Table 1. “For You” Feed Factors and Elements 
Factors 
Elements 
User interactions 
• 
Videos liked or shared 
• 
Accounts fol owed 
• 
Comments posted 
• 
Content created 
Video information/details 
• 
Captions 
• 
Sounds 
• 
Hashtags 
Device and account settings 
• 
Language preference 
• 
Country setting 
• 
Device type 
These factors are included to make sure the system is 
optimized for performance, but they receive lower 
weight in the recommendation system relative to other 
data points because users don’t actively express these 
as preferences. 
Source: “How TikTok Recommends Videos #ForYou,” TikTok Blog, June 18, 2020, at 
https://newsroom.tiktok.com/en-us/how-tiktok-recommends-videos-for-you. 
According to TikTok, 
 
5 John Hermann, “How TikTok Is Rewriting the World,” New York Times, March 10, 2019, https://www.nytimes.com/
2019/03/10/style/what-is-tik-tok.html. 
6 “How TikTok recommends videos #ForYou,” TikTok Blog, June 18, 2020, https://newsroom.tiktok.com/en-us/how-
tiktok-recommends-videos-for-you. 
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TikTok: Technology Overview and Issues 
 
[a]ll  these  factors  are  processed  by  our  recommendation  system  and  weighted  based  on 
their value to a user. A strong indicator of interest, such as whether a user finishes watching 
a longer video from beginning to end, would receive greater weight than a weak indicator, 
such as whether the video’s viewer and creator are both in the same country. Videos are 
then  ranked  to  determine  the  likelihood  of  a  user’s  interest  in  a  piece  of  content,  and 
delivered to each unique For You feed. 
The blog post was seen by stakeholders as an effort to provide more transparency to the public as 
the U.S. government was increasing its scrutiny of the company’s practices.7 
Data Collection, Storage, and Sharing by TikTok 
Critics, including some Members of Congress, cite as problematic the amount of data that TikTok 
collects from and about its users, how that data is stored, and how it could potentially be shared 
with the Chinese government and used in influence campaigns8 or against U.S. citizens.9 Because 
of these concerns, the federal government and more than half of U.S. states have banned the app 
on devices issued to certain government employees.10 Some private firms, such as Wells Fargo 
Inc., have banned or discouraged the use of the TikTok app.11 
Data Collection 
According to its privacy policy,12 TikTok collects a range of user information, including location 
data and internet address, keystroke patterns, and the type of device being used to access the app. 
The app also collects and stores a user’s browsing and search history within the app, as well as 
the content of any messages exchanged using the app. Additional information can be collected 
based on user permission: phone number, phone book, and social-network contacts; GPS data; 
user age; user-generated content (e.g., photos and videos); store payment information; and the 
videos “liked,” shared, watched all the way through, and re-watched.  
TikTok continues to state that the app does not collect more user data than other social media 
apps13 and online platforms, such as Facebook and Google (both of those companies track user 
activity across devices, while TikTok claims that it does not).14 According to some scholars, the 
data that TikTok collects from users appears to be comparable to what other social media 
 
7 Louise Matsakis, “TikTok Finally Explains How the ‘For You’ Algorithm Works,” Wired.com, June 18, 2020, 
https://www.wired.com/story/tiktok-finally-explains-for-you-algorithm-works/. 
8 Rebecca Jennings, “What’s Going on with TikTok, China, and the US Government?” Vox, December 16, 2019, 
https://www.vox.com/open-sourced/2019/12/16/21013048/tiktok-china-national-security-investigation. (Hereinafter, 
“What’s Going on with TikTok, China, and the US Government?”) 
9 Robert McMillan, Liza Lin, and Shan Li, “TikTok User Data: What Does the App Collect and Why Are U.S. 
Authorities Concerned?” Wall Street Journal, July 7, 2020, https://www.wsj.com/articles/tiktok-user-data-what-does-
the-app-collect-and-why-are-u-s-authorities-concerned-11594157084. (Hereinafter, “TikTok User Data: What Does the 
App Collect and Why Are U.S. Authorities Concerned?”) 
10 Catherine Thorbecke and Brian Fung, “TikTok Ban Explained: What You Need to Know About the US Government 
Threat to Ban the App,” CNN Business, March 23, 2023, https://www.cnn.com/2023/03/18/tech/tiktok-ban-explainer/
index.html. 
11 Shelly Banjo, Kartikay Mehrotra, and William Turton, “TikTok’s Huge Data Harvesting Prompts U.S. Security 
Concerns,” Bloomberg.com, July 14, 2020, https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2020-07-14/tiktok-s-massive-
data-harvesting-prompts-u-s-security-concerns. (Hereinafter, “TikTok’s Huge Data Harvesting Prompts U.S. Security 
Concerns.”) 
12 The privacy policy is available online at https://www.tiktok.com/legal/privacy-policy?lang=en. 
13 Brian Fung, “TikTok Collects a Lot of Data. But That’s Not the Main Reason Officials Say It’s a Security Risk,” 
CNN.com, March 24, 2023, https://www.cnn.com/2023/03/24/tech/tiktok-ban-national-security-hearing/index.html. 
14 “TikTok User Data: What Does the App Collect and Why Are U.S. Authorities Concerned?” 
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TikTok: Technology Overview and Issues 
 
companies gather and use.15 However, some critics have described TikTok’s approach to data 
mining as aggressive16 and argued that its ability to track user behavior while using the app, as 
well as its access to a user’s photos, videos, and phone book and geolocation tracking (based on 
user permissions), means that it can build extremely detailed behavioral profiles of its users that 
could potentially be shared with the Chinese government.17 On February 14, 2022, TheWrap 
reported: 
TikTok  can  circumvent  security  protections  on  Apple  and  Google  app  stores  and  uses 
device tracking that gives TikTok’s Beijing-based parent company ByteDance full access 
to user data, according to the summaries of two major studies obtained by TheWrap that 
appear to confirm longstanding concerns raised by privacy experts about the popular video-
sharing app.18 
Data Storage 
TikTok claims to store all content created by U.S. users—as well as data about those users—only 
on servers located within the United States and in Singapore. Those servers are owned or 
controlled by TikTok, but the company denies that it shares or would share this data with the 
Chinese government,19 stating: 
The  key  personnel  responsible  for  TikTok  …  are  all  Americans  based  in  the  United 
States—and therefore are not subject to Chinese law. U.S. content moderation is likewise 
led by a U.S.-based team and operates independently from China, and, as noted above, the 
TikTok  application  stores  U.S.  user  data  on  servers  located  in  the  United  States  and 
Singapore.20 
Data Sharing 
TikTok has asserted that all user data is stored in servers located within the United States and 
Singapore; however, in testimony to the House Committee on Energy and Commerce on March 
23, 2023, TikTok’s Chief Executive Officer, Shou Zi Chew, stated that ByteDance may still have 
 
15 Sherrod DeGrippo, “Understanding the Information TikTok Gathers and Stores,” Proofpoint, January 8, 2020, 
https://www.proofpoint.com/us/blog/threat-protection/understanding-information-tiktok-gathers-and-stores. 
16 Ryan Broderick, “Forget the Trade War. TikTok Is China’s Most Important Export Right Now,” BuzzFeed News, 
May 16, 2019, https://www.buzzfeednews.com/article/ryanhatesthis/forget-the-trade-war-tiktok-is-chinas-most-
important-export. 
17 “TikTok’s Huge Data Harvesting Prompts U.S. Security Concerns.” 
18 Antoinette Siu, “TikTok Can Circumvent Apple and Google Privacy Protections and Access Full User Data, 2 
Studies Say (Exclusive),” TheWrap, February 14, 2023, https://www.thewrap.com/tiktok-circumvent-privacy-
protections-user-data/. The studies, conducted by unidentified “white hat” cybersecurity experts that hack for the public 
good, were completed in November 2020 and January 2021. 
Kevin Poulsen and Robert McMillan, “TikTok Tracked User Data Using Tactic Banned by Google,” Wall Street 
Journal, August 11, 2020, sec. Tech, https://www.wsj.com/articles/tiktok-tracked-user-data-using-tactic-banned-by-
google-11597176738. 
19 “TikTok User Data: What Does the App Collect and Why Are U.S. Authorities Concerned?” 
20 “Why We Are Suing the Administration,” TikTok Blog, August 24, 2020, https://newsroom.tiktok.com/en-us/tiktok-
files-lawsuit. 
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TikTok: Technology Overview and Issues 
 
access to U.S. data. Further, a lawsuit filed in federal court21 in December 2019 asserted that user 
data was harvested and sent to servers in China.22 
White House TikTok Executive Orders 
Then-President Trump issued two executive orders affecting the future of TikTok in the United 
States, one on August 6, 2020 (E.O. 13942),23 and another on August 14, 2020 (no number 
assigned).24 In 2021, the Biden Administration rescinded E.O 13942;25 it has chosen thus far not 
to enforce the order of August 14, 2021. For details on the two executive orders and legal 
challenges, see CRS Legal Sidebar LSB10940, Restricting TikTok (Part I): Legal History and 
Background, by Stephen P. Mulligan, and CRS Legal Sidebar LSB10942, Restricting TikTok 
(Part II): Legislative Proposals and Considerations for Congress, by Stephen P. Mulligan and 
Valerie C. Brannon.  
China’s Cybersecurity Law and Export Rules 
The Cybersecurity Law of the People’s Republic of China was passed in November 2016 and 
went into effect in June 2017. It was updated in November 2018 by the Regulations on Internet 
Security Supervision and Inspection by Public Security Organs, and again in September 2022.26 
The law 
•  strictly controls online activities;  
•  mandates the local storage of user data and the registration of certain network 
assets; and 
•  allows the government to conduct onsite and remote inspection of computer 
networks.27 
The law requires Chinese companies to cooperate with government intelligence operations if so 
requested28 and may allow the Chinese government access to user data collected by any company 
doing business in China. One analyst notes that “by demanding access to any data collected and 
 
21 This case was transferred to an Illinois district court as part of a multi-district litigation proceeding, In Re: TikTok, 
Inc., Consumer Privacy Litigation, MDL-No.-2948 (N.D. Illinois). See also, “Court Approval of Multimillion Dollar 
TikTok Privacy Settlement,” National Law Review, March 8, 2021, https://www.natlawreview.com/article/tik-tok-tik-
tok-time-running-out-preliminary-court-approval-multimillion-dollar. 
22 “Tiktok Sent US User Data to China, Lawsuit Claims,” BBC.com, December 3, 2019, https://www.bbc.com/news/
business-50640110. 
23 United States, Executive Office of the President, “Addressing the Threat Posed by TikTok, and Taking Additional 
Steps to Address the National Emergency with Respect to the Information and Communications Technology and 
Services Supply Chain,” 85 Federal Register 48637 (August 11, 2020), https://www.federalregister.gov/executive-
order/13942. 
24 United States, Executive Office of the President, “Regarding the Acquisition of Musical.ly by ByteDance, Ltd,” 85 
FR 51297 (August 14, 2020), https://home.treasury.gov/system/files/136/EO-on-TikTok-8-14-20.pdf. 
25 E.O. 14034. United States, Executive Office of the President, “Protecting Americans’ Sensitive Data from Foreign 
Adversaries,” 86 Federal Register 31423 (June 9, 2021), https://www.federalregister.gov/documents/2021/06/11/2021-
12506/protecting-americans-sensitive-data-from-foreign-adversaries. 
26 Arendse Huld, “China Solicits Opinions on Amendment to Cybersecurity Law,” China Briefing, September 20, 
2022, https://www.china-briefing.com/news/china-cybersecurity-law-cac-solicits-opinions-on-amendment/. 
27 Computer networks are generally defined in the Cybersecurity Law as five or more computers connected to the 
internet, a definition that applies to almost every foreign company operating in China. 
28 “What’s Going on with TikTok, China, and the US Government?” 
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TikTok: Technology Overview and Issues 
 
stored in China, the updated regulations force [domestic and] foreign companies based in China 
to comply with its investigative measures, leaving intellectual property and private information 
vulnerable to government abuse.”29 
On August 31, 2020, China took specific action that could prohibit the sale of TikTok’s 
underlying technology and processes. The new export regulations cover such technologies as 
“text analysis, content recommendation, speech modeling, and voice recognition.”30 Since the 
recommendation engine is considered one of the key elements of TikTok’s success, a ban on 
transferring the technology and processes used to create it could make it more difficult to sell the 
app or prevent a sale altogether.31  
Status of Potential Oracle Partnership with TikTok 
On September 14, 2020, Oracle announced that it had reached an agreement with ByteDance to 
“serve as [the company’s] trusted technology provider” in the United States. From the 
terminology used in the proposal, it appeared that the deal involved a partnership rather than a 
sale, with TikTok using Oracle’s cloud hosting services.32 This arrangement would keep the 
source code of the For You feed and algorithmic recommendation engine in the hands of 
ByteDance. As of June 2023, the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States 
(CFIUS)—which was charged with reviewing the national security implications of the 
agreement—had not reached a decision regarding TikTok’s possible forced divestiture or other 
requirements. 
On September 19, 2020, Oracle announced that Walmart would join its bid for TikTok, with the 
two companies acquiring 20% of a newly formed company, TikTok Global,33 and the remaining 
80% owned by ByteDance. According to announcements made by the companies, 40% of 
ByteDance is owned by U.S. investors, so that the new company would be under majority U.S. 
ownership.34 However, this arrangement, along with TikTok keeping the For You 
recommendation engine algorithm,35 would not appear to satisfy the conditions of E.O. 13942. 
On September 23, 2020, TikTok filed for, and was granted, an injunction in federal court to stop 
the ban on the app that was set to take effect on September 27, 2020. TikTok was granted an 
extension until November 27, 2020, to persuade the U.S. government to approve the deal with 
 
29 Lauren Maranto, “Who Benefits from China’s Cybersecurity Laws?” Center for Strategic and International Studies, 
June 25, 2020, https://www.csis.org/blogs/new-perspectives-asia/who-benefits-chinas-cybersecurity-laws. 
30 Timothy B. Lee, “China Announces New Export Rules That Could Prevent Sale of Tiktok,” ArsTechnica.com, 
August 31, 2020, https://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2020/08/china-announces-new-export-rules-that-could-prevent-
sale-of-tiktok/. (Hereinafter, “China Announces New Export Rules That Could Prevent Sale of Tiktok.”) 
31 “China Announces New Export Rules That Could Prevent Sale of Tiktok.” 
32 Larry Dignan, “With TikTok, Oracle Hopes Its Cloud Infrastructure Business Goes Viral,” ZDNet.com, September 
21, 2020, https://www.zdnet.com/article/with-tiktok-oracle-hopes-its-cloud-infrastructure-business-goes-viral/. 
33 “Walmart Statement About Potential Investment in and Commercial Agreements with TikTok Global,” Walmart, 
September 19, 2020, https://corporate.walmart.com/newsroom/2020/09/19/walmart-statement-about-potential-
investment-in-and-commercial-agreements-with-tiktok-global. 
34 Jordan Novet, Spencer Kimball, and Alex Sherman, “Trump Agrees to Tiktok Deal with Oracle and Walmart, 
Allowing App’s U.S. Operations to Continue,” September 22, 2020, CNBC.com, https://www.cnbc.com/2020/09/19/
trump-says-he-has-approved-tiktok-oracle-deal-in-concept.html. 
35 Isobel Asher Hamilton, “TikTok’s Deal with Oracle and Walmart Lets It Cling on to Its Most Valuable Asset—Its 
Algorithm,” BusinessInsider.com, September 21, 2020, https://www.businessinsider.com/tiktok-deal-lets-it-hold-onto-
algorithm-2020-9. 
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TikTok: Technology Overview and Issues 
 
Oracle and Walmart. The extension date passed, but the Biden Administration did not enforce the 
ban that had been set to take effect. 
Due to the ongoing CFIUS examination, as well as legislative and executive efforts to ban the app 
in the United States, in March 2023, TikTok was reported to be reconsidering a partnership with 
Oracle and Walmart.36 
Discussion 
Some believe TikTok and other apps developed and owned by Chinese companies pose a serious 
security risk to the United States because Chinese companies are governed by China’s 
Cybersecurity Law. Others believe that TikTok is caught up in increasing trade tensions between 
China and the United States.37 
Threat to Security 
Although TikTok forcefully states that it does not share U.S. user data with the Chinese 
government, many security and privacy advocates are skeptical. TikTok did admit that employees 
in China had accessed the data of a few U.S. journalists in 2022. That incident is being 
investigated by Justice Department.38 
Other countries have acted against TikTok on the grounds of security. India banned TikTok and 
50 other Chinese apps in June 2020, calling them a “threat to sovereignty and integrity.”39 Also in 
June 2020, the European Union opened an investigation into TikTok to examine possible 
violations of its General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR).40 Australia had threatened to ban 
the app, but on August 4, 2020, the country’s Prime Minister indicated that TikTok would not be 
banned;41 however, in March 2023, 68 federal agencies in that country banned the app on work-
related phones. At least 15 other countries have partially or completely banned the app in 2022 
and 2023.42 
 
36 Dan Berthiaume, “Report: TikTok may be considering Walmart/Oracle deal again,” Chain Store Age, March 17, 
2023, https://chainstoreage.com/report-tiktok-may-be-considering-walmartoracle-deal-again. 
37 Kent Calder, “Opening Japan,” Foreign Policy, vol. 47 (Summer 1982), pp. 82-97, http://www.jstor.com/stable/
1148443. (Hereinafter, “Opening Japan.”) 
38 Clare Duffy, “TikTok Confirms That Journalists’ Data Was Accessed by Employees of Its Parent Company,” CNN, 
December 22, 2022, https://www.cnn.com/2022/12/22/tech/tiktok-bytedance-journalist-data/index.html. 
39 Kari Paul, “Should You Delete Tiktok? Here’s What Experts Say About the App Trump Wants to Ban,” The 
Guardian, July 16, 2020, https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2020/jul/16/tiktok-video-sharing-app-should-you-
delete-it. 
40 Stephanie Bodoni, “TikTok Faces Scrutiny from Eu Watchdogs over Data Practices,” Bloomberg.com, June 10, 2020 
(updated June 11, 2020), at https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2020-06-10/tiktok-faces-scrutiny-from-eu-
watchdogs-over-privacy-practices. For more information on the GDPR, see CRS In Focus IF10896, EU Data 
Protection Rules and U.S. Implications, by Rachel F. Fefer and Kristin Archick. 
41 Stephen Dziedzic, “TikTok Ban ‘Not Necessary’ but Prime Minister Scott Morrison Urges Caution over App’s 
China Connection,” Australian Broadcasting Corporation News, August 4, 2020, https://www.abc.net.au/news/2020-
08-05/prime-minister-scott-morrison-says-government-wont-ban-tiktok/12526246. 
42 Daniel Ruby, “How Many Countries Have Banned TikTok (2023 Data),” DemandSage.com, May 4, 2023, 
https://www.demandsage.com/tiktok-banned-countries. 
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Technology Trade Protectionism 
Other observers argue that TikTok is caught in “the crosshairs of a global technology battle,”43 
and that a unilateral U.S. ban on any app may be comparable to China’s “Great Firewall.”44 One 
way to potentially understand U.S. and Chinese government actions in this dispute may be 
through the concept of techno-nationalism,45 which refers to a country’s refusal or reluctance to 
import other countries’ advanced technology, as well as to export, or to allow other nations to 
benefit from, its own advanced technology. Within this framework, technology is considered a 
central pillar of a country’s wellbeing: 
Techno-nationalism … links technological innovation and capabilities directly to a nation’s 
national  security,  economic  prosperity,  and  social  stability.…  [It]  seeks  to  attain 
competitive advantage for its stakeholders, both locally and globally, and leverage these 
advantages for geopolitical gain.46 
One policy mechanism that nations use to protect what they view as important or sensitive 
technologies is export controls, rules that limit to which foreign entities and under what 
circumstances or conditions specific technologies may be sold or licensed.47 For example, in 
August 2020, the Bureau of Industry and Security at the Department of Commerce announced 
sanctions that restrict foreign semiconductor companies from selling chips developed or produced 
using U.S. software or technology to Huawei, another Chinese company, without first obtaining a 
license to do so.48 This restriction has been called a “lethal blow”49 to the company.  
Another mechanism is the use of protectionist practices that privilege domestic entities’ access to 
domestic markets. For example, China requires U.S. telecommunications companies to enter a 
partnership with a Chinese company to provide services in that country. In June 2020, the Senate 
Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Permanent Subcommittee on 
Investigations issued a report, “Threats to US Networks: Oversight of Chinese Government 
Owned Carriers.” The report notes that while China has access to the U.S. telecommunications 
market, U.S. companies do not have that same level of access in China:  
China does not provide US telecommunications companies reciprocal access to the Chinese 
market and requires foreign carriers seeking to operate in China to enter into joint ventures 
 
43 “Is It Time to Delete Tiktok? A Guide to the Rumors and the Real Privacy Risks.” 
44 Kevin Roose, “Don’t Ban TikTok. Make an Example of It.” New York Times, July 26, 2020, 
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/07/26/technology/tiktok-china-ban-model.html. The “Great Firewall” has been 
described as “a system of surveillance and blocking technology that prevents Chinese citizens from viewing websites 
outside the country.” Danny O’Brien, “China’s Global Reach: Surveillance and Censorship Beyond the Great 
Firewall,” Electronic Frontier Foundation, October 10, 2019, https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2019/10/chinas-global-
reach-surveillance-and-censorship-beyond-great-firewall. 
45 “Opening Japan.” 
46 Alex Capri, “Techno-Nationalism: What Is It and How Will It Change Global Commerce?” Forbes.com, December 
20, 2019, https://www.forbes.com/sites/alexcapri/2019/12/20/techno-nationalism-what-is-it-and-how-will-it-change-
global-commerce/#f8e22c0710f7. 
47 For more information on U.S. export controls and China, see CRS In Focus IF11627, U.S. Export Controls and 
China, by Karen M. Sutter and Christopher A. Casey. For more general information on U.S. export controls, see CRS 
Report R41916, The U.S. Export Control System and the Export Control Reform Initiative, by Ian F. Fergusson and 
Paul K. Kerr. 
48 “Commerce Department Further Restricts Huawei Access to U.S. Technology and Adds Another 38 Affiliates to the 
Entity List,” U.S. Department of Commerce, August 17, 2020, https://www.commerce.gov/news/press-releases/2020/
08/commerce-department-further-restricts-huawei-access-us-technology-and. 
49 Sherisse Pham, “New Sanctions Deal ‘Lethal Blow’ to Huawei. China Decries US Bullying,” CNN.com, August 18, 
2020, https://www.cnn.com/2020/08/17/tech/huawei-us-sanctions-hnk-intl/index.html. 
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with Chinese companies. These joint ventures often require U.S. companies to give their 
technology, proprietary know-how, and intellectual property to their Chinese partners.  
Since China was allowed to join the World Trade Organization in 2001, the report notes that “not 
a single foreign firm has succeeded in establishing a new joint venture” to provide basic 
telecommunications services in China. 
Congressional Action in the 118th Congress 
Controversy followed TikTok from the 117th Congress into the 118th Congress. Some Members 
have introduced various bills that would affect TikTok’s ability to continue operating in the 
United States, and the House Committee on Energy and Commerce has held a hearing on TikTok. 
Legislation 
Representative Michael McCaul introduced the Deterring America’s Technological 
Adversaries (DATA) Act (H.R. 1153, H.Rept. 118-63) on February 24, 2023. Among other 
provisions, the bill would require federal actions to protect the sensitive personal data of U.S. 
persons, with a particular focus on prohibiting the transfer of such data to foreign persons 
influenced by China. It would also require the Department of the Treasury to issue a directive 
prohibiting U.S. persons from engaging in any transaction with any person who knowingly 
provides or may transfer sensitive personal data subject to U.S. jurisdiction to any foreign person 
subject to Chinese influence. The bill was reported by the Committee on Foreign Affairs on May 
16, 2023, and placed on the Union Calendar, Calendar No. 43, the same day. 
Representative Kat Cammack introduced the Chinese-owned Applications Using the 
Information of Our Nation (CAUTION) Act of 2023 (H.R. 750) on February 2, 2023. The bill 
would require any person who sells or distributes the social media application TikTok (or any 
service developed or provided by ByteDance Ltd.) to disclose, prior to download, that the use of 
the application is prohibited on government-owned devices. The bill was ordered to be reported, 
amended, on March 9, 2023, by the House Committee on Energy and Commerce. 
Representative Ken Buck introduced the No TikTok on United States Devices Act (H.R. 503) on 
January 25, 2023. Among other provisions, the bill would impose sanctions on the parent 
company of the TikTok social media service, ByteDance Ltd., as long as it is involved with 
TikTok. Specifically, the President would be required to impose property-blocking sanctions on 
ByteDance or any successor entity or subsidiary if it is involved in matters relating to (1) TikTok 
or any successor service; or (2) information, video, or data associated with such a service. 
Additionally, the bill would require the Office of the Director of National Intelligence (ODNI) to 
report to Congress on any national security threats posed by TikTok, including the ability of 
China’s government to access or use the data of U.S. users of TikTok. Within 180 days of the 
bill’s enactment, ODNI would be required to brief Congress on the implementation of the bill. On 
February 27, 2023, the bill was referred to the Subcommittee on the National Intelligence 
Enterprise. 
Senator Josh Hawley introduced the No TikTok on United States Devices Act (S. 85) on January 
25, 2023. The bill is substantially similar to H.R. 503. On January 25, 2023, the bill was referred 
to the Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs.  
Representative Brian Babin introduced the Terminate TikTok on Campus Act of 2023 (H.R. 
231) on January 10, 2023. The bill would prohibit federal funds from being provided to an 
institution of higher education unless the institution has banned use of TikTok on electronic 
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TikTok: Technology Overview and Issues 
 
devices. The bill was referred to the House Committee on Education and the Workforce the same 
day it was introduced.  
Representative Jack Bergman introduced the Protecting Personal Data from Foreign 
Adversaries Act (H.R. 57) on January 9, 2023. Among other provisions, the bill would authorize 
sanctions and other prohibitions relating to software that engages in user data theft on behalf of 
certain foreign countries or entities, and allow the President to regulate or prohibit transactions 
using software that engages in the theft or unauthorized transmission of user data and provides 
access to such data to a communist country, the Chinese Communist Party, a foreign adversary, or 
a state sponsor of terrorism. Additionally, the bill would allow the President to impose visa- and 
property-blocking sanctions on developers and owners of software that makes unauthorized 
transmissions of user data to servers located in China that are accessible by China’s government 
or the Chinese Communist Party. It would also require the Department of State to determine and 
report to Congress whether WeChat or TikTok fall within certain regulations and prohibitions. 
Other bills introduced in the 118th Congress would likely impact TikTok without explicitly 
naming the company. For example, the RESTRICT Act (S. 686) would create new authorities for 
the Secretary of Commerce to review and prohibit certain information and communications 
technology (ICT)-related transactions with foreign entities. These authorities could impact 
foreign entities such as TikTok. On January 9, 2023, the bill was referred to the Committee on 
Foreign Affairs and the Committee on the Judiciary for consideration of such provisions that fall 
within the jurisdiction of those committees. 
Hearing 
On March 23, 2023, the House Committee on Energy and Commerce held a full committee 
hearing, “TikTok: How Congress Can Safeguard American Data Privacy and Protect Children 
from Online Harms.” During that hearing, Members questioned the TikTok Chief Executive 
Officer (CEO) Shou Zi Chew for approximately five hours about the safety and security of the 
app, including his company’s relationship with China, possible teen addiction to the app, and 
misinformation being spread on the app. In particular, some Members expressed concern that 
TikTok’s parent company, ByteDance, might be sharing U.S. users’ data with the Chinese 
government.50 
After the hearing, a TikTok spokesperson, Brooke Oberwetter, stated that the day had been 
“dominated by political grandstanding” that didn’t acknowledge TikTok’s current attempts to 
address the issues raised by the lawmakers. Oberwetter also noted:  
not  mentioned  today  by  members  of  the  committee:  the  livelihoods  of  the  5  million 
businesses on TikTok or the First Amendment implications of banning a platform loved by 
150 million Americans.51 
The hearing does not appear to have settled the underlying dispute between the U.S. government 
and TikTok. There is no publicly available evidence that the Chinese government has accessed the 
information of U.S. users, but national security experts say it is a possibility. TikTok says that the 
Chinese government has never been shown to have influenced the app’s recommendation 
algorithm, though experts say it is hypothetically possible.52 TikTok has admitted that company 
 
50 Dara Kerr, “Lawmakers Grilled TikTok CEO Chew for 5 Hours in a High-Stakes Hearing About the App,” NPR, 
March 23, 2023, https://www.npr.org/2023/03/23/1165579717/tiktok-congress-hearing-shou-zi-chew-project-texas. 
51 Ibid. 
52 Ibid. 
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TikTok: Technology Overview and Issues 
 
employees in China accessed the data of a few U.S. journalists, an incident that is being 
investigated by Justice Department.53 
Conclusion 
The variety of apps available to U.S. users is enormous. Situations similar to the case of TikTok 
may arise in the future with other apps created by foreign companies. Congress may wish to 
consider various options to address such situations, including: (1) developing an overarching 
legal and regulatory framework to protect the security and privacy of U.S. citizens’ data and 
communications, and (2) establishing a uniform, transparent process to assess the risks posed by 
foreign apps and establish mechanisms to mediate those risks. 
 
53 Clare Duffy, “TikTok Confirms That Journalists’ Data Was Accessed by Employees of Its Parent Company,” CNN, 
December 22, 2022, https://www.cnn.com/2022/12/22/tech/tiktok-bytedance-journalist-data/index.html. 
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Appendix. Related Congressional Activity—117th 
Congress 
During the 117th Congress, 10 bills were introduced that would have affected the operation of 
TikTok in the United States; one became law. Four hearings were held that focused on TikTok’s 
operation in the United States. 
Laws 
One TikTok-related bill became law in the 117th Congress. 
•  H.R. 2617 (P.L. 117-328), Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2023 
Introduced by Gerald E. Connolly on April 16, 2021, and became law on 
December 29, 2022. 
The law, which adopted the provisions of S. 1143, prohibits the installation and 
use of the TikTok app on devices owned by the federal government. 
Legislation 
Ten TikTok-related bills that did not become law were introduced in the 117th Congress. 
•  H.R. 8772, Block the Tok Act 
Introduced by Representative Dusty Johnson and referred to the House 
Committee on Energy and Commerce Subcommittee on Consumer Protection 
and Commerce on September 6, 2022. 
This bill would have prohibited TikTok from accessing user data of U.S. citizens 
from within China and required the Federal Trade Commission to investigate 
whether TikTok engaged in unfair or deceptive practices. The bill also would 
have prohibited the download or use of TikTok at U.S. military installations, at 
certain federal agencies, and on federal government devices. 
•  H.R. 6837, No TikTok on Department of Homeland Security Devices Act 
Introduced by Representative Michael Guest and referred to the House 
Committee on Homeland Security Subcommittee on Oversight, Management, 
and Accountability on February 25, 2022. 
This bill would have prohibited Department of Homeland Security (DHS) 
employees and contractors from using TikTok on DHS computers or other 
information technology equipment. It also would have required DHS to remove 
the application from DHS equipment. The bill included exceptions for law 
enforcement activities, national security interests and activities, and security 
researchers. 
•  H.R. 4793, Protecting Personal Data from Foreign Adversaries Act 
Introduced by Representative Jack Bergman on July 29, 2021, and referred to the 
House Committee on the Judiciary Subcommittee Immigration and Citizenship 
and Subcommittee on Courts, Intellectual Property, and the Internet on 
November 1, 2022. 
This bill would have authorized sanctions and other prohibitions relating to 
software that engage in user data theft on behalf of certain foreign countries or 
entities. It also would have allowed the President to regulate or prohibit 
transactions using software that engages in the theft or unauthorized transmission 
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TikTok: Technology Overview and Issues 
 
of user data and provides access to such data to (1) a communist country, (2) the 
Chinese Communist Party, (3) a foreign adversary, or (4) a state sponsor of 
terrorism. 
•  H.R. 4521, United States Innovation and Competition Act of 2021 
Introduced by Representative Eddie Bernice Johnson on July 29, 2021, and 
reported (amended) by the Committee on Science, Space, and Technology; 
passed/agreed to in the Senate on March 28, 2022.  
The bill would have required, with certain exceptions, that executive agencies 
requiring the remove TikTok and similar apps from their information technology. 
•  H.R. 3057, ACES Act of 2021 
Introduced by Representative Lisa C. McClain on May 7, 2021, and referred to 
the House Committee Energy and Commerce Subcommittee on Consumer 
Protection and Commerce on May 10, 2021. 
This bill would have required certain actions related to ByteDance Ltd., the 
Chinese parent company of TikTok, including requiring ByteDance to divest 
itself of assets or property used to enable or support ByteDance’s operation of 
TikTok in the United States. 
•  S. 1260, United States Innovation and Competition Act of 2021 
Introduced by Representative Charles E. Schumer on April 20, 2021, and passed 
the Senate on June 8, 2021. 
The bill would have required, with certain exceptions, that executive agencies 
remove TikTok and similar apps from their information technology. 
•  H.R. 2566, No TikTok on Government Devices Act 
Introduced by Representative Ken Buck and referred to the House Committee on 
Oversight and Reform on April 15, 2021. 
This bill would have required, with certain exceptions, that TikTok be removed 
from the information technology of federal agencies. 
•  S. 1143, No TikTok on Government Devices Act 
Introduced by Representative Josh Hawley on April 15, 2021, and received and 
held at the desk in the House on December 15, 2022.  
This bill was included as section 102 of Division R of the Consolidated 
Appropriations Act, 2023 (P.L. 117-328) and requires TikTok to be removed from 
the information technology of federal agencies. 
•  S. 47, APP Act 
Introduced by Representative Marco Rubio and referred to the Senate Committee 
on Commerce, Science, and Transportation on January 26, 2021. 
This bill would have established requirements for owners and operators of certain 
software (e.g., TikTok) from specified countries who make their software 
available to consumers in the United States. For example, before making such 
software available for download, the software would have been required to 
provide users with a warning to include the name of the owner and the owner’s 
country of principal operation. 
Hearings 
Three hearings were held in the Senate and one joint hearing was held that focused on issues 
related to TikTok.  
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TikTok: Technology Overview and Issues 
 
•  U.S.-China Relations: Improving U.S. Competitiveness Through Trade (S. Hrg. 
117-351)54 
Senate Committee on Finance 
April 22, 2021. 
•  Congressional-Executive Commission on China (Annual Report 2022)55 
Joint Hearing 
November 3, 2022. 
•  Emerging Technologies and Their Impact on National Security (S. Hrg. 117-
148)56 
Senate Committee on Armed Services 
February 23, 2021. 
•  Nominations of the 117th Congress, Second Session, Part II (S. Hrg. 117-642)57  
Senate Committee on Foreign Relations 
June 23, 2022, through November 30, 2022. 
 
 
 
Author Information 
 
Patricia Moloney Figliola 
   
Specialist in Internet and Telecommunications 
Policy 
    
 
Acknowledgments 
This report includes contributions from Kristen Busch, Analyst in Science and Technology Policy.
 
54 Information on this hearing can be found at https://www.govinfo.gov/app/details/CHRG-117shrg48401/CHRG-
117shrg48401/context. 
55 Information on this hearing can be found at https://www.govinfo.gov/app/details/CHRG-117jhrg47949/CHRG-
117jhrg47949/context. 
56 Information on this hearing can be found at https://www.govinfo.gov/app/details/CHRG-117shrg46695/CHRG-
117shrg46695/context. 
57 Information on this hearing can be found at https://www.govinfo.gov/app/details/CHRG-117shrg51737/CHRG-
117shrg51737/context. 
Congressional Research Service 
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TikTok: Technology Overview and Issues 
 
 
 
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Congressional Research Service  
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