TikTok’s national security scrutiny tightens as U.S. Navy reportedly bans popular social app

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
TikTok may be the fastest-growing social network in the history of the internet, but it is also quickly becoming the fastest-growing
security threat and thorn in the side of U.S
China hawks. The latest, according to a notice published by the U.S
Navy this past week and reported on by Reuters and the South China Morning Post, is that TikTok will no longer be allowed to be installed on
service members& devices, or they may face expulsion from the military service intranet. It just the latest example of the challenges facing
the extremely popular app
Recently, Congress led by Missouri senator Josh Hawley demanded a national security review of TikTok and its Sequoia-backed parent company
ByteDance, along with other tech companies that may share data with foreign governments like China
Concerns over the leaking of confidential communications recently led the U.S
government to demand the unwinding of the acquisition of gay social network app Grindr from its Chinese owner Beijing Kunlun. The intensity
of criticism on both sides of the Pacific has made it increasingly challenging to manage tech companies across the divide
As I recently discussed here on TechCrunch, Shutterstock has actively made it harder and harder to find photos deemed controversial by the
Chinese government on its stock photography platform, a play to avoid losing a critical source of revenue. In wake of Shutterstock Chinese
censorship, American companies need to relearn American values We saw similar challenges with Google and its Project Dragonfly
China-focused search engine as well as with the NBA. From the NBA to Sequoia to TikTok and more, a week of national security concerns with
China What interesting here though is that companies on both sides are struggling with policy on both sides
Chinese companies like ByteDance are increasingly being targeted and stricken out of the U.S
market, while American companies have long struggled to get a foothold in the Middle Kingdom
That might be a more equal playing field than it has been in the past, but it is certainly a less free market than it could be. While the
trade fight between China and the U.S
continues, the damage will continue to fall on companies that fail to draw within the lines set by policymakers in both countries
Whether any tech company can bridge that divide in the future unfortunately remains to be seen.