In December 2019, Reuters reported on the fact that the Navy has banned TikTok from being installed on government-issued devices (Pell & Wang, 2019). While that article did not specify why, the bulletin stated the app, “represented a cybersecurity threat,” and Pentagon spokesman, Lieutenant Colonel Uriah Orland, stated the ban was part of, “an effort to ‘address existing and emerging threats’” (Pell & Wang, 2019). According to more recent articles, the consensus appears to be that banning the app from government-issued devices is due to concerns that Chinese-based, TikTok, is sending US data to the Chinese government. According to Business Insider, the White House has launched more than 100 iterations of anti-TikTok ads, on both Facebook and Instagram, since mid-July (Leskin, 2020). These advertisements state that TikTok is spying on users by, “monitoring what is on your phone’s clipboard,” urges viewers to support a nationwide ban of the app, and indicates it is of Chinese origin, due to the lower banner stating, “WARNING: China is spying on you” (Leskin, 2020). In addition, President Trump has stated that banning TikTok was just one way he is considering to, “punish China over the coronavirus” (Hamilton, 2020).
This is not the first time the US government has pinned blame on China over cybersecurity concerns. Secretary of State, Mike Pompeo, stated that if the UK allowed Chinese-based company, Huawei, to have any part in the country’s 5G networking, there would be repercussions (Wintour, 2020). “[The] US would never permit its national security information to go across networks in which it did not have confidence” (Wintour, 2020). In February 2020, Reuters reported that the Department of Justice (DOJ) officially indicted four Chinese army members over the 2017 Equifax data breach incident (Chiacu & Bartz, 2020). Finally, the US directly named China as the culprit behind recent cyberattacks, meant to steal or disrupt COVID-19 research and development. “China is seeking valuable intellectual property and public health data through illicit means related to vaccines, treatments and testing” (Sanger & Perlroth, 2020).