The challenges facing TikTok as it confronts the US in court

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TikTok made good on its promise to challenge a new law signed by President Joe Biden that could result in a ban of the video app in the US.

The company, a subsidiary of Chinese tech giant ByteDance, asked Tuesday for an injunction to block the US government from enforcing the law, calling it "unconstitutional" on First Amendment and other grounds.

The new suit from TikTok alleges that the US law compromises the company's right to protected speech. It also claims the law infringes on the speech rights of its users.

But the social media giant could find that it is on less-than-solid legal ground, some experts said. The main reason: Its ownership by a Chinese company, ByteDance.

"As a general matter, foreign companies don't have constitutional rights," said Jamil Jaffer, director of the Antonin Scalia Law School at George Mason University’s National Security Institute.

Yet Wilson Freeman, an attorney for Pacific Legal Foundation, said his initial reaction to TikTok's complaint was that it's a challenge the government must take "very seriously."

"I’m not surprised they led with the First Amendment claim, as it seems like the strongest of the four claims by far," Freeman said.

"You can never predict with litigation, but I would not be at all surprised for TikTok to win on that claim."

The TikTok building in Culver City, Calif. (AP Photo/Damian Dovarganes, File) · (ASSOCIATED PRESS)

One potential problem with TikTok's First Amendment strategy is that a court could shoot down the idea that content on the platform qualifies as TikTok’s or ByteDance’s own speech.

If a court did validate a First Amendment claim, the company would then have to get over yet another hurdle: proving the new law is intended to influence the viewpoints expressed by TikTok — and not its stated purpose of protecting national security and user privacy.

The company has argued that it is not under Chinese control.

"ByteDance is not owned or controlled by the Chinese government. It is a private company," TikTok CEO Shou Zi Chew testified to members of Congress in March 2023.

In its complaint, TikTok confirmed a report from the Wall Street Journal that said a sale or divestiture would require the Chinese government's approval.

It went on to say that the Chinese government "has made clear that it would not permit a divestment of the recommendation engine that is a key to the success of TikTok in the US."

Free speech rights of TikTok users

A stronger, yet still tenuous, First Amendment claim could come from one of TikTok’s 170 million US users, who may also argue their rights to express viewpoints are being violated.