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Chew Shou Zi, CEO of TikTok, at the Qatar Economic Forum in Doha on Tuesday. Photo: Bloomberg

TikTok CEO: Montana’s ban on the app is ‘unconstitutional’

  • Chew Shou Zi said he’s confident his firm will win a lawsuit challenging the US state’s ban, which comes amid worries China’s using TikTok to gather intelligence
  • Chew said US data is stored in US by US firm, overseen by US personnel; ‘Chinese government never asked us for US users’ data, we will not provide even if asked’

TikTok CEO Chew Shou Zi said on Tuesday the US state of Montana’s ban of the app was unconstitutional and that he was confident his company will prevail in a lawsuit challenging the decision.

The Chinese-owned company filed a lawsuit on Monday against Montana’s decision to ban TikTok from operating in the state to protect residents from alleged intelligence gathering by China.

“We believe that the Montana bill that was recently passed is simply unconstitutional,” Chew told the Qatar Economic Forum organised by Bloomberg.

US lawmakers and state government officials have called for a nationwide ban on the video-sharing app, which is used by more than 150 million Americans, over concerns about potential Chinese government influence over the platform.

“The Chinese government never asked us for US users’ data and we will not provide even if asked,” Chew said.

Chew said his company has worked with Oracle to keep US users data stored in the United States.

02:32

US lawmakers grill TikTok CEO on app’s alleged ties to Chinese Communist Party

US lawmakers grill TikTok CEO on app’s alleged ties to Chinese Communist Party

“Today by default, all US data is stored in the Oracle cloud service already,” he said.

“We have built over the last two years something we call internally ‘Project Texas’, which ensures that American data is stored on American soil by an American company and overseen by American personnel,” Chew added.

In March, a congressional committee grilled Chew about whether the Chinese government could access user data or influence what Americans see on the app.

But calls to ban TikTok nationwide or give the Biden administration new powers to crack down or ban TikTok have not advanced in Congress.

Montana could impose fines of US$10,000 for each violation by TikTok and additional fines of US$10,000 per day if it violates the ban. The law does not impose penalties on individual TikTok users. It is not clear how Montana would enforce a TikTok ban.

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