MOSCOW, Feb. 16 – TikTok is under no obligation to give the Chinese government access to US users’ data, CEO Shou Zi Chew said as part of efforts to convince US lawmakers that the Chinese video-sharing app is not a security threat to the United States, reported Sputnik.

“Even if they (Chinese government) did (ask for access), we believe we don’t have to give it to them because US user data is subject to US law,” he told The Washington Post in an interview published on Wednesday.

Chew added that the Chinese government had never requested US users’ data from TikTok.

The chief executive specified that there were over 100 million users in the United States, and this would be “a real shame” if users around the globe “are not able to hear them anymore.”

In late January, the Wall Street Journal reported that Chew had agreed to give testimony before the House of Representatives in March to tell lawmakers about the company’s relations with the Chinese Communist Party and protection of user data.

In 2020, the Trump administration unsuccessfully tried to ban Chinese social media, including TikTok and WeChat. The Biden administration dropped this initiative; however, recently, the pressure on the company – owned by China’s ByteDance – has increased. In December last year, several US governors prohibited state officials from using TikTok on their devices and at state premises. TikTok, in turn, called these measures groundless and politically motivated.

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