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Albo's call on TikTok ban after US vote

March 15, 2024

Friday 15 March 2024
Ellen Ransley
Adelaide Advertiser


 Anthony Albanese says his government has no plans at this stage to outlaw  TikTok after the US took a major step towards banning the popular social  media app.
 
 The US House of Representatives on Wednesday (local time) voted to pass a  Bill that would ban users from accessing the video sharing app unless TikTok  splits from its majority Chinese-owned parent company ByteDance.
 
 Beijing has warned the US that a TikTok ban would amount to  "bullying".
 
 The legislation is the biggest threat yet to the video-sharing app, and at  home, opposition cyber security spokesman James Paterson said Australia  couldn't risk being left behind.
 
 The app is already banned from government devices, and the Prime Minister on  Thursday morning said Australia had "no plans" beyond that.
 
 "I think you've got to be pretty cautious. You've always got to have  national security concerns front and centre, but you also need to acknowledge  that for a whole lot of people, this provides a way of them  communicating," Mr Albanese said.
 
 "We haven't got advice at this stage to do that (ban TikTok). We don't  use TikTok on government phones, and that is an appropriate measure that  we're putting in place." He said the government continued to take  security advice but would make its own decisions.
 
 "You need to have an argument for it, rather than automatically just ban  things," he told ABC Radio. "We'll take security advice on it.  TikTok isn't compulsory by the way." Opposition Leader Peter Dutton said  Mr Albanese "needs to show leadership here" and act. "So far  the Prime Minister hasn't done that. And I think the Prime Minister,  particularly at a time like this, doesn't need to be weak. He needs to be  strong and show the leadership that's required to keep Australian kids safe  online," Mr Dutton said.
 
 "If he's got advice from the agencies, which I believe he has, that the  information has been hoovered up and young people don't have a safe presence  online, it's up to the prime minister of that country to respond in the  appropriate way, and that's what I would expect him to do." The  legislation in the US still has to pass the Senate, but President Joe Biden  said he was prepared to sign the Bill into law if both houses of Congress  gave it the green light.
 
 Senator Paterson said Australia could not afford to be "left  behind", and the government should have "already sent drafting  instructions" to the Home Affairs department so it could prepare  "equivalent legislation" for Australia.

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