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The Intercept Briefing

TikTok SCOTUS Battle

The Intercept Briefing

The Intercept

Politics, Unknown, Daily News, History, News

4.86.3K Ratings

🗓️ 9 January 2025

⏱️ 30 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

The Supreme Court is poised to decide a landmark case on Friday that could reshape social media in America. At stake: TikTok must either break from its Chinese parent company, ByteDance, or cease U.S. operations entirely.

While the government frames this as a critical national security measure, the short-form video app and its creators and users see a direct challenge to First Amendment freedoms. This tension sits at the heart of a broader debate about digital communication and national interests.

On this week's Intercept Briefing, Alex Pearlman, aka Pearlmania500, whose videos reach nearly 3 million followers, says the issue is not the app but the way tech platforms operate. He says, “We want regulations of algorithms. We at least need to know what the rules are." And when it comes to the government’s crackdown on TikTok, he says, “Everything that they've accused TikTok of, Facebook has done, either domestically or internationally. Everything that they have screamed could happen with TikTok, when it came to the elections, Elon Musk did openly. And most people know that. Most people see that. And I think it's going to lend to further cynicism when it comes to our institutions and when it comes to how government can actually operate." 

Intercept senior counsel and correspondent Shawn Musgrave adds, “Tech competitors to TikTok have generally avoided saying very much about the ban. … But these companies obviously stand to benefit incredibly from knocking out their top competitor in the short-video space. It is not really a consideration before the court in the case itself, but I do think it's important to look at some of the background issues. That it's not just about national security and First Amendment. There are also really considerable economic interests here too."

Intercept politics reporter Jessica Washington says TikTok isn't just another social network — it's fostering political conversations that wouldn't exist anywhere else. “We've seen Twitter, which is now X, move really far to the right. I think anyone who's been on there in recent times can attest to that. We know YouTube also has a pretty right-leaning audience as well and an algorithm. And Facebook and Instagram are very different platforms than TikTok. So I think we lose a lot of those conversations that are happening, important political conversations in different regions, different areas of the world. Important conversations that young people are having with each other.”

To hear more of this conversation and understand what’s at stake, check out this week’s episode of The Intercept Briefing.

If you want to support our work, you can go to theintercept.com/join. Your donation, no matter what the amount, makes a real difference.



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Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Welcome to the Intercept Briefing.

0:06.0

I'm Jordan Yule, your host this week.

0:08.0

Wait, is that my longboard?

0:10.0

Longboardium!

0:11.0

So popular, you're gonna be popular.

0:15.0

Perfect.

0:17.0

Picture this.

0:20.0

Millions of American TikTok users, scrolling through endless streams of commentary, viral dances, and life hacks.

0:29.0

Now, imagine it all going dark.

0:32.7

On Friday, the Supreme Court takes up one of the most consequential tech cases of our time,

0:39.0

whether to uphold a law forcing TikTok to sever ties with its Chinese parent company bite dance,

0:45.1

or face a nationwide ban.

0:48.2

The government claims national security is at stake.

0:52.1

TikTok argues it's a violation of its First Amendment rights.

0:56.0

But this isn't just about one app.

0:58.8

This case raises fundamental questions about who controls how Americans communicate in the

1:04.3

digital age.

1:05.8

To understand what's at stake, we check in with one prolific TikTok creator.

1:10.8

Hi, my name is Alex Pearlman, also known as Pearl Mania 500 on TikTok, Instagram,

1:15.5

U-T-Exagram, you to everywhere, honestly.

1:17.2

I've been making content on TikTok for over three years now, where I've gained a bunch of

1:22.8

followers, tried to push to save the app a couple times, and now we're sitting here wondering whether or not the Supreme Court will keep TikTok around due to First Amendment or whether or not it's all over.

...

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