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It’s not just TikTok: French also warn against WhatsApp, Instagram

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quoted by Laura Kayali in 

  Politico
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In a typically French move, France's top lawmakers are refusing to side with the United States and single out China's TikTok.

Contenu intervention médiatique

This week, top members of France's National Assembly strongly encouraged fellow MPs to "limit" their use of social media apps and messaging services, according to a damning internal email seen by POLITICO. The recommendation does include Chinese-owned TikTok — at the heart of a storm on both sides of the Atlantic — but also features American platforms such as Snap and Meta's WhatsApp and Instagram, alongside Telegram, founded by Russian-born brothers, and Signal.

"Given the particular risks to which the exercise of their mandate exposes MPs using these applications, we wish to appeal to your extreme vigilance and recommend that you limit their use," wrote Marie Guévenoux and Eric Woerth from Emmanuel Macron's Renaissance party and Eric Ciotti from conservative Les Républicains.

France's narrative of putting Chinese and American companies in the same basket is in stark contrast to moves by other European countries, including the Dutch government, which decided to target apps from countries that wage an “offensive cyber program” against the Netherlands, such as China, Russia, North Korea and Iran.

[...]

Their main issue with foreign social media apps is that Chinese and American laws are extraterritorial. The personal data gathered via the platforms — including contacts, photos, videos, and both professional and personal documents — could be used by foreign intelligence services, they argued in their email.

During Macron's tenure, France has fought tooth and nail against the U.S. Cloud Act, a piece of legislation that allows American authorities to seize data stored on American servers even if they’re located abroad. Paris has even come up with a specific set of rules for cloud services to try and shield European data from Washington's extraterritorial reach.

In China, an intelligence law also requires domestic technology companies to hand over data to state authorities on subjects anywhere in the world.

"The U.S. are well aware that all their arguments used against TikTok — namely that Chinese law is extraterritorial — awkwardly echo what the Europeans have been reproaching them for some time," said Mathilde Velliet, a researcher in tech geopolitics at the French Institute of International Relations (IFRI). "On the other hand," she added, "the U.S. also believes they cannot be put on the same footing as China, because they're a European ally with a different political and security relationship, and because it's a democracy."

Washington and EU capitals including Paris and Brussels also engage in dialogue on data security issues and cyber espionage, which is not the case with Beijing.

In the National Assembly's corridors, however, the top lawmakers' decision to call out foreign platforms from both the U.S. and China was very much welcome. "It's all starting to look like a third way, which would be European sovereignty," said Philippe Latombe, an MP from Macron's allied party Modem. "And that's good news."

 

> Read the full article on Politico's website.

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Mathilde VELLIET

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