House votes to keep sensitive American data out of hostile countries’ hands

House votes to keep sensitive American data out of hostile countries’ hands

The House of Representatives has overwhelmingly voted to pass a bill blocking the sale of sensitive American user data to hostile foreign countries.

The Protecting Americans’ Data from Foreign Adversaries Act was introduced in this Congress by House Energy & Commerce Committee Chairwoman Cathy McMorris Rodgers, R-Wash., and Rep. Frank Pallone, D-N.J. It advanced through Rodgers’ committee earlier this month in a unanimous bipartisan 50-0 vote.

The bill passed the House on Wednesday afternoon by a vote of 414-0.

According to the bill text, its purpose is “to prohibit data brokers from transferring sensitive data of United States individuals to foreign adversaries, and for other purposes.”

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The definition of “sensitive data” includes biometric data, private personal communications, log-in credentials, social security numbers, geo-location data and what, if any, status an individual has within the Armed Forces, among other information.

The limitations would apply to foreign governments like Russia, Iran or China as well as individuals and entities they have influence over.

It’s part of a recent bipartisan push by Congress to protect American user data from overseas threats.

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Last week, the House passed a bill aimed at forcing Beijing-backed tech company Bytedance to divest from TikTok within 165 days or risk the social media platform being banned in U.S. app stores. That bill passed in a decisive 352-65 vote, with one lawmaker voting “present.”

The legislation’s authors have said it would also apply to other apps owned by a hostile foreign entity. 

TikTok’s critics have long called it a national security threat. They have cited concerns about the Chinese government’s ability to leverage its power over Bytedance to access sensitive user data, even in the U.S., something the company has denied. 

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China hawks have also warned that the app’s popularity among young Americans gives the ruling Chinese Communist Party a platform for a mass influence campaign.

At the same time, lawmakers who are wary of the push to curb TikTok have cited First Amendment concerns and potential harm to small businesses who rely on it.

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