Earlier this month, Montana became the first state in the nation to pass a total ban on Chinese-owned TikTok, a move that came as the federal government continues to pursue a similar effort and as lawmakers and intelligence officials warn of potential national security concerns from apps based in countries considered adversarial to the United States.
Amid these moves, most Americans oppose bans on social media apps at the state and federal level, but are much more likely to back restrictions on apps that are owned by entities considered hostile to the United States, according to a new Morning Consult survey.
Since Congress banned TikTok from being accessed on federal government devices and networks in late 2022, efforts to further restrict TikTok at the federal level have largely stalled. States have had more luck passing their own restrictions on access to the app, with more than half restricting access to the platform on government-issued devices, which most of the public supports. Montana is the first state to go so far as to try to ban the app outright within its borders.
Montana’s law proposes a $10,000 daily fine levied against any app store that allows users to download TikTok. Morning Consult found that if an app is banned, 56% of adults believe app stores should be held responsible for enforcing the restrictions, and 52% backed fines against app store operators caught allowing the use or download of the app or service.
Individuals in Montana who use TikTok won’t be penalized for doing so under the state’s law, but there is a surprising public appetite for fines against users: 45% of adults said they would back penalties against individual people caught using a banned app or service.
The April 19-22, 2023, survey was conducted among a representative sample of 2,200 U.S. adults, with an unweighted margin of error of +/-2 percentage points.
ncG1vNJzZmiooqR7rrvRp6Cnn5Oku7TBy61lnKedZLavv9Oapa1lmaPBpriOrqpmmaCleqOtzaxkrK2iq7K6