Company: FSLY
Filing Date: 2025-05-07
Form Type: 10-Q
Source: 0001517413-25-000111
Chunk: 45

Company: Fastly, Inc.
Filing Date: 2025-05-07
Form: 10-Q
Item: Part I, Item 3
Chunk 45
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 is currently not clear how broadly such legislation will be interpreted or applied in relation to our customers or our business, and additional developments in our understanding of the application of this law could cause us to remove our POP from Hong Kong. Noncompliance with applicable regulations or requirements could subject us to investigations, sanctions, enforcement actions, disgorgement of profits, fines, damages, civil and criminal penalties, injunctions, or other collateral consequences. If any governmental sanctions are imposed, or if we do not prevail in any possible civil or criminal litigation, our business could be harmed. In addition, responding to any action will likely result in a significant diversion of management’s attention and resources and an increase in professional fees. Enforcement actions and sanctions could harm our business.

If the United States government prohibits our current or potential customers from doing business with us, whether through policy, regulations or laws, we could face direct liability or our delivery of content by our platform may be blocked. For example, in the current environment of economic trade negotiations and tensions between the Chinese and the United States governments, the United States government has expressed concerns about the ability of companies operating in China to do business in the United States or with United States companies. As a result, we could lose the ability to contract with current or potential customers and usage of our platform may decrease by affected customers, which could harm our business and reputation. Even in the absence of new restrictions or trade actions imposed by the United States or other governments, including potential new regulations resulting from the recent presidential and congressional elections in the United States, our customers that operate in China, target China as a market, or that have strong business ties to China, may take actions to reduce dependence on our platform, which could harm our business. In April 2024, under the prior administration, a bill was signed into law that would effectively ban TikTok in the United States if ByteDance, its China-based parent company, does not sell its stake in TikTok within a set time frame. The current administration issued an executive order on January 20, 2025 instructing the Attorney General not to enforce the law or impose any penalties against any entity for noncompliance for a period of 75 days and to provide written guidance as to how the law will be implemented. On April 4, 2025, the current administration issued an executive order extending the prior non-enforcement instruction until June 19, 2025. TikTok was one of our largest customers for the three months ended March 31, 2025