The US accuses TikTok of violating child privacy laws

Child privacy laws
Children accounts
TikTok denies it
Sell or leave
Concerns for national security
Data breaches
Partial ban of TikTok
Worldwide suspicion
TikTok and its origins
A simple premise
A massive growth
Overpowering all socials
TikTok stars
Fighting back
Canada
UK
New Zealand
Denmark and Norway
Taiwan
India
Pakistan
Afghanistan
Disinformation
China's TikTok
Child privacy laws

The US Department of Justices sued TikTok, alleging the company has illegally collected data from children under 13 years old.

Children accounts

According to the New York Times, the lawsuit claims TikTok knowingly allowed kids under 13 to open accounts, collected their data without parental consent, and, in some cases, did not honor their requests to delete their children's accounts.

TikTok denies it

TikTok denies the charges, claiming it takes children's safety very seriously. However, the DOJ claims the company violated the Children’s Online Privacy Protection Act and an agreement from 2019.

Sell or leave

The lawsuit is the latest clash between the US government and the company. In April, President Biden signed a bill to ban TikTok nationwide if its Chinese parent company, ByteDance, doesn't sell the US app.

Concerns for national security

That clash was also related to data collection. Like other social media, TikTok collects vast amounts of user data, and US lawmakers are concerned that the app might threaten national security. China has a law mandating that companies share data with the government.

Data breaches

The concern might not be so far-fetched. Last year, the European Union fined TikTok over $370 million for not being transparent about using children's user data and breaking data protection laws.

Partial ban of TikTok

The fine came after the EU partially banned the app on staff devices in all its central institutions and advised officials to delete it from their phones.

"Everything is seen in China"

The company denies the allegation, claiming it stores US user data outside China. However, a 2022 Buzzfeed investigation revealed the opposite. In leaked audio files, an employee said: "Everything is seen in China."

Worldwide suspicion

In addition to the EU and the US, the app's fast growth has raised eyebrows among many policymakers worldwide. But how did it get to this position?

TikTok and its origins

The Chinese company ByteDance launched TikTok in the international market in 2017. The app did not gain popularity until 2018, when it merged with another one: Musical.ly.

A simple premise

TikTok has a simple interface and premise: it shows short videos in a loop. The app also curates the content it offers to its users through an algorithm that analyzes their preferences and keeps them engaged.

A massive growth

Since its international release, TikTok has grown massively. In 2020, Morning Consult qualified the app as the third fastest-growing brand, just below Zoom and Peacock.

Overpowering all socials

That same year, it became the most downloaded app, beating Instagram. Hootsuite says it is the only non-Meta app to hit three billion downloads. Facebook, Messenger, Instagram, and WhatsApp have achieved that in almost a decade (since 2014), and TikTok has achieved it in half the time.

TikTok stars

The app also changed the way influencers work and monetize their communities. Tendency rewards and direct gifts are some of the characteristic features of TikTok.

Fighting back

Those influencers are fighting their governments fiercely to avoid a ban on the app. Still, TikTok's origins and obscurity regarding its data policies have concerned many governments.

Canada

An example is the Canadian government, which has imposed partial bans on the app: it was blocked from government-issued devices, alleging it presents an "unacceptable" risk to privacy and security.

UK

British authorities made a similar decision to ban the app from phones used by government ministers and civil servants. The parliament also banned TikTok on all official devices and the parliament network.

New Zealand

New Zealand government cybersecurity experts also suggested the parliament block TikTok on official phones with access to the legislative network. They will accept exceptions if parliament officials prove they need the app to perform their duties.

Denmark and Norway

Norway's defense minister personally advised the block in parliament. Aside from security considerations in Denmark, government officials argued that the app is useless for work and should not be on official phones.

Taiwan

Taiwan followed FBI warnings that TikTok could threaten US national security. The country banned the app and all Chinese software from public sector tablets, desktop computers, and phones.

India

India went all the way: the government imposed a nationwide ban on TikTok and all Chinese software and apps. The measure followed a conflict between the two countries at a disputed Himalayan border.

Pakistan

Pakistan cited concerns about the content, not national security, like most countries. The Pakistani government has banned the app at least four times since 2020.

Afghanistan

The Taliban leadership in Afghanistan banned TikTok and a game called PUBG in 2022. The block had more to do with young people "being misled" under the tight morality control of the government.

Disinformation

Still, the content on the app not only concerns oppressive governments like the Taliban. The US Congress has scrutinized the content the app promotes to young US users, especially when comparing the content with what Chinese children see.

China's TikTok

Douyin, the Chinese version of the app ─TikTok is banned there─ has blocks for children. Minors are not allowed to use the app for more than 40 minutes or at night, and the content they access is heavily curated.

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