In 2020, former president Donald Trump proposed ByteDance sell parts of its company to Microsoft. If an American company controlled TikTok, it was presumed the app would be less of a security concern for the U.S. and other countries. Also: What is Lemon8 and why is everyone talking about it on TikTok? By late last year, the U.S. Congress approved a motion to ban TikTok on all federal government-issued devices. In March, President Joe Biden’s White House ordered all federal employees to remove the app from their devices within 30 days. A day later, the European Parliament ordered members from all three of its institutions to delete the app from government devices – and urged members to delete it from their personal devices, too. More than half of U.S. states have also banned or partially banned TikTok from state-issued government devices. In some states, the governors are eager to propose a nationwide ban on the app. Some public, state-funded universities have also banned the app from being used on university networks. Here’s why all of those bans are being enforced.
Taiwan.The U.S. and more than half of its state governments.Canada and its provinces.The European Union’s governing bodies.Belgium.Denmark.New Zealand.The U.K.Australia.
Also: How to go live on TikTok (and how it can earn you real money) TikTok can collect lots of personal information from its users. In the app’s privacy policy, it states that when you create an account, upload content, or interact with the platform in any way, TikTok can and will collect the following:
Any account and profile information (name, age, username, phone number, profile image, email, and password).Any user-generated content uploaded to the app (audio recording, photos, comments, and videos).Direct messages.Any information used to purchase something through the app (card numbers, names, information from third-party payment apps, billing, and shipping address).
Some of TikTok’s information-gathering methods can be circumvented by taking steps like denying the app access to your contacts. But much of TikTok’s information gathering is automatic and cannot be stopped by the user. For instance, you must share:
Your device information (IP address, mobile carrier, and network type).Your location.Cookies.Device metadata (describes how, when, and where your user-generated content was created).
Also: The best lights for streaming on Twitch, YouTube, and TikTok Some governments are concerned about the geopolitical consequences if the Chinese government accessed this much Western user data. It can be especially concerning if government officials with clearance to sensitive and classified information give away their personal data – and that’s why the ban on federal government-issued devices is being enforced. After the Canadian government ban, a TikTok spokesperson told the BBC that the app’s ban blocks Canadian officials from reaching people on a public platform. The spokesperson said no one from the Canadian government met with the company to discuss a compromise, and that the company is disappointed in the Canadian government’s decision. Also: These experts are racing to protect AI from hackers TikTok had a similarly disapproving reaction to the European ban. The company said denying users access to government officials is a “self-defeating step.” After the U.S. announced its TikTok ban, TikTok spokesperson Brooke Oberwetter said the U.S.’s decision to ban the app without consulting the company prompted its allies to take the same steps. She said the company is disappointed in the U.S.’s decision. Following the U.K. government ban, TikTok remains adamant that the government bans are based on geopolitical motivations, and insists that the app does not pose any significant threats. Also: 5 simple ways to stop spending so much time on your phone To avoid legal blocks by federal courts, the U.S. House and Senate will need to pass the RESTRICT Act and the DATA Act. As a result of Chew’s testimony, more members of Congress supported two bipartisan bills that would give the president legal clearance to ban TikTok in the U.S. But Chew did mention a last-ditch effort to convince U.S. lawmakers that TikTok does not pose a national security risk. TikTok is spending $1.5 billion on Project Texas, an initiative to create a committee based in the U.S. made up of U.S. government-approved members to oversee, store, and monitor U.S. TikTok user data. Project Texas would relocate all U.S. TikTok user data onto U.S. soil, ensuring that the data never makes contact with Chinese servers. But for many lawmakers and political pundits, this corporate restructuring is not enough to sway their opinion.