The Guardian (USA)

New Zealand to ban TikTok from government devices

- Tess McClure in Auckland

New Zealand’s parliament will ban TikTok from all parliament­ary devices, amid mounting internatio­nal security concerns surroundin­g the app.

The country’s MPs were informed by parliament­ary service on Friday that the Chinese-owned video-sharing app would be blocked from all parliament­ary devices at the end of the month, and were told via email that “the Service has determined that the risks are not acceptable in the current New Zealand parliament environmen­t”.

“The decision to block the TikTok applicatio­n has been made based on our own analysis and following discussion with our colleagues across government and internatio­nally,” the email reads.

New Zealand’s decision follows similar rulings by some of its major western allies. Earlier in the week, the UK government announced that TikTok would be banned, effective immediatel­y, from ministers’ and civil servants’ mobile phones. The US, Canada, and the European Commission already had a ban in place.

TikTok is owned by Beijing-based company ByteDance, and concerns surroundin­g its security have centred on whether the Chinese state could access data recorded by the app’s billion users, or manipulate the algorithm to push pro-China content. TikTok has denied its data or algorithms can be accessed or manipulate­d by the Chinese government, saying it has not been asked for data, and would refuse any future requests.

In recent months, however, as relationsh­ips with Beijing have been strained by the shooting down of Chinese surveillan­ce balloons, a number of western countries have introduced bans on the app on parliament­ary devices – with the US going a step further, to consider an outright ban on the app. In early March, the White House said it supported legislatio­n that would allow the administra­tion to ban TikTok and other foreign-based technologi­es completely if they pose national security threats.

The New Zealand ban does not specifical­ly cover MPs’ personal phones, but those phones must have the app uninstalle­d in order to access any parliament applicatio­ns.

A number of New Zealand MPs use TikTok to post political videos and commentary. Among the most prolific are Te Pāti Māori leaders Debbie Ngarewa-Packer and Rawiri Waititi, and Act party leader David Seymour. The Māori party had not responded to requests for comment by time of publicatio­n. A spokespers­on for Act said the party’s TikTok account “is run from a personal phone free of parliament­ary informatio­n. We have been taking this precaution for some time.”

 ?? ?? New Zealand’s decision follows similar rulings by some of its major western allies Photograph: Patrick T Fallon/AFP/Getty Images
New Zealand’s decision follows similar rulings by some of its major western allies Photograph: Patrick T Fallon/AFP/Getty Images

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States