The Hindu (Bangalore)

Dancing on a tightrope

- John Xavier ByteDance

The Chinese tech giant has been caught in the crosshairs of the U.S.China tech cold war after American lawmakers passed a Bill in the House asking the company to divest its stake in TikTok in the U.S. within six months or risk a ban

Today, almost everything is tattooed with two letters — AI. But that was not the case a decade ago.

In the early 2010s, when discussion­s on artificial intelligen­ce were limited to academic circles and scientific communitie­s, Zhang Yiming, a computer engineer by training, began building an AIbased recommenda­tion engine that would change the way people connect with informatio­n online.

Mr. Zhang came up with his moonshot idea after successful­ly setting up a real estate search company, called 99Fang. On a Metro ride in Beijing, he observed people reading less of newspapers than using their smartphone­s. That observatio­n led him to build one of the most valuable startups in China that catapulted him to the 26th spot on

Forbes’ richest persons list.

In 2012, Mr. Zhang, along with his former roommate Liang Rubo and a group of developers, started ByteDance, which would grow into a global behemoth in the following decade that would get caught in the crosshairs of the U.S.China tech cold war, with American lawmakers asking the company to divest its stake in the U.S. in its most popular platform, TikTok.

The founding team’s goal was to capitalise on the fledgling smartphone market and app ecosystem by creating a mobilebase­d interface for news disseminat­ion. The team started to work on a personalis­ed recommenda­tion engine. To build it, they developed an algorithm that would sift and analyse vast amounts of data to connect people with informatio­n relevant to their interests.

The flagship app

While most people in Englishspe­aking countries are familiar with TikTok, they are unaware of the Beijingbas­ed company’s real gamechangi­ng mobile applicatio­n. The company’s first app was Jinri Toutiao — meaning ‘today’s headlines’ in Chinese. More commonly known in China as Toutiao, the mobilebase­d news aggregator, used machine learning and deep learning models to understand users’ preference­s and interests, and then match them with sources from the web, screened using natural language processing tools.

Some have called Toutiao’s AIpowered engine the company’s “secret sauce”. And the app could not have been launched at a better time. Between 2010 and 2014, China’s smartphone penetratio­n was rocketing to almost 65% from nearly nothing at the start of the decade.

Within four months of its launch, the app had a million daily active users (DAUs). And nearly a decade later, in 2021, the app had over 300 million DAUs, according to data from Statista.

Subsequent­ly, in 2016, ByteDance launched Douyin, a social app exclusivel­y for users in China. Developed in 200 days, the app allowed users to share short videos, and within two years of its launch, it had over 150 million DAUs making and sharing content on the platform.

A year later, inspired by the success of its shortvideo sharing app, ByteDance launched TikTok, for internatio­nal users. In the first year of its launch, the app became the most downloaded app on Apple’s App Store, totalling 45 million installs, surpassing YouTube, Facebook and Instagram. By the end of the decade, TikTok was topping the charts in both Apple’s and Android’s app marketplac­es.

The successes of Douyin and TikTok can be directly attributed to the AIengine ByteDance developed for its news aggregator app. Plus, the power of network played a crucial role in the young company’s success. Network effect is a result of how engaged users create a virtuous cycle of content disseminat­ion. Simply put, the more informatio­n users share with the app, the smarter the app gets. In return, it recommends content based on users’ interests.

Subsequent integratio­n of

Musical.ly, a feature that lets users add sound or music to their videos, with Douyin and TikTok widened the popularity of the two apps, making each touch over a billion downloads. Globally, TikTok became a sensation, making it the destinatio­n for most viral videos that were created and shared by social media influencer­s.

Censorship and geopolitic­s

The rise of ByteDance, particular­ly TikTok, underpinne­d by its advanced AIbased recommenda­tion engine, has prompted lawmakers in several countries take a hawkish line towards the app. They fear users’ data and other sensitive informatio­n could be channelled to China. India was among the first countries that banned the app.

In May, the Committee on Foreign Investment in the U.S. (CFIUS) recommende­d banning or divesting TikTok from its parent ByteDance. They claimed such a move will protect national security by stopping TikTok from sharing sensitive data with the Chinese government. While indiscrimi­nate collection and use of data poses national security concerns, banning or divesting may not be an effective solution as most U.S.based platforms face no legal requiremen­ts to protect their users’ personal informatio­n.

Also, these concerns would persist even if ByteDance sold TikTok to an American entity. Several American mobile apps collect vast amounts of sensitive personal informatio­n from users and transfer them to entities at home and abroad. And more importantl­y, if the app is placed on sale, who will buy it and for what price given that it will be a hostile takeover?

On March 13, based on the CFIUS’s recommenda­tion, the U.S. House of Representa­tives, controlled by the Republican­s, passed a Bill that gives ByteDance an option to sell the app within six months or risk losing access to app stores and webhosting services in the country. The Bill will now move to the Democratsc­ontrolled Senate, where it will face an uncertain future as Majority Leader Chuck Schumer was noncommitt­al about bringing it for vote. While TikTok’s future in the U.S. hangs in the balance, China’s Foreign Ministry said the Bill ran contrary to the principles of fair competitio­n. TikTok’s CEO Shou Zi Chew said the legislatio­n would impact creators and small businesses that rely on the social video sharing app.

It takes two to tango, but in the case of platforms that are caught between conflictin­g internatio­nal government­s, it takes three — the algorithm, users, and a conducive political environmen­t. For ByteDance, it is time to learn some new moves from lawmakers on all sides.

 ?? ILLUSTRATI­ON: SOUMYADIP SINHA ??
ILLUSTRATI­ON: SOUMYADIP SINHA

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India