Texarkana Gazette

Placed on ice

EU blocks staff from using Tiktok

- JILLIAN DEUTSCH AND JORGE VALERO

The European Commission suspended staff from using Tiktok over security concerns related to the social media app’s data-collection practices.

Staff were ordered to delete the short-video app from mobile phones and corporate devices, including personal devices that use commission apps, a commission spokespers­on confirmed on Thursday.

Western government­s including the U.S. and U.K. have become increasing­ly worried about Tiktok’s potential national security risk, in light of concerns around its Chinese parent company, ByteDance. The commission’s suspension follows a decision by the U.S. Congress at the end of last year to restrict Tiktok from federal government devices.

“This measure aims to protect the Commission against cybersecur­ity threats and actions which may be exploited for cyberattac­ks against the corporate environmen­t of the Commission,” the European Union’s executive arm wrote in a statement.

Employees were given until March 15 to get rid of it, the commission said in an email to employees on Thursday that was viewed by Bloomberg.

A commission spokespers­on said it’s also informed other E.U. institutio­ns about the suspension and that the decision was not the result of any pressure from the U.S.

“We believe this suspension is misguided and based on fundamenta­l misconcept­ions,” a Tiktok spokespers­on said. “We are surprised that the Commission did not contact us directly nor offer any explanatio­n - we have requested a meeting to set the record straight on how we protect the data of the 125 million people across the E.U. who come to Tiktok every month.”

Tiktok is creating three data centers in Europe to store data locally, reduce employees’ access to data and minimize data flows outside Europe, the spokespers­on added.

E.U. Budget Commission­er Johannes Hahn, who is in charge of the department that made the decision, said there was no “immediate threat” from Tiktok but the commission is constantly monitoring threats.

The E.U. is becoming more aggressive in its approach to Tiktok. After a call with Tiktok Chief Executive Officer Shou Zi Chew in January, Internal Market Commission­er Thierry Breton said the E.U. will ban the platform if it does not follow content moderation and data rules.

“We will not hesitate to adopt the full scope of sanctions to protect our citizens if audits do not show full compliance,” Breton wrote.

Executive Vice President Margrethe Vestager has been more cautious about imposing a complete ban of the platform similar to discussion­s in the U.S., telling Swedish media this month that a ban is “not on the table.”

“If we ban someone from doing business in Europe, we need strong reasons,” Vestager said. “As long as they live up to the law, they can conduct their business in Europe.”

The Dutch intelligen­ce agency is also probing potential risks associated with government workers using Tiktok on their phones. French President Emmanuel Macron has also raised concerns about the platform and its impact on young users.

Politico reported on the ban earlier.

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