The Guardian (USA)

Should you delete TikTok? Here’s what experts say about the app Trump wants to ban

- Kari Paul

The wildly popular video-sharing app TikTok is facing a potential ban in the

US and among employees of several major companies over security concerns.

What does that mean for you? Should you delete TikTok from your device? Here’s what you need to know.

What is TikTok?

TikTok is a video-sharing app similar to Snapchat and Instagram that lets users post clips that are 15 to 60 seconds long, usually set to music or a film dialogue. Videos can be “liked”, searched via hashtags and shared with others.

Where does it come from?

TikTok started as Musical.ly, which rose in popularity as a lip sync app. The Chinese company ByteDance bought

the app in 2018 and relaunched it with additional features.

Since then, it has exploded in popularity, becoming the most downloaded app globally in the first quarter of 2020. Overall it has been downloaded roughly 2bn times and its user base is young, with 41% between 16 and 24.

So what’s the problem?

The concerns are threefold. Because TikTok’s parent company ByteDance is based in China there are fears the company may share user data with the Chinese government, whether intentiona­lly through data requests or unintentio­nally through surveillan­ce software.

There are general privacy concerns about how much data TikTok collects from user devices. “The fear is that the informatio­n in TikTok could provide more details than intended about people’s whereabout­s or what they are up to,” said Chris Morales, head of security analytics at the cybersecur­ity firm Vectra. “You could in theory track someone to a location, such as a military base or government installati­on.”

And there are concerns over TikTok’s code, with experts worrying that it could allow privacy and security breaches. TikTok patched several major flaws, including one found in January 2020 that would allow an attacker to control someone else’s account, upload unauthoriz­ed videos, make private videos public and delete existing videos.

Are these legitimate concerns?

TikTok does collect a significan­t amount of user data, research shows. To sign up, users must provide their email, phone number and a link to another social media account. The app itself requires permission­s to user location, audio and camera recordings, and contacts, according to a study by the San Francisco-based mobile cybersecur­ity firm Lookout.

That’s more data than companies like Twitter and Facebook collect. Together, the informatio­n could easily be used to identify and track the actions of specific people that use the applicatio­n, said Hank Schless, Lookout’s manager of security solutions. “The fact that TikTok is owned by a Chinese company makes it a legitimate security concern,” Schless added.

China is far more aggressive than other government­s in compelling companies to share informatio­n, and ByteDance, TikTok’s parent company, has worked with local police forces in Xinjiang, where Beijing is accused of detaining an estimated 1 million people belonging to religious minorities in re-education camps and prisons, according to a 2019 report from the Australian Strategic Policy Institute (ASPI). The company has an active role in “disseminat­ing the party-state’s propaganda on Xinjiang”, the report reads.

TikTok has denied it shares informatio­n with the Chinese government and has distanced itself from ByteDance, hiring the California-based former Disney executive Kevin Mayer as chief executive officer in May.

But studies have found cause for concern. One report from the security firm Penetrum found the majority of the app’s data could be traced to servers in China hosted by Alibaba, which has had security breaches in the past and shares the personal informatio­n of its users with third parties, according to its privacy policy. Servers based in China would also be under Chinese jurisdicti­on and thus more easily subject to data requests.

“From our understand­ing and our analysis it seems that TikTok does an excessive amount of tracking on its users, and that the data collected is partially if not fully stored on Chinese servers with the ISP Alibaba,” the Penetrum report said.

What if I don’t care about my privacy?

Other problems include moderation and how it is influenced by social and political norms in China. TikTok moderators were guided to censor videos that mentioned Tiananmen Square, Tibetan independen­ce and the banned religious group Falun Gong, the Guardian found in September 2019.

Moderators were also told to suppress videos from users who appeared too ugly, poor or disabled, according to a March report from the Intercept, and to delete videos that showed protests in Hong Kong.

Who has banned TikTok?

Wells Fargo on Monday announced it would require its employees to uninstall TikTok. Amazon told employees to do the same last week, but walked back that decision claiming the instructio­ns were sent in error.

India’s government banned TikTok and 50 other China-based apps in June, calling them a “threat to sovereignt­y and integrity”. Last week, the US secretary of state, Mike Pompeo, said the Trump administra­tion was “looking at” banning the app in the US, citing similar reasons.

The US army and navy instructed service members to delete the app from military devices in December. And in March, two Republican senators introduced legislatio­n that would prohibit federal employees from using TikTok on government-issued work phones.

The US and India each have a complicate­d relationsh­ips with China, with Washington and Beijing locked in a years-long trade war that shows few signs of letting up. In 2019, the Trump administra­tion banned products from the Chinese firm Huawei from the US and just this week threatened sanctions against employees of the company.

Meanwhile, India’s ban on TikTok came after a violent confrontat­ion between Indian and Chinese troops.

“This is the perfect storm of technology meeting geopolitic­al rivalry,” said Douglas Schmidt, a computer science professor at Vanderbilt University. “These kinds of things are being used as bargaining tactics in geopolitic­al trade negotiatio­n.”

TikTok did not respond to a request for comment.

VAR did not demand otherwise.

Ramos ran up but instead of shooting he rolled the ball under his studs for Benzema to come and finish. His teammate was a long way inside the area when he scored. Fortunatel­y for him, behind him an opponent was encroachin­g too. Real got another chance; this time Benzema took it and scored.

Vicente Iborra headed home to make it 2-1 and then suddenly there was a series of shots, ever closer. Courtois saved from Ontiveros and Iborra could barely believe it when his shot slipped wide in the 93rd minute.

Marcos Asensio thought he had got a third soon after but, while he was denied the goal, Zidane and his players were not to be denied the title. Unbeaten at either of Real’s homes this season, he has his title.

 ?? Photograph: Florence Lo/Reuters ?? The secretary of state, Mike Pompeo, said last week that the US was ‘looking at’ banning TikTok because of security concerns.
Photograph: Florence Lo/Reuters The secretary of state, Mike Pompeo, said last week that the US was ‘looking at’ banning TikTok because of security concerns.

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