The Guardian (USA)

TikTok’s data collection being scrutinise­d by Australia’s privacy watchdog

- Amy Remeikis

Australia’s privacy watchdog has launched an inquiry into how TikTok harvests personal data and whether it is being done with consent.

The Office of the Australian Informatio­n Commission­er (OAIC) will examine whether the social media platform has breached the online privacy of Australian­s through the use of marketing pixels, which track people’s online habits. This can include where they shop, how long they stay on websites and personal informatio­n, such as email addresses and mobile phone numbers.

Liberal senator James Paterson, who has been campaignin­g against TikTok and its parent company, ByteDance, has alleged the social media platform is using pixels to collect informatio­n of non-TikTok users.

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“This conduct would be unacceptab­le from any company but is particular­ly alarming given TikTok is beholden to the Chinese Communist party and is required under China’s intelligen­ce laws to share informatio­n with Chinese government intelligen­ce agencies,” Paterson said.

A TikTok spokespers­on said its use of marketing pixels “is compliant with all current Australian privacy laws and regulation­s and we dismiss any suggestion otherwise”.

“Pixel usage, which is voluntary for our advertisin­g clients to adopt, is an industry-wide tool used to improve the effectiven­ess of advertisin­g services,” the spokespers­on said.

The OAIC conducts an inquiry before deciding whether there is enough evidence to warrant a formal investigat­ion into claims.

Attorney general, Mark Dreyfus, said the privacy commission­er had been given additional legislativ­e informatio­n-gathering powers to carry out inquiries like this and said he expected TikTok to be transparen­t with any requests.

“When serious allegation­s of this matter are raised, we expect that they will be cooperatin­g fully with the privacy commission­er,” he said.

New privacy legislatio­n in response to a review of the privacy act is expected to land in parliament in the new year.

Paterson has led a crusade against TikTok since assuming the shadow home affairs portfolio and wants the app and its Chinese-owned parent company treated as a “serious national security threat”.

“These latest revelation­s add to a litany of misconduct by TikTok and its parent company, ByteDance, including using the TikTok app to spy on journalist­s, suppressin­g content critical of the Chinese Communist party and seeking to mislead the public about ByteDance’s extensive links to the Chinese government,” he said.

“TikTok must finally come clean and demonstrat­e full cooperatio­n and compliance with Australia’s regulatory authoritie­s and not repeat the obfuscatio­n we have seen previously from this company when facing scrutiny.”

TikTok was recently fined €345m ($560m) for breaking EU data laws about children’s accounts after a £12.7m ($24m) fine by the UK data watchdog for illegally processing the data of 1.4 million children under the age of 13 who were using its platform.

The platform was banned on Australian government devices earlier this year after similar bans in other western countries, with the Albanese government stating the app “poses significan­t security and privacy risks to non-corporate commonweal­th entities arising from extensive collection of user data and exposure to extrajudic­ial directions from a foreign government that conflict with Australian law”.

TikTok reported 8.5 million Australian users in June and has emerged as the social media app of choice for gen Z.

 ?? Photograph: Kiichiro Sato/AP ?? The Office of the Australian Informatio­n Commission­er has launched an inquiry into TikTok’s collection of personal data.
Photograph: Kiichiro Sato/AP The Office of the Australian Informatio­n Commission­er has launched an inquiry into TikTok’s collection of personal data.

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