TikTok Tells US Lawmakers It Does Not Give Info To China (reuters.com) 33
During the company's first appearance at a U.S. congressional hearing, TikTok executive Michael Beckerman said it does not give information to the Chinese government and has sought to safeguard U.S. data. Reuters reports: Michael Beckerman, TikTok's head of public policy for the Americas, became the company's first executive to appear before Congress, testifying to a subcommittee of the Senate Commerce Committee. Republicans in particular pressed Beckerman on worries regarding TikTok's stewardship of data on the app's users. Senator Marsha Blackburn, the panel's top Republican, said she is concerned about TikTok's data collection, including audio and a user's location, and the potential for the Chinese government to gain access to the information. Blackburn questioned Beckerman on whether TikTok could resist giving data to China's government if material were to be demanded. "We do not share information with the Chinese government," Beckerman responded.
Under questioning by Republican Senator Ted Cruz, Beckerman said that TikTok has "no affiliation" with Beijing ByteDance Technology, a ByteDance entity at which the Chinese government took a stake and a board seat this year. Beckerman also testified that TikTok's U.S. user data is stored in the United States, with backups in Singapore. "We have a world-renowned U.S. based security team that handles access," Beckerman said. Republican Senator John Thune said TikTok is perhaps more driven by content algorithms than even Facebook, as the app is famous for quickly learning what users find interesting and offering them those types of videos. Beckerman said TikTok would be willing to provide the app's algorithm moderation policies in order for the Senate panel to have it reviewed by independent experts.
Under questioning by Republican Senator Ted Cruz, Beckerman said that TikTok has "no affiliation" with Beijing ByteDance Technology, a ByteDance entity at which the Chinese government took a stake and a board seat this year. Beckerman also testified that TikTok's U.S. user data is stored in the United States, with backups in Singapore. "We have a world-renowned U.S. based security team that handles access," Beckerman said. Republican Senator John Thune said TikTok is perhaps more driven by content algorithms than even Facebook, as the app is famous for quickly learning what users find interesting and offering them those types of videos. Beckerman said TikTok would be willing to provide the app's algorithm moderation policies in order for the Senate panel to have it reviewed by independent experts.
Why? (Score:3)
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Because Mai Fun is delicious?
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also.
americans have big penises
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"user data is stored in the United States, with backups in Singapore."
TikTok is popular throughout Southeast Asia, which has 700 million people. Singapore is a well-connected hub in the middle of that.
"We do not share information with the Chinese gov" (Score:3)
That's fine, but unless the partners with whom the data
shared are analysed, that doesn't mean that China (or any other country) doesn't get it by commercial means from a partner.
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They will give China (Score:3, Insightful)
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whatever it asks for. That's the way the law works. In China, that is.
TikTok has its headquarters in Culver City, California. The CEO and most of the principal employees are western educated and live outside China.
ByteDance is located in Shenzhen but has limited control over TikTok. ByteDance does not have the authority to tell TikTok employees in America to violate American law.
The Xi regime has declared war on tech. So why should the techies do his bidding?
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Ever heard the term Smoke and Mirrors? His 100% evasive answers to Crux re. Byte Dance Beijing was most illuminating...
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How many TikTok/ByteDance employees have family in China? Canada has experienced how China is willing to grab random innocents to use as bargaining chips. It would be pretty simply to apply some pressure there.
Don't ever forget that this is a totalitarian regime that has no morals or scruples. Do you seriously have to ask "why comply?" If they haven't "asked" for data yet, it's because the data is of no real interest to China. Until it does, and then they'll "ask" for it, and the company WILL comply.
Re:They will give China (Score:4, Informative)
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It's the usual tax dodge, same as many US companies locate in the Caymans or Ireland. Same as many of them incorporate in Delaware for legal advantage.
If you don't trust TikTok then presumably you don't trust Apple or Microsoft either, seeing as they both operate in China (to an even greater extent than ByteDance), and are known to have been p0wned by the NSA.
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That's the way the law works. In China, that is.
That's the way laws work everywhere. It is one of the things governments do, pass laws. People are supposed to follow them and if they don't there are sanctions.
It is true that in China the law is not always applied equally, but that is also true in the West.
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pro-China trolls are out in force today, I see.
Western nations have court systems. It isn't always fair, and dumb laws like the Patriot Act get passed all the time; but it isn't "do what we say or gulag" from the government.
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whatever it asks for. That's the way the law works. In China, that is.
How soon people forget Snowden.
It is exactly the same in the US, except for the addition of a gag order to stop you from telling anyone. Look up what is NSL and why Lavabit was closed.
Unless the NSA simply directly read your data from the datacenter, then they don't even need to ask you.
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He's probably telling the truth. (Score:4, Interesting)
Never let an opportunity for profit go unexploited.
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for not having their heads chopped off?
Or their families that still live in China, for workers in other countries.
Plus consider the reverse (Score:2)
FTFY (Score:2)
TikTok 'Tells' US Lawmakers It Does Not Give Info To China
Not that they know of (Score:2)
I'm sure that not everyone that works for them, works for them.
India banned TikTok last year (Score:2)
Tiktok was banned as part of a crackdown on dozens if not hundreds of Chinese apps.
More interesting was the ban on Chinese financial loan shark apps.
Title of this /. post is not true (Score:3, Interesting)
Just make your app less creepy (Score:2)
How Silly... (Score:1)