Regulators launch national security review of TikTok

Subscribers:
4,200
Published on ● Video Link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jNMzof2W0a0



Category:
Review
Duration: 2:45
9 views
0


Reported today on TechSpot

For the full article visit: http://bit.ly/2pyo5Vm

Regulators launch national security review of TikTok

The US is looking into ByteDance's acquisition of Musical.ly

In brief: The United States is looking into TikTok's parent company, ByteDance, after critics and lawmakers have been criticizing its controversial policies and potential ties to the Chinese government. The company denies those claims, but it will have to convince regulators as well.

TikTok's meteoric rise hasn't been without its kinks, and at least two US senators have recently set off the alarm bell about the potential issues around parent company, ByteDance. A lot of younger people are drawn to work for the app -- even Facebook employees -- but all of this has also drawn the attention of regulators.

According to a new report from Reuters, the US Committee on Foreign Investment (CFIUS) has opened a national security review of ByteDance, a Chinese company that acquired lip-syncing app Musical.ly in 2017 for $1 billion and later rebranded it as TikTok.

The problem with the acquisition is that ByteDance didn't ask for approval from the CFIUS, so the committee now has "the scope to investigate it." Back in March, the CFIUS looked into Kunlun Tech's buyout of Grindr, and found that the foreign ownership had national security risks that were too high for comfort, so it pushed for a sale.

TikTok has been facing a lot of scrutiny as of late due to its alleged ties with the Chinese government and loose privacy guidelines, the latter of which have resulted in FTC fining it to the tune of $5.7 million. Then it was found that the app censored content related to the Hong Kong protests, which raised the eyebrows of two US senators who promptly called the practice into question in a letter they sent to intelligence agencies.

As for ByteDance, last week they published a statement defending itself against the scrutiny. They say TikTok didn't remove content "based on sensitivities related to China," and that it wouldn't do so if asked by the Chinese government.

The company explained that it doesn't operate in China and that US user data is stored locally with "backup redundancy in Singapore." And while it didn't comment on the "ongoing regulatory processes," the company believes it has "made clear that we have no higher priority than earning the trust of users and regulators in the US."




Other Videos By Colin Boyd SEO


2019-11-03SpaceX achieves key milestone in safety testing of Crew Dragon spacecraft
2019-11-03Trump's cybersecurity advisor had his iPhone erased after entering the wrong password
2019-11-03A network of ‘camgirl’ sites exposed millions of users and sex workers
2019-11-03CHEAP: Apple’s AirPods with wireless charging case are $35 off
2019-11-02Airbnb to ban ‘party houses’ in wake of Halloween shooting that left 5 dead
2019-11-02Microsoft unveils new Edge browser logo that no longer looks like Internet Explorer
2019-11-02Google Maps incognito mode starts public roll out
2019-11-02This Week in Apps: iOS 13 complaints, Q3 trends, App Store ratings bug
2019-11-02Linux drivers confirm high-end Radeon Navi GPUs, detail new budget cards
2019-11-029 new trailers you should watch this week
2019-11-02Regulators launch national security review of TikTok
2019-11-02Startups Weekly: Understanding Uber’s latest fintech play
2019-11-02CHEAP: The Google Home Hub is only $70 — buy it
2019-11-02Satoshi Nakaboto: ‘Bitcoin market cap rivals China Mobile, China’s largest wireless carrier’
2019-11-02Amazon now sells movie tickets in India
2019-11-02Overwatch 2 brings new game modes, heroes, and cooperative gameplay
2019-11-01Google Fi is offering the Pixel 3A for just $299
2019-11-01‘Busted e-scooter’ was the best Halloween costume of 2019
2019-11-01How to make Google Assistant or Alexa find any missing item with a Tile tracker
2019-11-01Electric skateboard startup Inboard is for sale and all employees have been laid off
2019-11-01The untold origin story of an AmazonBasics AA battery