Berliner Boersenzeitung - Five ways TikTok is seen as threat to US national security

EUR -
AED 4.018177
AFN 74.922955
ALL 98.457111
AMD 423.432415
ANG 1.971814
AOA 993.873923
ARS 1066.309463
AUD 1.628349
AWG 1.971883
AZN 1.857359
BAM 1.95136
BBD 2.209074
BDT 130.742543
BGN 1.956184
BHD 0.41228
BIF 3164.311304
BMD 1.093971
BND 1.426854
BOB 7.5598
BRL 6.120435
BSD 1.094021
BTN 91.890935
BWP 14.567658
BYN 3.580554
BYR 21441.832863
BZD 2.205382
CAD 1.499561
CDF 3148.44906
CHF 0.941578
CLF 0.037002
CLP 1021.003323
CNY 7.747485
CNH 7.758009
COP 4632.967458
CRC 564.914741
CUC 1.093971
CUP 28.990233
CVE 110.764436
CZK 25.340776
DJF 194.420514
DKK 7.459026
DOP 66.072151
DZD 145.527695
EGP 53.061643
ERN 16.409566
ETB 133.300594
FJD 2.437039
FKP 0.833124
GBP 0.836945
GEL 2.975983
GGP 0.833124
GHS 17.427068
GIP 0.833124
GMD 74.941988
GNF 9444.786047
GTQ 8.461748
GYD 228.880436
HKD 8.501386
HNL 27.348851
HRK 7.437921
HTG 144.251807
HUF 399.079812
IDR 17162.327456
ILS 4.119982
IMP 0.833124
INR 91.912987
IQD 1433.102094
IRR 46042.505695
ISK 148.516987
JEP 0.833124
JMD 172.875105
JOD 0.775298
JPY 163.252246
KES 141.122002
KGS 93.208526
KHR 4452.462567
KMF 492.232291
KPW 984.573338
KRW 1473.507936
KWD 0.335225
KYD 0.911651
KZT 536.479435
LAK 24154.880683
LBP 98019.807536
LKR 320.457984
LRD 211.136788
LSL 19.527421
LTL 3.230212
LVL 0.661732
LYD 5.240118
MAD 10.758656
MDL 19.281546
MGA 5004.917738
MKD 61.536873
MMK 3553.175344
MNT 3717.313628
MOP 8.761466
MRU 43.485595
MUR 50.344495
MVR 16.797918
MWK 1899.133655
MXN 21.326365
MYR 4.684937
MZN 40.203234
NAD 19.527379
NGN 1772.777414
NIO 40.236642
NOK 11.788966
NPR 147.025497
NZD 1.804786
OMR 0.421138
PAB 1.094111
PEN 4.094182
PGK 4.346402
PHP 62.441723
PKR 303.713736
PLN 4.296574
PYG 8528.596263
QAR 3.982875
RON 4.976261
RSD 117.05048
RUB 106.093647
RWF 1460.451371
SAR 4.107793
SBD 9.079223
SCR 15.105313
SDG 658.019401
SEK 11.379624
SGD 1.429714
SHP 0.833124
SLE 24.994288
SLL 22940.020611
SOS 624.657937
SRD 34.781733
STD 22642.992316
SVC 9.573132
SYP 2748.635049
SZL 19.209561
THB 36.669916
TJS 11.667495
TMT 3.839838
TND 3.359859
TOP 2.562192
TRY 37.484306
TTD 7.417125
TWD 35.326486
TZS 2981.071358
UAH 45.061766
UGX 4020.852005
USD 1.093971
UYU 45.0471
UZS 14002.829245
VEF 3962967.65217
VES 41.004867
VND 27168.771386
VUV 129.878443
WST 3.060343
XAF 654.467995
XAG 0.035861
XAU 0.000419
XCD 2.956512
XDR 0.813948
XOF 651.458366
XPF 119.331742
YER 273.903013
ZAR 19.317806
ZMK 9847.061079
ZMW 28.911223
ZWL 352.258236
  • RBGPF

    -1.4700

    59.33

    -2.48%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0700

    6.9

    -1.01%

  • SCS

    0.2500

    13.03

    +1.92%

  • CMSD

    -0.1715

    24.68

    -0.69%

  • VOD

    0.0700

    9.73

    +0.72%

  • CMSC

    -0.1200

    24.52

    -0.49%

  • NGG

    -0.2700

    65.63

    -0.41%

  • GSK

    2.2200

    40.24

    +5.52%

  • RIO

    -0.3100

    66.35

    -0.47%

  • BCC

    0.3700

    142.39

    +0.26%

  • AZN

    0.6350

    77.505

    +0.82%

  • RELX

    0.0700

    46.71

    +0.15%

  • BCE

    -0.2000

    33.31

    -0.6%

  • JRI

    0.0600

    13.22

    +0.45%

  • BTI

    0.2600

    35.48

    +0.73%

  • BP

    -0.0500

    31.98

    -0.16%

Five ways TikTok is seen as threat to US national security
Five ways TikTok is seen as threat to US national security / Photo: DENIS CHARLET - AFP/File

Five ways TikTok is seen as threat to US national security

Many in the United States see TikTok, the highly popular video-sharing app owned by Beijing-based ByteDance, as a threat to national security.

Text size:

The following is a look at five reasons why:

- Data sharing -

TikTok -- like its rivals Instagram, Snapchat and YouTube -- thrives on data and there seems to be no limit to how much young users are willing to share about themselves on the super addictive app.

TikTok's critics worry that all this information is being processed by a Chinese company in China where the Communist Party reigns supreme.

But some experts believe the threat is overblown and that nefarious actors can make their way to the troves of data no matter who owns the platform and where it is based.

"If we're talking about US citizen data, it's the Wild West," said Justin Sherman, a senior fellow at Duke University's Sanford School of Public Policy.

"There's very little regulation, companies collect tons of data all the time, whether they're foreign companies or US companies."

Tiktok says it has undertaken to fully move the data of American users to US-only servers in a project known as "Project Texas."

- Spying -

TikTok, like all apps, potentially opens access to a user's entire phone.

"Anytime you have an app on the phone, there's the potential for using that app to bridge access to other things on the phone," said Michael Daniel, CEO of Cyber Threat Alliance.

This could include "surreptitiously turning on the microphone or the camera of the device without the user being even aware," added Daniel, a former cybersecurity coordinator at the US National Security Council.

Etay Maor, senior director of security strategy at Cato Networks, pointed to Pegasus, software created by an Israeli tech firm that was used by governments around the world to spy on critics and opponents.

"Maybe with TikTok we are just clicking and installing the Chinese version of Pegasus on our devices... I think that is the worry of the US government," Maor said.

- Censorship -

Another potential threat mentioned by cybersecurity experts is the ability of the Chinese government to censor content on TikTok to defend the priorities of the Communist Party.

"The idea is that the Chinese government would eventually tell TikTok outside of China that you will not show anything that supports Tibet or Taiwan and thereby shape the information environment," said Daniel.

Tiktok insists that it has never intervened on content in ways to satisfy the Chinese government, but given the level of censorship that prevails in China, analysts warn that the threat for Beijing to lean on TikTok exists.

"If you look at the way the Chinese government has censored information, has suppressed journalism and things of that nature at home, it's really not at all far-fetched to say there's a risk associated with the same thing happening on TikTok elsewhere," said Sherman.

- Misinformation -

Another fear is that the Chinese government could use TikTok as a means to disrupt US society in a replay of the online campaigns waged by Russia in 2016 ahead of the American presidential election.

Already, research published by Global Witness and the Cybersecurity for Democracy team at New York University suggested TikTok failed to filter large volumes of election misinformation in the weeks leading up to US midterm elections last month.

In the experiment, TikTok "performed the worst out of all of the platforms tested," the researchers found.

In response, TikTok has introduced safety measures related to election content and required government and politician accounts to be verified.

- Just... China? -

Some experts wonder if TikTok can do anything to satisfy concerns given its origins in China, especially with the Republicans retaking the US House of Representatives in January.

Most of the arguments against TikTok have been coming from the Republican Party, which has a history of being tougher on Beijing than the Democrats.

Republicans are also putting pressure on Democrats as US President Joe Biden negotiates a long-term security arrangement for the app to keep operating under Chinese ownership in the United States.

According to Politico, the Biden administration is divided over whether to force the Chinese owner of TikTok to divest from its US operations, casting doubt on the proposed compromise.

(Y.Yildiz--BBZ)