By contrast, the same search on popular video platform TikTok yields
just a handful of videos on the unrest, sparking suspicion the
Chinese-owned app may be censoring the protests, according to a report
from the Washington Post.
TikTok, developed in 2016 by Chinese
technology startup ByteDance, has enjoyed a meteoric rise. The viral
video app was downloaded over 1 billion times globally last year,
surpassing both Facebook and Instagram in the number of installs,
according to analytics site Sensor Tower.
TikTok has said it
follows the same content moderation guidelines as other apps in the
U.S., but it has not disclosed how it regulates its content, CNET senior
producer Dan Patterson told CBSN. "There's a lot of opacity as to what
they are filtering and how they are filtering it," he said.
According
to Patterson, TikTok must adhere to the same censorship laws governing
other Chinese social media companies, like WeChat or Baidu.
t's
not the first time a wildly popular app from a country other than the
U.S. has sparked privacy concerns. When Russian-owned FaceApp went viral
this summer, it raised concerns that people using filters to alter
their faces to look older were effectively handing their photos to the
company, which can be used to further train FaceApp's machine-learning
software.
That raises similar concerns that TikTok parent
ByteDance, the largest startup in the world with a valuation of $75
billion, can use its immense capital and vast amounts of harvested data
to apply artificial intelligence at large scales, according to
Patterson.
"When we think about privacy and we think about security, we have to think also about capability," Patterson said.
He added: "They are certainly doing interesting things with your face data and artificial intelligence."