Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Social Media
  3. News

U.S. government launches national security investigation into TikTok

Add as a preferred source on Google

The U.S. government launched a national security investigation into the popular app TikTok on Friday — looking expressly into the Chinese company’s acquisition of the app Musical.ly. TikTok purchased the company for $1 billion roughly two years ago.

The Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States (CFIUS) is reportedly investigating the deal now in part because TikTok did not seek clearance from CFIUS when it acquired the company. CFIUS reviews are confidential.

Recommended Videos

In October, TikTok came under fire for hosting ISIS propaganda videos on the platform. On October 21, reports indicated that the service removed around two dozen accounts from the platform for posting extremist propaganda.

TikTok
Its parent company, Bytedance, was also accused by lawmakers of censoring content on the platform at the request of the Chinese government. We’ve reached out to TikTok for comment and will update this story if we hear back.

In July, TikTok was also investigated by the U.K. government for how it handles personal information of children that use the platform. They examined in particular how it collects, handles, and uses that data.

Lawmakers in the U.K. were directly concerned with the open messaging system on the platform that can allow adults to contact children. The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) had similar concerns that the platform was not getting the correct consent prior to allowing children under 13 to use it.

“We are looking at the transparency tools for children,” Elizabeth Denham, head of the Information Commissioner’s Office (ICO) in the United Kingdom, said in July. “We’re looking at the messaging system, which is completely open, we’re looking at the kind of videos that are collected and shared by children online. So we do have an active investigation into TikTok right now, so you can watch that space.”

TikTok has a particularly young user base. Earlier this year it indicated that roughly 60% of its 26.5 million monthly active users in the United States are between the ages of 16 and 24.

In addition to TikTok, ByteDance also owns China’s most popular news aggregator, Jinri Toutiao. The app is financially backed by Japan’s Softbank, as well as venture capitalist and private equity firms Sequoia Capital, KKR, General Atlantic, and Hillhouse Capital.

Emily Price
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Emily is a freelance writer based in San Francisco. Her book "Productivity Hacks: 500+ Easy Ways to Accomplish More at…
Meta is testing an AI bot to unleash the same online stupidity that is AskGrok on X
Threads is getting its own version of AskGrok, and it is already controversial.
meta-ai-chatbot-threads

If you have ever been on X and watched someone tag Grok under a viral post asking "is this real???" – congratulations, Threads is about to give you the exact same experience.

Meta is testing a new feature that gives its AI chatbot a dedicated Threads account, @meta.ai, that users can tag directly inside posts and replies. The bot will then respond publicly with added context, recommendations, or information on whatever is being discussed.

Read more
You can’t block Meta’s AI bot on Threads. I don’t know what we did to deserve this.
Meta's new Threads AI chatbot cannot be blocked, and users are furious about losing basic control over their own feeds.
A verified account on Instagram Threads.

Meta rolled out its AI chatbot on Threads this week, and it comes with a catch you didn't agree to.

The new @meta.ai account, reported by Engadget, works a lot like Grok on X. You can tag it in a conversation, and it jumps in with answers about trending topics, live sports, entertainment, or breaking news.

Read more
Instagram’s new Instants tool is a brazen copycat of Snapchat and BeReal, but at least it keeps things real
Instagram launched Instants, a disappearing photo feature inspired by Snapchat and BeReal.
instagram-instants-app

Instagram has never been shy about borrowing ideas, and its latest move makes that clearer than ever. The platform just globally launched Instants, a new feature that lets you share disappearing, unedited photos with your Close Friends or mutual followers.

The standalone Instants app is now available on iOS and Android, which opens directly to the camera when you log in with your Instagram account.

Read more