黑料社区

Saudi TikTok users weigh in on potential app ban

Saudi TikTok users weigh in on potential app ban
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Saudi TikTok users weigh in on potential app ban
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Updated 12 July 2020

Saudi TikTok users weigh in on potential app ban

Saudi TikTok users weigh in on potential app ban
  • Due to pandemic, interest in the app skyrocketed as many users watch videos and try to recreate them while in quarantine

RIYADH: Chinese video platform TikTok is under fire once again, as rumors of the app being a tool used by the Chinese government to spy on users resurface online.

TikTok, owned by Chinese company ByteDance, is a video-sharing site similar to the now-defunct Vine, where users share short clips of themselves which can be altered using AI technology.
Lip-syncing along with a track, using filters, and adding special effects give users the chance to create short clips that can be shared and downloaded in several social media platforms.
Due to the coronavirus pandemic, interest in the app skyrocketed as many users downloaded TikTok to watch videos and try to recreate them while in quarantine. The app has also gained significant popularity in the Middle East with influencers such as Saudi model Roz, UAE-based content creators Khalid and Salama, and Saudi top TikToker iimeeto, who recently celebrated reaching four million followers on the platform.
Rania Mohammed, a fourth year medical student at Dar AlUloom University in Riyadh, said that TikTok was 鈥渢he only thing keeping her sane鈥 as she struggled with the pressures of school and quarantine.
鈥淎s a med school student, my attention span and free time are both severely limited,鈥 she told Arab News. 鈥淭aking a 15 minute break to watch silly TikToks has helped me keep motivated. The specific brand of humor on that app is the fastest way to make me laugh.鈥
Mai Alhumood, a government employee, said that she downloaded the app while she was bored and became 鈥渜uickly addicted鈥 to the platform鈥檚 fun short videos.
鈥淧eople are so creative on TikTok, and the challenges that keep going viral are so interesting,鈥 she told Arab News.
However, the app has long-suffered from accusations of spying and gathering users鈥 private information on behalf of the Chinese government, leading to both temporary and permanent bans in countries around the world.
Recently, it was reported that Amazon requested that employees remove the app from their smartphones in an email over 鈥渟ecurity risks.鈥 The company later retracted its directive.
Saudi cybersecurity expert Abdullah Al-Jaber believed that concerns over the security of TikTok鈥檚 collected data stemmed from the app鈥檚 country of origin and its rules and regulations.

HIGHLIGHTS

鈥 Following a provisional ban in April 2019, India鈥檚 Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology banned TikTok permanently in June this year, along with 58 other Chinese apps. The ministry claimed that the apps were a 鈥榯hreat to the sovereignty and security of the country鈥 following a Himalayan border clash with Chinese troops in the disputed territory of Ladakh.

鈥 Indonesia temporarily blocked TikTok in July 2018, citing public concern regarding 鈥榠llegal content鈥 such as pornography and blasphemy. However, the app was unblocked following various changes from TikTok such as the opening of a government liaison office and implementing security mechanisms.

鈥 Recently, the US became the third country to seriously consider banning the app, according to information from President Donald Trump鈥檚 administration. Trump also weighed in on a potential TikTok ban. He said that banning the app would be 鈥榩unishing China for its response to the coronavirus.鈥

鈥淭ikTok collects data in a very similar way to US applications,鈥 he told Arab News. 鈥淗owever the main concern is that the US has regulations and compliance that must be met when collecting customer data, such as GDPR data privacy regulation. In the case of TikTok, we don鈥檛 know as much about how the data is being used or stored because we don鈥檛 know their regulations.鈥
Following a provisional ban in April 2019, India鈥檚 Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology banned TikTok permanently in June this year, along with 58 other Chinese apps. The ministry claimed that the apps were a 鈥渢hreat to the sovereignty and security of the country鈥 following a Himalayan border clash with Chinese troops in the disputed territory of Ladakh.
Indonesia temporarily blocked TikTok in July 2018, citing public concern regarding 鈥渋llegal content鈥 such as pornography and blasphemy. However, the app was unblocked following various changes from TikTok such as the opening of a government liaison office and implementing security mechanisms.
Recently, the US became the third country to seriously consider banning the app, according to information from President Donald Trump鈥檚 administration.
Trump also weighed in on a potential TikTok ban. In an interview with Gray Television, Trump said that banning the app would be 鈥減unishing China for its response to the coronavirus.鈥
鈥淟ook, what happened with China with this virus, what they鈥檝e done to this country and to the entire world is disgraceful,鈥 he said.
While 黑料社区 has yet to announce a ban of any kind of TikTok, local users and followers are trying to practice caution while using the app anyway.
Alhumood considered making videos on the platform, but dismissed the idea and only uses it to follow other people鈥檚 videos.
鈥淚 have ideas for it, sure, but I鈥檇 rather not take the risk. I don鈥檛 even have a username or a registered account, and that鈥檚 one of the better things about TikTok. I only have the app, but I can still watch all the videos without giving them my private information.鈥
Mohammed also said that she had no interest in creating videos herself, though she did have a registered account in order to comment on videos and keep track of her favorites.
However Al-Jaber said that, in his opinion, registering an account on TikTok did not necessarily pose more of a risk than using other social media.
鈥淚f you use Facebook or Twitter, it鈥檚 not much different than using TikTok,鈥 he said.