Hubbry Logo
TikTokTikTokMain
Open search
TikTok
Community hub
TikTok
logo
8 pages, 0 posts
0 subscribers
Be the first to start a discussion here.
Be the first to start a discussion here.
TikTok
TikTok
from Wikipedia

TikTok Pte. Ltd.
DeveloperByteDance
Initial releaseSeptember 2016; 9 years ago (2016-09)
Operating system
Predecessor
Available in41 languages[1]
List of languages
Type
LicenseProprietary
Websitetiktok.com Edit this at Wikidata
Douyin
DevelopersBeijing Douyin Technology Co., Ltd.
Initial release20 September 2016; 9 years ago (2016-09-20)
Operating system
Available inSimplified Chinese, English[2]
TypeVideo sharing
LicenseProprietary
Websitedouyin.com
Douyin
Chinese抖音
Literal meaning"Vibrating sound"
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinDǒuyīn
Bopomofoㄉㄡˇ ㄧㄣ
Gwoyeu RomatzyhDoouin
Wade–GilesTou3-yin1
Tongyong PinyinDǒu-yin
IPA[tòʊ.ín]
Yue: Cantonese
Yale RomanizationDáuyām
Jyutpingdau2 jam1
IPA[tɐw˧˥ jɐm˥]

TikTok, known in mainland China and Hong Kong[3] as Douyin (Chinese: 抖音; pinyin: Dǒuyīn; lit. 'Shaking Sound'),[4] is a social media and short-form online video platform owned by Chinese Internet company ByteDance. It hosts user-submitted videos, which range in duration from three seconds to 60 minutes.[5] It can be accessed through a mobile app or through its website.

Since its launch, TikTok has become one of the world's most popular social media platforms, using recommendation algorithms to connect content creators and influencers with new audiences.[6] In April 2020, TikTok surpassed two billion mobile downloads worldwide.[7] Cloudflare ranked TikTok the most popular website of 2021, surpassing Google.[8] The popularity of TikTok has allowed viral trends in food, fashion, and music to take off and increase the platform's cultural impact worldwide.[9][10]

TikTok has come under scrutiny due to data privacy violations, mental health concerns, misinformation, offensive content, and its role during the Gaza war.[11][12] While TikTok remains accessible to users in most countries, a minority of countries (including India and Afghanistan) have implemented full or partial bans. Many other countries limit TikTok's use on government-issued devices for security or privacy reasons.[11][13]

Corporate structure

[edit]

TikTok Ltd was incorporated in the Cayman Islands in the Caribbean and is based in both Singapore and Los Angeles.[14] It owns four entities which are based respectively in the United States, Australia (which also runs the New Zealand business), United Kingdom (also owns subsidiaries in the European Union), and Singapore (owns operations in Southeast Asia and India).[15][16]

Its parent company, Beijing-based ByteDance, is owned by founders and Chinese investors, other global investors, and employees.[17] One of ByteDance's main domestic subsidiaries is owned by Chinese state funds and entities through a 1% golden share.[18][19][20] Employees have reported that multiple overlaps exist between TikTok and ByteDance in terms of personnel management and product development.[21][22][23][24] TikTok says that since 2020, its US-based CEO is responsible for making important decisions, and has downplayed its China connection.[24]

History

[edit]

Douyin

[edit]

Douyin was launched on September 20, 2016, by ByteDance, originally under the name A.me, before changing its name to Douyin (抖音) in December 2016.[25][26] Douyin was developed in 200 days and within a year had 100 million users, with more than one billion videos viewed every day.[27][28]

While TikTok and Douyin share a similar user interface, the platforms operate separately.[29][4][30] Douyin includes an in-video search feature that can search by people's faces for more videos of them, along with other features such as buying, booking hotels, and making geo-tagged reviews.[31]

TikTok

[edit]

ByteDance planned on Douyin expanding overseas. The founder of ByteDance, Zhang Yiming, stated that "China is home to only one-fifth of Internet users globally. If we don't expand on a global scale, we are bound to lose to peers eyeing the four-fifths. So, going global is a must."[32]

ByteDance created TikTok as an overseas version of Douyin. TikTok was launched in the international market in September 2017.[33] On 9 November 2017, ByteDance spent nearly $1 billion to purchase Musical.ly, a startup headquartered in Shanghai with an overseas office in Santa Monica, California.[34][35] Musical.ly was a social media video platform that allowed users to create short lip-sync and comedy videos, initially released in August 2014. TikTok merged with Musical.ly on 2 August 2018 with existing accounts and data consolidated into one app, keeping the title TikTok.[36][35][37][38]

On 23 January 2018, the TikTok app ranked first among free application downloads on app stores in Thailand and other countries.[39] TikTok has been downloaded more than 130 million times in the United States and has reached 2 billion downloads worldwide,[7] according to data from mobile research firm Sensor Tower (those numbers exclude Android users in China).[40]

In the United States, Jimmy Fallon, Tony Hawk, and other celebrities began using the app in 2018.[41][42] Other celebrities like Jennifer Lopez, Jessica Alba, Will Smith, and Justin Bieber joined TikTok.[43] In January 2019, TikTok allowed creators to embed merchandise sale links into their videos.[44] On 3 September 2019, TikTok and the U.S. National Football League (NFL) announced a multi-year partnership.[45] The agreement came just two days before the NFL's 100th season kick-off at Soldier Field in Chicago where TikTok hosted activities for fans in honor of the deal. The partnership entails the launch of an official NFL TikTok account, which is to bring about new marketing opportunities such as sponsored videos and hashtag challenges. In July 2020, TikTok, excluding Douyin, reported close to 800 million monthly active users worldwide after less than four years of existence.[46]

In May 2021, TikTok appointed Shou Zi Chew as their new CEO[47] who assumed the position from interim CEO Vanessa Pappas, following the resignation of Kevin A. Mayer on 27 August 2020.[48][49][50] In September 2021, TikTok reported that it had reached 1 billion users.[51] In 2021, TikTok earned $4 billion in advertising revenue.[52]

In October 2022, TikTok was reported to be planning an expansion into the e-commerce market in the US, following the launch of TikTok Shop in the United Kingdom. The company posted job listings for staff for a series of order fulfillment centers in the U.S. and is reportedly planning to start the new live shopping business before the end of the year.[53] The Financial Times reported that TikTok will launch a video gaming channel, but the report was denied in a statement to Digiday, with TikTok instead aiming to be a social hub for the gaming community.[54][55] According to data from app analytics group Sensor Tower, advertising on TikTok in the U.S. grew by 11% in March 2023, with companies including Pepsi, DoorDash, Amazon, and Apple among the top spenders. According to estimates from research group Insider Intelligence, TikTok is projected to generate $14.15 billion in revenue in 2023, up from $9.89 billion in 2022.[56] In March 2024, The Wall Street Journal reported that TikTok's growth in the U.S. had stagnated.[57]

Since at least 2020, following calls to ban TikTok in the country, the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States (CFIUS) has been investigating the company's 2017 merger with Musical.ly but has not finalized any of its negotiations with TikTok, such as the Project Texas proposal, waiting instead for Congress to act.[58]

In January 2025, Chinese officials began preliminary talks about potentially selling TikTok's U.S. operations to Elon Musk if the app faced an impending ban due to national security concerns. While Beijing preferred TikTok remain under ByteDance's control, the sale could happen through a competitive process or with U.S. government involvement. One possibility involved Musk's platform, X, taking over TikTok's U.S. business. The move came ahead of a Supreme Court case that upheld the constitutionality of a law that would force a sale or ban of TikTok in the U.S. by 19 January 2025, due to national security concerns regarding its ties to China.[59][60] Other potential buyers included Project Liberty's "The People's Bid For TikTok" consortium[61] of billionaire real estate mogul Frank McCourt with Shark Tank investor Kevin O'Leary; former Trump Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin; YouTuber Jimmy Donaldson (MrBeast)[62] and former Activision Blizzard CEO Bobby Kotick; the seriousness of these potential buyers was unclear.[63] The day before the impending ban, California-based conversational search engine company Perplexity AI submitted a bid for a merger with TikTok US.[64][65][66][67]

On September 14, 2025, the Wall Street Journal reported the US and China have reached the "framework of a deal" for the US operations of TikTok to be sold to a consortium of investors in the US including Larry Ellison of Oracle.[68] The deal is expected to be confirmed by President Trump and Party Chair Xi Jinping and was part of broader tariff discussions.[69]

Expansion in other markets

[edit]
TikTok headquarters in Culver City, California, June 2024
  •   TikTok available
  •   TikTok available, but under a de jure ban
  •   TikTok available, but under a de facto ban
  •   TikTok unavailable

TikTok was downloaded over 104 million times on Apple's App Store during the first half of 2018, according to data provided to CNBC by Sensor Tower.[70]

After merging with musical.ly in August, downloads increased and TikTok became the most downloaded app in the U.S. in October 2018, which musical.ly had done once before.[27] In February 2019, TikTok, together with Douyin, hit one billion downloads globally, excluding Android installs in China.[71] In 2019, media outlets cited TikTok as the 7th-most-downloaded mobile app of the decade, from 2010 to 2019.[72] It was also the most-downloaded app on Apple's App Store in 2018 and 2019, surpassing Facebook, YouTube and Instagram.[70][73] In September 2020, a deal was confirmed between ByteDance and Oracle in which the latter will serve as a partner to provide cloud hosting.[74][75] In November 2020, TikTok signed a licensing deal with Sony Music.[76] In December 2020, Warner Music Group signed a licensing deal with TikTok.[77][78]

The advertising revenue of short video clips is lower than other social media: while users spend more time, American audience is monetized at a rate of $0.31 per hour, a third the rate of Facebook and a fifth the rate of Instagram, $67 per year while Instagram will make more than $200.[79] In July 2023, Iranian Mehr News Agency reported "experts from Douyin" will meet Iranian business in Tehran to enable Iranian exports to China.[80]

In 2023, several high-level executives transferred from ByteDance to TikTok to focus on moneymaking operations. Some moved from Beijing to the US. According to sources for The Wall Street Journal, the personnel move led to concerns from some TikTok employees and was reported to the office of U.S. Senator Ted Cruz for further investigation.[81][82] In December 2023, TikTok invested $1.5 billion in GoTo's Indonesian e-commerce business, Tokopedia.[83] In March 2024, The Information reported that it is an open secret among investors that TikTok loses billions of dollars annually.[84]

Competition with other platforms

[edit]

Although the size of its user base falls short of that of Facebook, Instagram, or YouTube, TikTok reached 1 billion active monthly users faster than any of them.[85] Competition from TikTok prompted Instagram, which is owned by Facebook, to spend $120 million as of 2022 to entice more content creators to its Reels service, although engagement level remained low.[86] Snapchat had likewise paid out $250 million in 2021 to its creators.[87] Many platforms and services, including YouTube Shorts, began to imitate TikTok's format and recommendation page. Those changes caused a backlash from users of Instagram, Spotify, and Twitter.[85]

In March 2022, The Washington Post reported that Facebook's owner Meta Platforms paid Targeted Victory—a consulting firm backed by supporters of the U.S. Republican Party—to coordinate lobbying and media campaigns against TikTok and portray it as "a danger to American children and society". Its efforts included asking local reporters to serve as "back channels" of anti-TikTok messages, writing opinion articles and letters to the editor, including one in the name of a concerned parent, amplifying stories about TikTok trends, such as "devious licks" and "Slap a Teacher", that actually originated on Facebook, and promoting Facebook's own corporate initiatives. Ties to Meta were not disclosed to the other parties involved. Targeted Victory said that it is "proud of the work". A Meta spokesperson said that all platforms, including TikTok, should face scrutiny.[88]

The Wall Street Journal reported that Silicon Valley executives met with U.S. lawmakers to build an "anti-China alliance" before TikTok CEO's congressional hearing in March 2023.[89][90]

TikTok Notes

[edit]

In April 2024, TikTok users started receiving notifications that their current and future picture posts would be shown on a new app called TikTok Notes. The app is not released yet; however, TikTok confirmed it is being worked on. TikTok Notes will be a direct competitor to Instagram for photo sharing. Jasmine Enberg, a principal social media analyst at eMarketer, observes that launching Notes as a separate app, instead of as a new feature in TikTok, may be done in response to regulatory and consumer scrutiny.[91][92] On 18 April 2024, Notes first released to users in Canada and Australia for limited testing.[93] On 1 April 2025, it was announced that Notes would be shut down on 8 May.[94] It went defunct on May 8, 2025.

Features

[edit]

The mobile app allows users to create short videos, which often feature music in the background and can be sped up, slowed down, or edited with a filter. They can also add their own sound on top of the background music. To create a music video with the app, users can choose background music from a wide variety of music genres, edit with a filter and record a 15-second video with speed adjustments before uploading it to share with others on TikTok or other social platforms.[95] The "For You" page on TikTok is a feed of videos that are recommended to users based on their activity on the app. Content is curated by TikTok's artificial intelligence depending on the content a user liked, interacted with, or searched. This helps users find new content and creators reach new audiences, in contrast to other social networks that base recommendations on the interactions and relationships between users.[96][6]

TikTok's algorithm, recognized by The New York Times in 2020 as one of the most advanced for shaping user experiences and social interactions,[97] stands out from traditional social media. While typical platforms focus on active user actions like likes, clicks, or follows, TikTok monitors a wider array of behaviors during video viewing. This comprehensive observation is then used to refine its algorithms, as noted by Wired in 2020.[98] Furthermore, The Wall Street Journal in 2021 highlighted its superiority over other social media platforms in understanding users' preferences and emotions. TikTok's algorithm leverages this insight to present similar content, creating an environment that users often find hard to disengage from.[99]

The app's "react" feature allows users to film their reaction to a specific video, over which it is placed in a small window that is movable around the screen.[100] Its "duet" feature allows users to film a video aside from another video.[101] The "duet" feature was another trademark of musical.ly. The duet feature is also only able to be used if both parties adjust the privacy settings.[102]

Videos that users do not want to post yet can be stored in their "drafts". The user is allowed to see their "drafts" and post when they find it fitting.[103]

The app allows users to set their accounts as "private". When first downloading the app, the user's account is public by default. The user can change to private in their settings. Private content remains visible to TikTok but is blocked from TikTok users who the account holder has not authorized to view their content.[104] Users can choose whether any other user, or only their "friends", may interact with them through the app via comments, messages, or "react" or "duet" videos.[100] Users also can set specific videos to either "public", "friends only", or "private" regardless if the account is private or not.[104]

Users may send their friends videos, emojis, and messages with direct messaging. TikTok has also included a feature to create a video based on the user's comments. Influencers often use the "live" feature. This feature is only available for those who have at least 1,000 followers and are over 16 years old. If over 18, the user's followers can send virtual "gifts" that can be later exchanged for money.[105][106]

TikTok announced a "family safety mode" in February 2020 for parents to be able to control their children's presence on the app. There is a screen time management option, restricted mode, and the option to put a limit on direct messages.[107] The app expanded its parental controls feature called "Family Pairing" in September 2020 to provide parents and guardians with educational resources to understand what children on TikTok are exposed to. Content for the feature was created in partnership with online safety nonprofit, Internet Matters.[108]

In October 2021, TikTok launched a test feature that allows users to directly tip certain creators. Accounts of users that are of age, have at least 100,000 followers and agree to the terms can activate a "Tip" button on their profile, which allows followers to tip any amount, starting from $1.[109] In December 2021, TikTok started beta-testing Live Studio, a streaming software that would let users broadcast applications open on their computers, including games. The software also launched with support for mobile and PC streaming.[110] However, a few days later, users on Twitter discovered that the software uses code from the open-source OBS Studio. OBS made a statement saying that, under the GNU GPL version 2, TikTok has to make the code of Live Studio publicly available if it wants to use any code from OBS.[111]

In May 2022, TikTok announced TikTok Pulse, an ad revenue-sharing program. It covers the "top 4% of all videos on TikTok" and is only available to creators with more than 100,000 followers. If an eligible creator's video reaches the top 4%, they will receive a 50% share of the revenue from ads displayed with the video.[112] In July 2023, TikTok launched a new streaming service called TikTok Music, currently available only in Brazil and Indonesia.[113] This service allows users to listen to, download and share songs.[113] It is reported that TikTok Music features songs from major record companies like Universal Music Group, Sony Music and Warner Music Group.[113] On 19 July 2023, TikTok Music was expanded for select users in Australia, Mexico and Singapore.[114]

After a dispute with TikTok regarding payouts for artists and regulation of AI-generated music content on the platform, Universal Music Group decided not to renew its licensing agreement with TikTok, causing its catalogue of 3 million recordings to become unavailable for usage after 31 January 2024.[115] This marked the company's first instance of withdrawing its music from a major platform, in contrast to Warner Music, which had recently renewed its own licensing deal with TikTok.[116] In March 2024, Universal Music Publishing Group removed its catalogue of 4 million compositions from TikTok.[117] In April 2024, Taylor Swift's music returned to the platform.[118]

Content

[edit]
[edit]

The app has spawned numerous viral trends, Internet celebrities, and music trends around the world.[119] Duets, a feature that allows users to add their own video to an existing video with the original content's audio, have sparked many of these trends.[120] Many stars got their start on musical.ly, which merged with TikTok on 2 August 2018. These include Loren Gray, Baby Ariel, Zach King, Lisa and Lena, Jacob Sartorius, and many others. Loren Gray remained the most-followed individual on TikTok until Charli D'Amelio surpassed her on 25 March 2020. Gray's was the first TikTok account to reach 40 million followers on the platform. She was surpassed with 41.3 million followers. D'Amelio was the first to ever reach 50, 60, and 70 million followers. Charli D'Amelio remained the most-followed individual on the platform until she was surpassed by Khaby Lame on 23 June 2022. Other creators rose to fame after the platform merged with musical.ly on 2 August 2018.[121] TikTok also played a major part in making "Old Town Road" by Lil Nas X one of the biggest songs of 2019 and the longest-running number-one song in the history of the U.S. Billboard Hot 100.[122][123][124]

TikTok has allowed many music artists to gain a wider audience, often including foreign fans. For example, despite never having toured in Asia, the band Fitz and the Tantrums developed a large following in South Korea following the widespread popularity of their 2016 song "HandClap" on the platform.[125] "Any Song" by R&B and rap artist Zico became number one on the Korean music charts due to the popularity of the #anysongchallenge, where users dance to the choreography of the song.[126] The platform has also launched many songs that failed to garner initial commercial success into sleeper hits, particularly since the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic.[127][128] However, it has received criticism for not paying royalties to artists whose music is used on the platform.[129]

Classic stars are able to connect with younger audiences born decades after a musician's first debut and across traditional genres. In 2020, Fleetwood Mac's "Dreams" was used in a skating video and a recreation by Mick Fleetwood. The song re-entered Billboard Hot 100 after 43 years and topped Apple Music. In 2022, Kate Bush's "Running Up That Hill" went viral among fans of Stranger Things, topping the UK singles chart 37 years after its original release. In 2023 Kylie Minogue's "Padam Padam" entered the Radio 1 playlist after being shared by Gen Z, even though many youth radio stations had refused to play it. Other older artists with strong engagement on TikTok include Elton John and Rod Stewart.[130] In Japan, artists from the 1970s to 1990s, such as Kohmi Hirose, Yōko Oginome, Akina Nakamori, Seiko Matsuda, Momoe Yamaguchi and Saki Kubota, have become popular on TikTok during the Showa (and early Heisei) retro boom.[131][132][133][134]

In June 2020, TikTok users and K-pop fans "claimed to have registered potentially hundreds of thousands of tickets" for President Trump's campaign rally in Tulsa, Oklahoma through communication on TikTok,[135] contributing to "rows of empty seats"[136] at the event. Later, in October 2020, an organization called TikTok for Biden was created to support then-presidential candidate Joe Biden.[137] After the election, the organization was renamed to Gen-Z for Change.[138][139]

On 10 August 2020, Emily Jacobssen wrote and sang "Ode to Remy", a song praising the protagonist from Pixar's 2007 computer-animated film Ratatouille. The song rose to popularity when musician Daniel Mertzlufft composed a backing track to the song. In response, began creating a "crowdsourced" project called Ratatouille the Musical. Since Mertzlufft's video, many new elements including costume design, additional songs, and a playbill have been created.[140] On 1 January 2021, a full one-hour virtual presentation of Ratatouille the Musical premiered on TodayTix. It starred Titus Burgess as Remy, Wayne Brady as Django, Adam Lambert as Emile, Kevin Chamberlin as Gusteau, Andrew Barth Feldman as Linguini, Ashley Park as Colette, Priscilla Lopez as Mabel, Mary Testa as Skinner, and André De Shields as Ego.

A viral TikTok trend known as "devious licks" involves students vandalizing or stealing school property and posting videos of the action on the platform. The trend has led to increasing school vandalism and subsequent measures taken by some schools to prevent damage. Some students have been arrested for participating in the trend.[141][142] TikTok has taken measures to remove and prevent access to content displaying the trend.[143] Another TikTok trend known as the Kia Challenge involves users stealing certain models of Kia and Hyundai cars manufactured without immobilizers, which was a standard feature at the time, between 2010 and 2021.[144] As of February 2023, it had resulted in at least 14 crashes and eight deaths according to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration.[145] In May, Kia and Hyundai settled a $200-million class-action lawsuit by agreeing to provide software updates to affected vehicles and over 26,000 steering wheel locks.[146] In 2023, a trend emerged where streamers acted as if they were video-game characters following prompts from their viewers.[147]

On Douyin, the Chinese version of TikTok, some celebrities who had garnered large followings as of August 2019 include Dilraba Dilmurat, Angelababy, Luo Zhixiang, Ouyang Nana, and Pan Changjiang.[148] In the 2022 FIFA World Cup, a Qatari teenage royal became an Internet celebrity after his angry expressions were recorded in Qatar's opening match loss to Ecuador;[149] he amassed more than 15 million followers in less than a week after creating a Douyin account.[150]

Food and recipes

[edit]

TikTok food trends refer to popular recipes and food-related fads on the social media platform TikTok.[151] These trends amassed popularity in 2020 during the COVID-19 pandemic, as many people spent more time cooking at home while engaging with social media for entertainment.[151]

Food-related content on TikTok is often categorized under the hashtags #TikTokFood and #FoodTok.[151] These hashtags have amassed 4.6 million and 4.5 million posts, respectively, according to the platform. Some TikTok users share personal recipes and dietary habits, while others use step-by-step cooking videos to grow their online presence.[152]

The widespread popularity of these trends has influenced various aspects of society, including interest in cooking among younger generations, discussions about body image, the marketing of food products on social media, and temporary food shortages.[152][153][154][155]

Several TikTok content creators, such as Eitan Bernath, Jeron Combs, and Emily Mariko, have gained recognition through their recipes and content. Some of the most notable TikTok food trends include the leftover salmon bowl, baked feta cheese pasta, and pesto eggs.[156][157][158]

Fashion and body size

[edit]

"Midsize" fashion gained greater exposure on TikTok after many creators opened up about not able to find clothing sizes that fit them well. Women's apparel can roughly be divided into petite, straight, and plus sizes, leaving gaps in between. Realistic videos about how differently pieces of garment fit on a model compared to how they fit on a typical consumer resonated with many who had believed that they were alone in their struggle.[159][160][161]

Cosmetic surgery

[edit]

Content promoting cosmetic surgery is popular on TikTok and has spawned several viral trends on the platform. In December 2021, Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, the journal of the American Society of Plastic Surgeons, published an article about the popularity of some plastic surgeons on TikTok. In the article, it was noted that plastic surgeons were some of the earliest adopters of social media in the medical field and many had been recognized as influencers on the platform. The article published stats about the most popular plastic surgeons on TikTok up to February 2021 and at the time, five different plastic surgeons had surpassed 1 million followers on the platform.[162][163]

In 2021, it was reported that a trend known as the #NoseJobCheck trend was going viral on TikTok. TikTok content creators used a specific audio on their videos while showing how their noses looked before and after having their rhinoplasty surgeries. By January 2021, the hashtag #nosejob had accumulated 1.6 billion views, #nosejobcheck had accumulated 1 billion views, and the audio used in the #NoseJobCheck trend had been used in 120,000 videos.[164] In 2020, Charli D'Amelio, the most-followed person on TikTok at the time, also made a #NoseJobCheck video to show the results of her surgery to repair a broken nose.[165] In April 2022, NBC News reported that surgeons were giving influencers on the platform discounted or free cosmetic surgeries in order to advertise the procedures to their audiences. They also reported that facilities that offered these surgeries were also posting about them on TikTok. TikTok has banned the advertising of cosmetic surgeries on the platform but cosmetic surgeons are still able to reach large audiences using unpaid photo and video posts. NBC reported that videos using the hashtags '#plasticsurgery' and '#lipfiller' had amassed a combined 26 billion views on the platform.[166]

In December 2022, it was reported that a cosmetic surgery procedure known as buccal fat removal was going viral on the platform. The procedure involves surgically removing fat from the cheeks in order to give the face a slimmer and more chiseled appearance. Videos using hashtags related to buccal fat removal had collectively amassed over 180 million views. Some TikTok users criticized the trend for promoting an unobtainable beauty standard.[167][168][169]

Film criticism

[edit]

A significant number of users on TikTok, such as Juju Green, create content surrounding Film criticism and Easter eggs. However, as reported by The New York Times, these people often do not see themselves necessarily as film critics.[170] These creators would often attend red carpet premieres of movies and interview the celebrities in attendance, which was the subject of significant debate as some considered the questions the creators asked to be disrespectful.[171] By 2022, TikTok released a Showbiz List, highlighting individuals who were having a larger impact on the film industry.[172]

During the 2023 SAG-AFTRA strike, such influencers were told that they would be denied future entry into the union if they partnered with struck studios. This led many creators to stop creating new content which they were not already contractually obligated to create.[173] Creators who posted saying that they would not be changing their content, such as Green, were met with significant criticism.[174]

STEM feed

[edit]

In March 2023, TikTok introduced a dedicated feed for science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) content. It works with Common Sense Networks to check for safety and age appropriateness and with the Poynter Institute for reliability of information.[175][176]

Heating

[edit]

In January 2023, Forbes reported that a "heating" tool allows TikTok to manually promote certain videos, comprising 1–2% of daily views. The practice began as a way to grow and diversify content and influencers that were not automatically picked up by the recommendation algorithm. It was also used to promote brands, artists, and NGOs, such as the FIFA World Cup and Taylor Swift.[177] However, some employees have abused it to promote their own accounts or those of their spouses, while others have felt that their guidelines leave too much room for discretion. TikTok said only a few individuals can approve heating in the U.S. and the promoted videos take up less than 0.002% of user feeds. To address concerns of Chinese influence, the company is negotiating with the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States (CFIUS) such that future heating could only be performed by vetted security personnel in the U.S. and the process would be audited by third-parties such as Oracle.[178]

Censorship and moderation

[edit]

TikTok's and Douyin's censorship policies have been criticized as non-transparent. Internal guidelines against the promotion of violence, separatism, and "demonization of countries" could be used to prohibit content related to the 1989 Tiananmen Square protests and massacre, Falun Gong, human rights in Tibet, Taiwan, Chechnya, Northern Ireland, the Cambodian genocide, the 1998 Indonesian riots, Kurdish nationalism, ethnic conflicts between blacks and whites, or between different Islamic sects. A more specific list banned criticisms against world leaders, including past and present ones from Russia, the United States, Japan, North and South Korea, India, Indonesia, and Turkey.[179][180] In 2019, The Guardian reported that TikTok had censored videos of topics not favored by the Chinese government.[179] That year, TikTok took down a video about human rights abuses in the Xinjiang internment camps against Uyghurs but restored it after 50 minutes as well as the creator's account, saying that the action was a mistake and triggered by a brief "satirical" image of Osama bin Laden in another post.[181][182] Other human rights activists have also said that their TikTok videos discussing human rights violations of the Uyghurs have been taken down.[183]

TikTok moderators were instructed to suppress posts from "For You" recommendations if the users shown were deemed "too ugly, poor, or disabled".[184][185] The consumption of alcohol, full or partial nudity, LGBT, and intersex contents were restricted even in places where they are legal.[186] TikTok has since apologized and instituted a ban against anti-LGBTQ ideology, but censorship continues on Douyin due to regulations in China.[187][188] Douyin guidelines also forbid live broadcasting by unregistered foreigners, "feudal superstition", "money worship", smoking and drinking, competitive eating by the "already obese", "toxic" slime, "pornographic" ASMR such as ear-licking, and female anchors wearing revealing clothes.[180]

ByteDance said its early guidelines were global and aimed at reducing online harassment and divisiveness when its platforms were still growing. They have been replaced by versions customized by local teams for users in different regions.[189] A March 2021 study by the Citizen Lab found that TikTok did not censor searches politically but was inconclusive about whether posts are.[4][190] A 2023 paper by the Internet Governance Project at Georgia Institute of Technology concluded that TikTok is "not exporting censorship, either directly by blocking material, or indirectly via its recommendation algorithm."[191]

After increased scrutiny, TikTok said it is granting some outside experts access to the platform's anonymized data sets and protocols, including filters, keywords, criteria for heating, and source code.[192][193] A December 2023 study by the Network Contagion Research Institute (NCRI) found a "strong possibility that content on TikTok is either amplified or suppressed based on its alignment with the interests of the Chinese government."[194] According to its director, the NCRI is an independent non-profit research organization funded by Rutgers University, the British government, and private donors.[195] The New York Times commented that "[a]lready, there is evidence that China uses TikTok as a propaganda tool. Posts related to subjects that the Chinese government wants to suppress — like Hong Kong protests and Tibet — are strangely missing from the platform."[196] TikTok subsequently restricted the number of hashtags that can be searched under its Creative Center, saying it was "misused to draw inaccurate conclusions".[197][198]

A historian from the Cato Institute said that there were "basic errors" in the Rutgers University study and criticized the uncritical news coverage that followed. The study compares data from before TikTok even existed to show the app has fewer hashtags about historically sensitive topics, distorting the findings.[199][197]

In August 2024, the NCRI released a subsequent report based on user journey data from 24 accounts that they created across TikTok, Instagram, and YouTube.[195][200] By searching for four keywords—Uyghur, Xinjiang, Tibet, and Tiananmen, the researchers found that TikTok returned a higher percentage of positive, neutral, or irrelevant content related to human rights in China. For example, more than 25% of results for "Tiananmen" on TikTok were considered pro-China by the researchers, compared to 16% on Instagram and 8% on YouTube. In other cases, however, Instagram and YouTube showed higher rates of pro-China content than TikTok. For example, 50% of searches about "Uyghur" and "Xinjiang" on YouTube were considered positive, compared to less than 25% on TikTok. The researchers said this is because some YouTube accounts are linked to state actors.[195] According to their survey, people who use TikTok more than three hours daily are significantly more positive about China's human rights record compared to those who do not use the app. TikTok pushed back against the NCRI, saying that making "accounts that interact with the app in a prescribed manner" is not the same as the experience of real users and some of the events being compared happened before TikTok existed.[195]

Extremism and hate

[edit]

Concerns have been voiced regarding content relating to, and the promotion and spreading of, hate speech and far-right extremism, such as antisemitism, islamophobia, racism, and xenophobia. Some videos were shown to expressly promote Holocaust denial and told viewers to take up arms and fight in the name of white supremacy and the swastika.[201] As TikTok has gained popularity among young children,[202] and the popularity of extremist and hateful content is growing, calls for tighter restrictions on their flexible boundaries have been made. TikTok has since released tougher parental controls to filter out inappropriate content and to ensure they can provide sufficient protection and security.[203]

In October 2019, TikTok removed about two dozen accounts that were responsible for posting ISIL propaganda and execution videos on the app.[204][205] In Malaysia, TikTok is used by some users to engage in hate speech against race and religion especially mentioning the 13 May incident after the 2022 election. TikTok responded by taking down videos with content that violated their community guidelines.[206]

In March 2023, The Jewish Chronicle reported that TikTok still hosted videos that promoted the neo-Nazi propaganda film Europa: The Last Battle, despite having been alerted to the issue four months prior. TikTok said it removed and would continue to remove the content and associated accounts and has blocked the search term as well.[207] In July 2024, the Institute for Strategic Dialogue reported that an organized neo-Nazi TikTok network promoting neo-Nazi propaganda, including Europa: The Last Battle, was receiving millions of views and was having its content promoted by TikTok's algorithm.[208][209][210]

In September 2024, Sky News reported that clips of Adolf Hitler's speeches with added music were attracting high levels of engagement on TikTok. Although they were removed by TikTok after the report, mixing audio remains an effective way to evade content moderation on many platforms.[211]

In July 2025, Media Matters reported that Google's Veo 3 text-to-video model for AI-generated content is being used to generate large numbers of dehumanizing and violent videos with racist and antisemitic tropes which are being shared on TikTok.[212]

Graphic content

[edit]

In June 2021, TikTok made an apology after a shock video, showing a girl dancing which then cuts to a graphic scene of a man being beheaded by a saw, went viral. The video has been put on TikTok's blacklist, which detects it before being uploaded.[213] TikTok has previously worked to remove graphic content from its platform, including the suicide video that circulated in September 2020, which had appeared among the recommended clips of TikTok's For You section.[214][215]

Misinformation

[edit]

TikTok has banned Holocaust denial, but other conspiracy theories have become popular on the platform, such as Pizzagate and QAnon (two conspiracy theories popular among the U.S. alt-right) whose hashtags reached almost 80 million views and 50 million views respectively by June 2020.[216] The platform has also been used to spread misinformation about the COVID-19 pandemic, such as clips from Plandemic.[216] TikTok removed some of these videos and has generally added links to accurate COVID-19 information on videos with tags related to the pandemic.[217]

In January 2020, left-leaning media watchdog Media Matters for America said that TikTok hosted misinformation related to the COVID-19 pandemic despite a recent policy against misinformation.[218] In April 2020, the government of India asked TikTok to remove users posting misinformation related to the COVID-19 pandemic.[219] There were also multiple conspiracy theories that the government is involved with the spread of the pandemic.[220] It reported that in the second half of 2020, over 340,000 videos in the U.S. about election misinformation and 50,000 videos of COVID-19 misinformation were removed.[221]

To combat misinformation in the 2022 midterm election in the US, TikTok announced a midterms Elections Center available in-app to users in 40 different languages. TikTok partnered with the National Association of Secretaries of State to give accurate local information to users.[222] In September 2022, NewsGuard Technologies reported that among the TikTok searches it had conducted and analyzed from the U.S., 19.4% surfaced misinformation such as questionable or harmful content about COVID-19 vaccines, homemade remedies, the 2020 U.S. elections, the Russian invasion of Ukraine, the Robb Elementary School shooting, and abortion. NewsGuard suggested that in contrast, results from Google were of higher quality.[223] Mashable's own test from Australia found innocuous results after searching for "getting my COVID vaccine" but suggestions such as "climate change is a myth" after typing in "climate change".[221]

In November 2023, Singaporean Law and Home Affairs Minister K. Shanmugam applied for court orders requiring TikTok to provide information on the identity of three users that he accuses of spreading false and defamatory information about him. The users had shared on TikTok an article published by celebscritic.com alleging that K. Shanmugam was involved in an extra-marital affair.[224]

Russian invasion of Ukraine

[edit]

As of 2022, TikTok is the 10th most popular app in Russia.[225] After a new set of Russian war censorship laws was installed in March 2022, the company announced a series of restrictions on Russian and non-Russian posts and livestreams.[226][227] Tracking Exposed, a user data rights group, learned of what was likely a technical glitch that became exploited by pro-Russia posters. It stated that although this and other loopholes were patched by TikTok before the end of March, the initial failure to correctly implement the restrictions, in addition to the effects from Kremlin's "fake news" laws, contributed to the formation of a "splInternet ... dominated by pro-war content" in Russia.[228][225] TikTok said that it had removed 204 accounts for swaying public opinion about the war while obscuring their origins and that its fact checkers had removed 41,191 videos for violating its misinformation policies.[229][230]

In December 2023, BBC News reported that it had discovered nearly 800 fake TikTok accounts promoting Russian propaganda and disinformation. TikTok's own investigation found more than 12,000 fake accounts, including ones using additional languages such as English and Italian.[231]

In September 2024, TikTok removed the accounts of Russian state media outlets RT and Sputnik.[232]

Feminism

[edit]

The growth of popularity and access to TikTok has contributed to a growth in popularity of digital feminist movements and discourse originating from the platform.[233][234] Digital spaces like TikTok enable marginalized communities and activists, such as feminists, to feel safer and have an easier place to engage in discussion and dialogue or build an identity which might otherwise be impossible due to circumstances.[235] The momentum of digital feminist movements through platforms like TikTok have additionally encouraged many social media agents and marketing campaigns around the world to adopt some degree of feminism as a part of their online image or personal brand.[236] TikTok's unique platform organization, of spontaneous peer-peer information sharing, has enabled its utilization for community-engaged, digital knowledge mobilization and exchange between social justice communities.[237] However inversely enabled by the platform's organic potential, both feminist challenges and anti-feminist reinforcement of dominant social, hierarchical, and gender values are widespread and instigated through TikTok, and content labeled as anti-feminist is itself popularized on TikTok.[233]

Usage

[edit]

Demographics

[edit]

TikTok tends to appeal to younger users, as 41% of its users are between the ages of 16 and 24. As of 2021, these individuals are considered Generation Z.[96] Among these TikTok users, 90% said they used the app daily.[238] TikTok's geographical use in 2019 has shown that 43% of new users were from India before the social platform was banned in the country.[239] But adults have also seen growth on TikTok. The share of U.S. adults who regularly get news from TikTok hit 14% in 2023.[240]

By July 2023, TikTok has become the primary news source for British teenagers on social media, with 28% of 12 to 15-year-olds relying on the platform, while traditional sources like BBC One/Two are more trusted at 82%, according to a report by UK regulator Ofcom.[241] As of the first quarter of 2022, there were over 100 million monthly active users in the United States and 23 million in the UK. The average user, daily, was spending 1 hour and 25 minutes on the app and opening TikTok 17 times.[242] Out of TikTok's top 100 male creators, a 2022 analysis reported 67% were white, with 54% having near-perfect facial symmetry.[243]

Teenage mode

[edit]

China heavily regulates how Douyin is used by minors in the country, especially after 2018.[244] Under government pressure, ByteDance introduced parental controls and a "teenage mode" that shows only whitelisted content, such as knowledge sharing, and bans pranks, superstition, dance clubs, and pro-LGBT content.[a][187] A mandatory screen time limit was put in place for users under the age of 14 and a requirement to link accounts to a real identity to prevent minors from lying about their age or using an adult's account. The differences between Douyin and TikTok have led some U.S. politicians and commentators to accuse the company or the Chinese government of malicious intent.[244][245] In March 2023, TikTok announced default screen time limits for users under the age of 18. Those under the age of 13 would need a passcode from their parents to extend their time.[244]

Underage users

[edit]

As with other platforms popular with children, underage users may inadvertently reveal their daily routine and whereabouts, raising concerns of potential misuse by sexual predators.[246][247] At the time of reporting (2018), TikTok had only two privacy settings, either private or completely public, without any middle ground.[248] Comment sections of "sexy" videos, such as young girls dancing in revealing clothes, were found to contain requests for nude pictures. TikTok itself forbids direct messaging of videos and photos, which meant follow-up interactions, if any, would have to take place in some other form.[249][250] In recent years, the U.S. has charged and sentenced sexual predators for illegal activities on TikTok against underage girls.[251][252][253][254]

On 22 January 2021, the Italian Data Protection Authority demanded that TikTok temporarily suspend Italian users whose age could not be established.[255] The order came after the death of a 10-year-old Sicilian girl involved in an Internet challenge. TikTok asked its users in Italy to confirm again that they were over 13 years old. By May, over 500,000 accounts had been removed for failing the age check.[256]

In July 2021, the Dutch Data Protection Authority fined TikTok €750,000 for offering privacy statements only in English but not in Dutch. It noted that TikTok had implemented positive measures, such as forbidding direct messaging for users younger than 16 and allowing their parents to manage privacy settings directly through a paired family account, but the risk of children pretending to be older when creating their account remains.[257][258] TikTok raised the minimum age for livestreaming from 16 to 18 after a BBC News investigation found hundreds of accounts going live from Syrian refugee camps. Thirty of them showed children begging for digital donation. TikTok reportedly made as much as a 70% commission on some of them, a figure that the company disputed.[259]

In March 2024, the Italian Competition Authority fined TikTok €10 million for not protecting underage users adequately from harmful content such as the "French scar" challenge, which left heavy pinch marks on a person's cheeks.[260] On December 30, 2024, Venezuela's Supreme Court fined TikTok $10 million over viral challenges that authorities say led to the deaths of three children. The court cited TikTok's negligence in failing to implement "necessary and adequate measures" to prevent the viral video challenges.[261][262]

Influencer marketing

[edit]
The BookTok section at a Barnes & Noble store at The Grove at Farmers Market in Hollywood, February 2022

TikTok has provided a platform for users to create content not only for fun but also for money. As the platform has grown significantly over the past few years, it has allowed companies to advertise and rapidly reach their intended demographic through influencer marketing.[263] The platform's algorithm also contributes to the influencer marketing potential, as it picks out content according to the user's preference.[264] Sponsored content is not as prevalent on the platform as it is on other social media apps, but brands and influencers still can make as much as they would if not more in comparison to other platforms.[264] Influencers on the platform who earn money through engagement, such as likes and comments, are referred to as "meme machines".[263]

In 2021, The New York Times reported that viral TikTok videos by young people relating the emotional impact of books on them, tagged with the label "BookTok", significantly drove sales of literature. Publishers were increasingly using the platform as a venue for influencer marketing.[265]

In December 2022, NBC News reported in a television segment that some TikTok and YouTube influencers were being given free and discounted cosmetic surgeries in order for them to advertise the surgeries to users of the platforms.[266] In 2022, it was reported that a trend called "de-influencing" had become popular on the platform as a backlash to influencer marketing. TikTok creators participating in this trend made videos criticizing products promoted by influencers and asked their audiences not to buy products they did not need. However, some creators participating in the trend started promoting alternative products to their audiences and earning commission from sales made through their affiliate links in the same manner as the influencers they were originally criticizing.[267][268]

In June 2022, NBC News reported that some of the influencers paid by FeetFinder, a website that sells foot fetish content, did not disclose their videos were ads. FeetFinder said that it has suggested to influencers to be upfront about who was funding them. Existing sellers on FeetFinder said that the videos often misrepresented how "easy" it is to make money from posting feet pictures. Other TikTok creators have spoken out against accepting sponsorship deals indiscriminately and criticized those who posted undisclosed FeetFinder ads.[269]

Businesses

[edit]

In October 2020, the e-commerce platform Shopify added TikTok to its portfolio of social media platforms, allowing online merchants to sell their products directly to consumers on TikTok.[270] Some small businesses have used TikTok to advertise and to reach an audience wider than the geographical region they would normally serve. The viral response to many small business TikTok videos has been attributed to TikTok's algorithm, which shows content that viewers at large are drawn to, but which they are unlikely to actively search for (such as videos on unconventional types of businesses, like beekeeping and logging).[271]

In 2020, digital media companies such as Group Nine Media and Global used TikTok increasingly, focusing on tactics such as brokering partnerships with TikTok influencers and developing branded content campaigns.[272] Notable collaborations between larger brands and top TikTok influencers have included Chipotle's partnership with David Dobrik in May 2019[273] and Dunkin' Donuts' partnership with Charli D'Amelio in September 2020.[274]

Sex workers

[edit]

TikTok is regularly used by sex workers to promote pornographic content sold on platforms such as OnlyFans.[275] One porn actor posted a viral song referring to himself as an "accountant", starting a trend.[276] In 2020, TikTok updated their terms of service to ban content that promotes "premium sexual content", impacting a large number of adult content creators.[277] In response, they began substituting words in their captions and videos and using filters to censor explicit images.[278][279] Some adult content creators have found a way to game TikTok's recommendation algorithm by posting riddles, attracting a large number of viewers that struggled to solve them. This increased potential Web traffic linked to the riddle posters' accounts on OnlyFans.[280]

Political

[edit]
President Trump references TikTok helped him win the 2024 election, implications on tariffs with China and restrictions in the US, March 2025.

The Israeli Defense Force actively recruits influencers on TikTok and other social media platforms, often with what commentators have dubbed "Thirst traps".[281][282]

Since 2021, TikTok has created "election centres" on its platform leading up to European Parliament elections. About 30% of EP lawmakers use TikTok to get their messages across and to dispel misinformation.[283]

In February 2024, the re-election campaign for U.S. President Joe Biden announced that it had opened a TikTok account while taking "advanced safety precautions". Biden posted his first video during Super Bowl LVIII.[284] The move was criticized by a number of lawmakers over security concerns. Since 2022, the Biden administration had briefed TikTokers on news items such as the Russian invasion of Ukraine and student debt relief in America.[285][286]

Charities

[edit]

Many charities use TikTok for fundraising and education, especially with younger audiences, charities using TikTok include; Oregon Zoo, Shelter, Battersea Dogs and Cats Home, British Red Cross, American Heart Association, United Way, Catskill Animal Sanctuary and the Black Country Living Museum.[287][288] Some TikTok influencers run their own events to raise money for charitable causes e.g. Mercury Stardust runs the TikTok-A-Thon for Trans Healthcare.[289][290][291] 'TikTok For Good' was created by TikTok to support fundraising on the platform.[292]

In 2019, TikTok announced the #EduTok Mentorship program,[293] a live workshop series in the Indian states of Bihar, Andhra Pradesh, Telangana, Rajasthan, Jharkhand and Jammu inspired by the hashtag #EduTok, in which video creators present factually for purposes of education. In 2022 TikTok banned fundraising for political accounts.[294]

Privacy and security concerns

[edit]

Privacy concerns have been brought up regarding the app.[295][296] TikTok's privacy policy lists that the app collects usage information, IP addresses, a user's mobile carrier, unique device identifiers, keystroke patterns, and location data, among other data.[297] Other information collected includes users inferred interests based on the content they view as well as content created by users.[24] TikTok is also able to track information about web users even if they are not users of the TikTok app. It collects information such as IP address, online browsing habits and web search history.[298] TikTok can share data with its corporate group, including ByteDance. The company says that it employs access control and approval process overseen by a U.S.-based team.[24] In June 2021, TikTok updated its privacy policy to include potential collection of biometric data, including "faceprints and voiceprints", for special effects and other purposes. The terms said that user authorization would be requested if local law demands such.[299] Experts considered them to be "vague" and their implications "problematic" for the United States due to the country's general lack of robust data privacy laws.[300] In a November 2022 update to its European privacy policy, TikTok stated that its global corporate group employees from China and other countries could gain remote access to the user information of accounts from Europe based on "demonstrated need".[301]

A March 2021 study by the Citizen Lab found that TikTok did not collect data beyond the industry norms, what its policy stated, or without additional user permission.[190] In May 2023, The Wall Street Journal reported that former employees complained about TikTok tracking users who had viewed LGBT-related content. The company said its algorithm tracks interests not identity, and non-LGBT users also view such content.[302]

Potential data collection by the Chinese government

[edit]

Concerns have been raised about the potential control and influence of the Chinese government over TikTok's owner, ByteDance,[303] in particular the extraterritorial implications of China's 2017 National Intelligence Law.[304][305] An article in the law insists that all organizations and citizens shall "support, assist and cooperate with national intelligence efforts."[306][307] Analysts differ in their assessments of the data collection risks. Jim Lewis of the Center for Strategic and International Studies said TikTok would have no right to appeal requests for data made by the Chinese government.[24] Some cybersecurity experts say individual users are not at risk.[308] The United States has not offered any evidence of TikTok sharing such information with Chinese authorities.[309] Keeping user data within the United States became the motivation behind TikTok's Project Texas.[24]

Access from China and United States response

[edit]

In October 2021, following the 2021 Facebook leak and controversies about social media ethics, a bipartisan group of United States lawmakers also pressed TikTok, YouTube, and Snapchat on questions of data privacy and moderation for age-appropriate content. Lawmakers also "hammered" TikTok about whether consumer data could be turned over to the Chinese government through ByteDance, its parent company in China.[310] TikTok said it does not give information to China's government and "U.S. user data" is stored within the country with backups in Singapore.[311]

In June 2022, BuzzFeed News reported that leaked audio recordings of internal TikTok meetings reveal employees in China had access to overseas data, including a "master admin" who could see "everything". Some of the recordings were made during consultations with Booz Allen Hamilton, a U.S. government contractor. A spokesperson of the contractor said some of the report's information was inaccurate but would neither confirm nor deny whether TikTok was one of its clients.[312] As a consequence, the Senate Intelligence Committee including U.S. lawmakers Mark Warner and Marco Rubio called for the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) to investigate ByteDance and whether TikTok had misled them.[313][314] Following the reports, TikTok confirmed that employees in China could have access to U.S. data.[315] It also announced that U.S. user traffic would now be routed through Oracle Cloud and that backup copies would be deleted from other servers.[316]

In June 2022, FCC Commissioner Brendan Carr called for Google and Apple to remove TikTok from their app stores, saying sensitive data were being accessed from Beijing[317][318] and ByteDance would be "required by law to comply with [Chinese government] surveillance demands."[317] In November 2022, Christopher A. Wray, director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), said the Chinese government could use TikTok for influence operations on its users.[319] In May 2023, a former ByteDance employee filed a wrongful termination lawsuit alleging that Hong Kong users' device information and communications, particularly those of demonstrators in the 2019–2020 Hong Kong protests, were accessed by Chinese Communist Party members in 2018.[320][321][322] ByteDance denied the claims, saying the employee worked on a defunct project and that TikTok was pulled out of Hong Kong in 2020.[321] The whistleblower claimed in a sworn court statement that his father in mainland China had been detained by the authorities in retaliation for his speaking to the media about alleged censorship by TikTok.[323]

In June 2023, TikTok confirmed that some financial information, such as tax forms and Social Security numbers, of American content creators are stored in China. This applies to those signing contracts with and receiving payment transactions from ByteDance. Whether similar information will remain exempt from being treated as "protected user data" is being negotiated with Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States (CFIUS).[324] A 2024 unclassified threat assessment by the Director of National Intelligence said "TikTok accounts run by a [Chinese] propaganda arm reportedly targeted candidates" during the 2022 United States elections.[325]

In April 2024, it was discovered that former employee Zen Goziker—allegedly the source of various leaks about TikTok to The Washington Post, Forbes, and Buzzfeed News—had made improbable claims. He has also spoken with law enforcement agencies and lawmakers hostile to TikTok. He has accused not only his former employer but also the Attorney General, the Director of National Intelligence, and the Department of Homeland Security for getting him fired.[326]

Project Texas

[edit]

In response to security concerns of the United States government, TikTok has been working to silo privileged user data within the United States under oversight from the U.S. government or a third party such as Oracle.[327] Named Project Texas, the initiative focuses on unauthorized access, state influence, and software security. A new subsidiary, TikTok U.S. Data Security Inc. (USDS), was created to manage user data, software code, back-end systems, and content moderation. It would report to the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States (CFIUS), not ByteDance or TikTok, even for hiring practices. Oracle would review and spot check the data flows through USDS. It would also digitally sign software code, approve updates, and oversee content moderation and recommendation. Physical locations would be established so that Oracle and the U.S. government could conduct their own reviews.[328] The company has been engaged in confidential negotiations over the project with CFIUS since 2021 and submitted its proposal but received little response from the panel afterward.[329]

In March 2023, a former employee of the company said Project Texas did not go far enough and that a complete "re-engineering" would be needed. TikTok responded by saying that Project Texas already is a re-engineering of the app and that the former employee left in 2022 before the project specifications were finalized.[330] Other former employees had their own takes on the situation. A data scientist said U.S. user data were emailed to ByteDance workers in China to identify viewer interests. A manager recounted that there was a lot more separation on the technical side between TikTok and ByteDance by the time he left. Another said TikTok had to employ better data collection practices than Meta or Google due to the scrutiny it received.[22]

Project Clover

[edit]

TikTok has faced criticism for transferring European user data to servers in the United States. It is holding discussions with UK's National Cyber Security Centre about a "Project Clover" for storing European information locally. The company plans to build two data centers in Ireland and one more in Norway. A third party will oversee the cybersecurity policies, data flows, and personnel access independently of TikTok.[331][332][17]

Journalist spying scandal

[edit]

In October 2022, Forbes reported that a team at ByteDance planned to surveil certain U.S. citizens for undisclosed reasons. TikTok said that the tracking method suggested by the report would not be feasible because precise GPS information is not collected by the platform.[333][334] In December 2022, ByteDance confirmed after internal investigation that the data of two journalists and their close contacts had been accessed by its employees from China and the United States. It was intended to uncover sources of leaks who might have met with the journalists from Forbes and the Financial Times. The data included IP addresses, which can be used to approximate a user's location. ByteDance stated that it fired four employees in response.[335]

The incident is being investigated by the U.S. Department of Justice and FBI.[336][337][327] The U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of Virginia reportedly subpoenaed information from ByteDance regarding its surveillance of journalists on TikTok.[338] In December 2023, the United States House Select Committee on Strategic Competition between the United States and the Chinese Communist Party inquired the FBI about the status of the case.[339]

Software code

[edit]

In January 2020, Check Point Research discovered a vulnerability through which a hacker could spoof TikTok's official SMS messages and replace them with malicious links to gain access to user accounts. It was later patched by TikTok.[340] In August 2020, The Wall Street Journal reported that TikTok tracked Android user data, including MAC addresses and IMEIs, with a tactic in violation of Google's policies.[341][342]

In August 2022, software engineer and security researcher Felix Krause found that in-app browsers from TikTok and other platforms contained codes for keylogger functionality but did not have the means to further investigate whether any data was tracked or recorded. TikTok said that the code is disabled.[343]

Regulatory actions

[edit]

U.S. Federal Trade Commission

[edit]

On 27 February 2019, the United States Federal Trade Commission (FTC) reached a consent decree with ByteDance, fining it U.S.$5.7 million for collecting information from minors under the age of 13 in violation of the Children's Online Privacy Protection Act (COPPA).[344] ByteDance responded by adding a kids-only mode to TikTok which blocks the upload of videos, the building of user profiles, direct messaging, and commenting on others' videos, while still allowing the viewing and recording of content.[345] In May 2020, an advocacy group filed a complaint with the FTC saying that TikTok had violated the terms of the February 2019 consent decree with the FTC, which sparked subsequent congressional calls for a renewed FTC investigation.[346][347][348] In March 2022, following a class action lawsuit for violations of COPPA, TikTok settled for US$1.1 million.[349][350] In March 2024, it was reported that the FTC continues to investigate TikTok.[351] In August 2024, the FTC and U.S. Department of Justice filed a joint lawsuit alleging violations of the 2019 consent decree.[352]

Data Protection Commission (Europe)

[edit]

In September 2021, the Ireland Data Protection Commission (DPC) launched investigations into TikTok concerning the protection of minors' data and transfers of personal data to China.[353][354] The Irish DPC became the lead agency to handle such matters after TikTok established an office in the country, taking over investigations started by Dutch and Italian authorities.[355][257] In September 2023, the DPC fined TikTok €345 million for violations of the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) vis-à-vis the mishandling of children data.[356][357] In April 2025, the Ireland DPC fined TikTok over €500 million for illegally sending European user data to China.[358][359] In July 2025, the DPC opened a new investigation into TikTok for unauthorized transfers of user data to China.[360]

UK Information Commissioner's Office

[edit]

In February 2019, the United Kingdom's Information Commissioner's Office (ICO) launched an investigation of TikTok following the fine ByteDance received from the United States Federal Trade Commission (FTC). Speaking to a parliamentary committee, Information Commissioner Elizabeth Denham said that the investigation focuses on the issues of private data collection, the kind of videos collected and shared by children online, as well as the platform's open messaging system which allows any adult to message any child. She noted that the company was potentially violating the GDPR which requires the company to provide different services and different protections for children.[361] In April 2023, the ICO imposed a £12.7 million fine on TikTok for misusing children's data.[362][363] In March 2025, the ICO opened another investigation into TikTok concerning its use of children's personal information to recommend content to them.[364]

Pending investigations

[edit]

Texas

[edit]

In February 2022, Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton initiated an investigation into TikTok for alleged violations of children's privacy and facilitation of human trafficking.[365][366] Paxton claimed that the Texas Department of Public Safety gathered several pieces of content showing the attempted recruitment of teenagers to smuggle people or goods across the Mexico–United States border. He claimed the evidence may prove the company's involvement in "human smuggling, sex trafficking and drug trafficking". The company claimed that no illegal activity of any kind is supported on the platform.[367]

Turkey

[edit]

In 2022, Turkey's Financial Crimes Investigation Board (MASAK) initiated a probe into TikTok in relation to millions of dollars in fund transfers involving TikTok accounts that were suspected of money laundering or terrorism financing.[368]

Privacy Commissioner of Canada

[edit]

In February 2023, the Privacy Commissioner of Canada, along with its counterparts in Alberta, British Columbia, and Quebec, launched an investigation into TikTok's data collection practices.[369] In 2025, a Canadian investigation found that TikTok had collected sensitive personal data from children in violation of federal privacy laws.[370]

European Commission

[edit]

In February 2024, the European Commission launched an investigation into TikTok for potential violations of the Digital Services Act (DSA), involving content aiming at children and advertising transparency.[371] In April 2024, the European Commission opened a second investigation into TikTok to assess whether it broke EU law.[372] In October 2024, the European Commission requested additional information from TikTok relating to its algorithm and risks around elections, mental health, and protection of minors.[373] In December 2024, the European Commission announced an investigation into TikTok over accusations of Russian interference in the 2024 Romanian presidential election.[374] In May 2025, the European Commission found TikTok had violated digital advertising rules under the DSA.[375]

Australian Information Commissioner inquiry

[edit]

In December 2023, the Office of the Australian Information Commissioner announced an inquiry into TikTok's data harvesting of Australian citizens amid allegations that it contravened Australian privacy law.[376]

Controversies

[edit]

Cyberbullying

[edit]

Vox noted in 2018 that bullies and trolls were relatively rare on TikTok compared to other platforms.[250] Nonetheless, several users have reported cyberbullying via features such as Duet or React, which is used to interact with followers.[377] A trend making fun of autism eventually created a huge backlash, even on the platform itself, and the company ended up removing the hashtag altogether.[378][379] Parents filming how their children reacted to people with disability, often in terror, led to criticisms of ableism.[citation needed] In December 2019, following a report by German digital rights group netzpolitik.org, TikTok admitted that it had suppressed videos by disabled users as well as LGBTQ+ users in a purported temporary effort to limit cyberbullying.[380][184]

Addiction and mental health

[edit]

There are concerns that some users may find it hard to stop using TikTok.[381] Internal TikTok research has documented the addiction potential of the app.[382] In April 2018, an addiction-reduction feature was added to Douyin.[381] This encouraged users to take a break every 90 minutes.[381] Later in 2018, the feature was rolled out to the TikTok app. TikTok uses popular influencers to encourage viewers to stop using the app and take a break.[383]

Many were also concerned with the app affecting users' attention spans due to the short-form nature of the content. This is a concern as many of TikTok's audience are younger children, whose brains are still developing.[384] TikTok executives and representatives have noted and made aware to advertisers on the platform that users have poor attention spans. The company's survey reported that nearly 50% of social media users find it stressful to watch a video longer than a minute and a third of users watch videos at double speed. Their short attention spans posed a challenge for TikTok to pivot towards longer content formats.[242] TikTok has also received criticism for enabling children to purchase coins which they can send to other users.[385]

Daily hours of entertainment screen media (Social Medias) may displace healthy behaviors such as socializing face to face, chores, hobbies, homework, family meals time, exercise, and sufficient sleep. Insomnia is considered a strong mediator between screen media time and mental health symptoms which implies that engaging in screen time pushes out adequate sleep and leads to decreased mental health.[386]

In February 2022, The Wall Street Journal reported that "Mental-health professionals around the country are growing increasingly concerned about the effects on teen girls of posting sexualized TikTok videos."[387] In March 2022, a coalition of U.S. state attorneys general launched an investigation into TikTok's effect on children's mental health.[388] In June 2022, TikTok introduced the ability to set a maximum uninterrupted screen time allowance, after which the app blocks off the ability to navigate the feed. The block only lifts after the app is exited and left unused for a set period of time. Additionally, the app features a dashboard with statistics on how often the app is opened, how much time is spent browsing it and when the browsing occurs.[389]

Since 2021, it has been reported that accounts engaging with contents related to suicide, self-harm, or eating disorders were shown more similar videos. Some users were able to circumvent TikTok filters by writing in code or using unconventional spelling. The company has faced multiple lawsuits pertaining to wrongful deaths. TikTok said it is working to break up these "rabbit holes" of similar recommendations. U.S. searches for eating disorder receive a prompt that offers mental health resources.[390][391][392]

In 2021, the platform revealed that it will be introducing a feature that will prevent teenagers from receiving notifications past their bedtime. The company will no longer send push notifications after 9 pm to users aged between 13 and 15. For 16 to 17 year olds, notifications will not be sent after 10 pm.[393] In March 2023, TikTok announced default screen time limits for users under the age of 18.[394] The Wall Street Journal has reported that doctors experienced a surge in reported cases of tics, tied to an increasing number of TikTok videos from content creators with Tourette syndrome. Doctors suggested that the cause may be a social one as users who consumed content showcasing various tics would sometimes develop tics of their own,[395] akin to mass psychogenic illness.[396][397]

In May 2024, Nebraska Attorney General Mike Hilgers filed a lawsuit against TikTok for allegedly harming minors' mental health through an algorithm designed to be cultivate compulsive behavior.[398] In October 2024, U.S. senators Richard Blumenthal and Marsha Blackburn requested that TikTok turn over "all documents and information" related to child safety disclosures that were uncovered by NPR and Kentucky Public Radio.[399]

As of March 2025, strong scientific understanding of TikTok's effects on user's mental health "remains elusive". A 2025 meta-analysis found that use of TikTok was correlated with symptoms of anxiety and depression, with stronger links in females and users under 24 years old.[400]

2022 medication shortage

[edit]

In November 2022, Australia's medical regulatory agency, the Therapeutic Goods Administration (TGA) reported that there was a global shortage of the diabetes medication Ozempic. According to the TGA, the rise in demand was caused by an increase in off-label prescription of the drug for weight loss purposes.[401] In December 2022, with the United States experiencing a shortage as well, it was reported that the huge increase in demand for the medicine was caused by a weight loss trend on TikTok, where videos about the drug exceeded 360 million views.[402][403][404] Wegovy, a drug that has been specifically approved for treating obesity, also became popular on the platform after Elon Musk credited it for helping him lose weight.[405][406]

Workplace conditions

[edit]

Several former employees of the company have claimed of poor workplace conditions, including the start of the workweek on Sunday to cooperate with Chinese timezones and excessive workload. Employees claimed they averaged 85 hours of meetings per week and would frequently stay up all night in order to complete tasks. Some employees claimed the workplace's schedule operated similarly to the 996 schedule. The company has a stated policy of working from 10 AM to 7 PM five days per week (63 hours per week), but employees noted that it was encouraged for employees to work after hours. One female worker complained that the company did not allow her adequate time to change her feminine hygiene product because of back-to-back meetings. Another employee noted that working at the company caused her to seek marriage therapy and lose an unhealthy amount of weight.[407] In response to the allegations, the company noted that they were committed to allowing employees "support and flexibility".[408][409]

In September 2023, two former ByteDance employees filed a formal complaint with the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) asking the EEOC to investigate TikTok's practice of retaliation against workers who complain about discrimination.[410]

Israeli–Palestinian conflict

[edit]

With reports that Palestinians resorted to TikTok for promoting their cause after platforms like Facebook and Twitter blocked their content,[411] Israeli analyst Yoni Ben-Menachem called the app a "tool of dangerous influence" inciting violence against Israelis.[412][413] According to Ynet, the Palestinian militant group Lion's Den gained much of their popularity through TikTok.[414] In February 2023, Otzma Yehudit politician Almog Cohen advocated blocking TikTok for all of East Jerusalem.[415] U.S. lawmakers wanting to ban TikTok accused the platform of pushing pro-Hamas and pro-Palestine content.[416][417]

According to The Times of Israel, antisemitism at the company was "rampant" after the October 7 attacks, allowing anti-Jewish and anti-Israel content to increase on the platform.[418] Prominent Jewish individuals such as Sacha Baron Cohen, Debra Messing, Amy Schumer, and TikTok creator Miriam Ezagui raised the issue with Adam Presser, TikTok's head of operations, and Seth Melnick, its global head of user operations, both also Jewish.[419]

TikTok said that a significant proportion of its userbase comes from non-US regions such as the Middle East and Southeast Asia and that hashtags should not be cherry-picked due to differences in the number of views per post and the age of a post or tag. The popularity of pro-Palestine content has also been explained by the app's younger user base, which has shifted its sympathy away from Israel towards the Palestinians.[416][417]

The Jewish Federations of North America expressed support for TikTok to be banned, while Israel's critics denounced the "criminalisation of pro-Palestinian voices," including on TikTok, which has been used to condemn "Israel's atrocities", according to The New Arab.[420] TikTok was also accused by Malaysia's minister of communications, Fahmi Fadzil of suppressing pro-Palestinian content. The company stated it banned praising Hamas and removed more than 775,000 videos and 14,000 livestreams.[421][422]

In November 2023, Osama bin Laden's 2002 "Letter to the American people" went viral on TikTok and other social media. In the letter, he denounced the U.S. and its support for Israel, and supported al-Qaeda's war against the U.S. as a defensive struggle. Numerous social media users, including Americans, expressed their opposition to U.S. foreign policy by sharing the resurfaced copies of the letter and its contents. The Guardian website removed the letter after displaying it for more than 20 years, and TikTok began issuing takedowns of videos featuring the letter.[423] Reporting in The Washington Post suggested that the virality of the letter had been limited prior to media coverage, having never trended on TikTok. Many of the TikTok videos covering the letter were critical of bin Laden, and media coverage had exaggerated its significance while elevating the virality of the letter.[424]

In July 2025, TikTok hired Erica Mindel, a former Israel Defense Forces instructor and contractor for the US State Department's Special Envoy to Monitor and Combat Antisemitism, as its Public Policy Manager of Hate Speech.[425][426]

Child exploitation in Kenya

[edit]

An investigation in 2025 found that TikTok was profiting from sexual livestreams in Kenya involving minors, with teenagers as young as 15 using the platform to solicit explicit content. Women in Kenya reported earning money through TikTok Lives, where coded sexual slang and emoji gifts facilitated transactions, with explicit content often delivered via other platforms. TikTok takes a 70% cut of these livestream earnings and has been aware of child exploitation since at least 2022. Many moderators say the company's content policies are ineffective, and digital pimps exploit underage users on the large. Kenya lacks adequate moderation, and TikTok denies any sort of wrongdoing.[427]

In response to the exposé, Kenya's Communications Authority (CA) launched a formal inquiry, directing TikTok to remove all sexual content involving minors and submit a detailed plan to strengthen its moderation and child protection systems.[428][429][430]

Lobbying by competitors

[edit]

According to The Washington Post, Meta hired the Republican consulting firm Targeted Victory to run a campaign aimed at turning public opinion against TikTok. Internal emails revealed that the firm sought to portray TikTok as "the real threat" and encouraged headlines such as "From dances to danger: how TikTok has become the most harmful social media space for kids." Operatives promoted stories to local media that tied TikTok to allegedly dangerous trends among teenagers, including the 2021 "devious lick" vandalism challenge, which evidence shows originated on Facebook. The campaign also sought to deflect attention from criticisms of Meta's own privacy and antitrust issues. A Meta spokesperson defended the effort, saying that all platforms, including TikTok, should face equal scrutiny.[431][432] An analysis estimated that Meta, the parent company of Facebook and Instagram, could gain between $2.46 billion and $3.38 billion in advertising revenue if TikTok were banned.[433]

Restrictions and bans

[edit]
  •   TikTok available on all devices
  •   TikTok banned on national governmental devices
  •   TikTok previously banned for all users
  •   TikTok discontinued for download
  •   TikTok banned for all users de jure, but not enforced
  •   TikTok banned for all users de facto
  •   TikTok banned for all users
  •   TikTok unavailable; Douyin used instead
  • Not shown: Banned on EU and NATO devices

Albania

[edit]

On 21 December 2024, Albanian Prime Minister Edi Rama announced that the Albanian government will shut down TikTok in 2025 for at least a year, following a deadly incident in November 2024 in which a teenager fatally stabbed another teen after a dispute that began on the platform.[434][435][436] On 7 March 2025, the shutdown was officially enacted after the Albanian Cabinet cited concerns over the app's role in promoting violence and bullying among children.[437]

Canada

[edit]

On 6 November 2024, Canada ordered TikTok to shut down its offices and subsidiary company (TikTok Technology Canada, Inc.) in the country due to national security concerns, but access to the app was not banned.[438][439] Users will still be able to access the video app and upload content to it.[438][439]

European Union

[edit]

In February 2023, the European Parliament, the European Commission, and the Council of the European Union, have all banned TikTok on staff devices, citing cybersecurity concerns.[440][441]

India

[edit]

In 2020, TikTok was banned indefinitely in India after the country had a border clash with China.[442]

United States

[edit]

In January 2020, the United States Army and Navy banned TikTok on government devices after the Defense Department labeled it a security risk. Recruiters had been using the app to help fill quotas, and some continue to maintain a level of engagement through their personal accounts.[443][444][445]

According to a 2020 article in The New York Times, Central Intelligence Agency analysts determined that while it is possible the Chinese government could obtain user information from the app, there was no evidence it had done so.[446]

Federal level

[edit]

On 6 August 2020, U.S. President Donald Trump signed an order[447][448] which would ban TikTok transactions in 45 days if it was not sold by ByteDance.[449][450] On 14 August 2020, Trump issued another order[451] giving ByteDance 90 days to sell or spin off its U.S. TikTok business.[452] In the order, Trump said that there is "credible evidence" that leads him to believe that ByteDance "might take action that threatens to impair the national security of the United States".[453]

In June 2021, U.S. President Joe Biden signed an executive order revoking the Trump administration ban on TikTok, and instead ordered the Secretary of Commerce to investigate the app to determine if it poses a threat to U.S. national security.[454] On 27 December 2022, the Chief Administrative Officer of the United States House of Representatives banned TikTok from all devices managed by the House of Representatives.[455] On 30 December 2022, President Joe Biden signed the No TikTok on Government Devices Act, prohibiting the use of the app on devices owned by the federal government, with some exceptions.[456]

On 13 March 2024, the United States House of Representatives passed H.R. 7521, which would ban TikTok entirely unless it was divested from its Chinese parent company, ByteDance.[457] In April, the House of Representatives included a revised version of the bill in a foreign aid package, which was passed by the Senate on 23 April 2024, and signed into law by President Joe Biden the following day.[458][459][460] The law was challenged in TikTok, Inc. v. Garland but was upheld as constitutional. In response to the potential ban, many users signed up for the Chinese app Xiaohongshu (Chinese: 小红书), known internationally as REDnote.[461] On 18 January 2025, hours before the bill went into effect, TikTok became unavailable across the country.[462][463] The next day, TikTok restored access to their service after re-elected U.S. President Donald Trump assured TikTok he would not enforce the law.[464][60] President Trump signed an executive order on 20 January 2025, delaying the enforcement of the TikTok ban by 75 days.[465][466] In April 2025, President Trump signed another executive order further delaying the enforcement of the TikTok ban by 75 days,[467] and again in June 2025 another 75 day extension.[468]

State level

[edit]

As of February 2023, at least 32 (of 50) states have announced or enacted bans on state government agencies, employees, and contractors using TikTok on government-issued devices. State bans only affect government employees and do not prohibit civilians from having or using the app on their personal devices.[469][470]

Observations

[edit]

Critics say the United States itself surveils individuals abroad via tech companies under FISA laws.[471] Data collected by TikTok and other social networks can already be purchased through other means.[471][472] Some theorize that, if passed, H.R. 7521 could "embolden authoritarian censorship" of American Internet companies and affect U.S. interests, reputation, and online speech.[473] They have also labeled a potential ban on the app an assault on freedom of speech, including Republican congressmen Rand Paul and Thomas Massie.[474][475]

Observers have argued that the national security concerns raised are largely hypothetical.[476][477][478] There is insufficient public evidence to show that American user data has been accessed by or shared with the PRC government,[479][480][481] with some claims reportedly exaggerated.[482] Biden himself was on TikTok as the president, while Trump has reversed his previous position.[483] According to computer security specialist Bruce Schneier, which company owns TikTok may not matter, as Russia had interfered in the 2016 US elections using Facebook without owning it.[484]

Partnerships

[edit]

In April 2021, the Abu Dhabi Department of Culture and Tourism partnered with TikTok to promote tourism for the city.[485] It came following the January 2021 winter campaign with the United Arab Emirates Government Media Office.[486]

In June 2023, The New Zealand Herald reported that TikTok, working in cooperation with both New Zealand and Australian police, deleted 340 accounts and 2,000 videos associated with criminal gangs including the Mongrel Mob, Black Power, Killer Beez, the Comancheros, Mongols, and Rebels. TikTok had earlier drawn criticism for hosting content by organized crime groups promoting the gang lifestyle and fights. A TikTok spokesperson reiterated the platform's efforts to countering "violent" and "hateful" organizations' content and cooperating with police. New Zealand Police Commissioner Andrew Coster praised the platform for taking a "socially-responsible stance" against gangs.[487]

TikTok has partnered with the Hispanic Heritage Foundation to support small Latino businesses, setting aside $5000 each for 40 grant recipients based on entrepreneurship.[488] After digital advertising rules for the Olympics were relaxed, TikTok and Team GB signed a sponsorship deal to help UK athletes connect with new audiences for the 2024 Summer Olympics.[489]

Starting in 2021, TikTok became the primary sponsor/partner of the English Football League club Wrexham A.F.C. located in Wrexham, Wales. A large version of the TikTok logo was emblazoned on the front of the player's red coloured home and away uniforms below the Wrexham A.F.C. crest as well as on shirts sold by Wrexham's brick and mortar and virtual fan stores, the partnership ended in 2023 when Wrexham was promoted to the EFL League Two after which U.S. airline United took over the partnership/sponsorship.[490][491]

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]

References

[edit]

Further reading

[edit]
[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
TikTok is a platform specializing in short-form videos, owned by the Beijing-based technology company , which launched the app internationally in September 2017 after debuting its Chinese counterpart Douyin (抖音) in 2016. As of mid-2024, TikTok had approximately 1.04 billion monthly active users worldwide, establishing it as one of the most downloaded and engaged apps globally, particularly among younger demographics, with its algorithm-driven "For You" page enabling rapid viral dissemination of such as dances, challenges, and educational clips. The platform's explosive growth has reshaped digital culture, propelling music hits, influencing consumer trends like , and fostering creator economies, yet it has drawn scrutiny for its addictive design mechanics that prioritize engagement over user well-being, contributing to documented concerns including increased anxiety and problematic usage patterns among adolescents. In response to risks posed by ByteDance's ties to the —enabling potential data harvesting, algorithmic manipulation to suppress criticism of , and dissemination of state-favored narratives—multiple governments have imposed restrictions, culminating in the January 2026 completion of the TikTok USDS Joint Venture LLC, establishing majority U.S. governance over American operations to sever foreign adversary control. Persistent controversies center on data privacy violations, where user information could be accessed by Chinese authorities under national intelligence laws, and biases that amplify pro-China viewpoints while throttling dissenting material, as evidenced by independent analyses of algorithmic behavior. These issues underscore TikTok's dual role as an innovative hub and a vector for geopolitical influence, prompting ongoing debates over balancing technological benefits against empirical risks of surveillance and ideological skew.

Ownership and Corporate Structure

ByteDance Ownership and Chinese Government Ties

ByteDance Ltd., the parent company of TikTok, was founded in 2012 by Chinese entrepreneur in , . As a privately held entity, its ownership is distributed with approximately 60% held by global institutional investors including , , and ; Zhang Yiming retains a 21% equity stake while exercising majority voting control through dual-class shares granting him over 50% of voting rights; and the remaining 21% is owned by employees. Despite this structure and significant foreign investment, operates as a Chinese company headquartered in and remains subject to the People's Republic of China's (PRC) legal framework, which mandates cooperation with state intelligence efforts. China's 2017 National Intelligence Law requires organizations to support, assist, and cooperate in national intelligence work, including providing data upon request, without exceptions for private firms like . Similarly, the 2015 National Security Law and related regulations compel adherence to (CCP) ideology and potential content censorship to align with state interests. ByteDance formalized its ties to the CCP by establishing an internal Party committee in 2014, a step required or incentivized for major Chinese firms to embed Party oversight in . Reports indicate the Chinese government maintains influence through a representative on 's board, facilitating direct input on operations. Former executive Yintao Yu has alleged in U.S. court filings that the company functions as a "propaganda tool" for the CCP, promoting nationalistic content and suppressing critical views under Beijing's directives. In the context of TikTok's completed U.S. divestiture in January 2026, ceded majority ownership of U.S. operations to American investors while retaining a minority stake of 19.9% in the TikTok USDS Joint Venture LLC and rights to about 50% of profits, alongside licensing —restructured but originating from 's Beijing-based systems. These arrangements do not sever 's overarching PRC legal obligations, which U.S. officials have cited as enabling potential data access and influence by Chinese authorities over global operations, including algorithmic recommendations.

Efforts to Mitigate Foreign Control (Project Texas, Project Clover, and 2025 US Divestiture Deal)

Project , announced by TikTok in January 2023, represented an attempt to isolate American user from potential access by ByteDance employees in or the Chinese government. The initiative, estimated to cost $1.5 billion, involved migrating U.S. user to Corporation's cloud servers located exclusively within the , with providing independent oversight of and access protocols. TikTok committed to prohibiting any transfers to and restricting ByteDance's Chinese staff from accessing U.S. or algorithms, aiming to mitigate risks cited by U.S. lawmakers regarding potential or influence operations. Despite implementation progress by mid-2024, including third-party audits, U.S. intelligence assessments and congressional reviews deemed the measures insufficient and "largely cosmetic," as they relied on ByteDance's self-enforcement without fully severing ties to the parent company. In addition to Project Texas, reports in July 2025 indicated that TikTok was developing "M2," the internal name for a standalone app exclusively for U.S. users, featuring a separate recommendation algorithm and isolated user data system from the global version. This initiative aimed to address U.S. national security concerns over data handling and facilitate a potential sale of TikTok's U.S. operations, with an expected launch around September 2025, though TikTok has not officially confirmed the project. In parallel, Project Clover, launched in March 2023, sought to achieve similar data localization for European users amid regulatory pressures from the . This multi-billion-euro program, valued at €12 billion over 10 years, established dedicated centers outside , including a facility in that became fully operational in April 2025 for storing and processing EU user . Additional investments included a €1 billion center in announced in May 2025, along with enhanced (PETs) and strict access controls enforced by independent auditors like . The initiative complied with standards by ensuring no cross-border flows to ByteDance's Chinese operations, though critics noted it did not eliminate underlying ownership risks. The Protecting Americans from Foreign Adversary Controlled Applications Act, signed into law in April 2024, mandated that ByteDance divest its U.S. operations by January 19, 2025, or face a nationwide ban, driven by bipartisan concerns over Chinese Communist Party influence via data access and algorithmic manipulation. Multiple enforcement delays followed, culminating in a September 25, 2025, executive order by President Donald Trump approving a qualified divestiture framework. The divestiture was completed on January 22, 2026, with the formal establishment of TikTok USDS Joint Venture LLC. The new entity is 50% owned by a consortium of American investors including Oracle, Silver Lake, and MGX (each holding 15%), with 30.1% held by affiliates of existing ByteDance investors and 19.9% retained by ByteDance. Adam Presser, formerly TikTok's Head of Operations and Trust & Safety, was appointed CEO of the U.S. joint venture, with Will Farrell named Chief Security Officer. The entity is governed by a seven-member majority-American board including Shou Chew (TikTok global CEO), Timothy Dattels (TPG Global), Mark Dooley (Susquehanna), Egon Durban (Silver Lake), Raul Fernandez (DXC Technology), Kenneth Glueck (Oracle), and David Scott (MGX). Additional investors include Dell Family Office, Vastmere Strategic Investments, Alpha Wave Partners, Revolution, Via Nova (General Atlantic affiliate), and NJJ Capital. Under the new structure, the U.S. algorithm is retrained exclusively on American user data, with Oracle serving as the trusted security partner responsible for data governance and compliance oversight. Under the agreement, ByteDance retains a minority stake below 20 percent in the U.S. entity, while transferring majority ownership and operational control—including data management, content moderation, and the recommendation algorithm—to the consortium of American investors, thereby satisfying statutory requirements for non-foreign adversary control. The deal, valued in negotiations around $14 billion for the stake transfer, averted an imminent ban but drew scrutiny from some lawmakers for potentially preserving indirect ByteDance influence through retained operational elements.

Global Subsidiaries and Operations

TikTok's international operations are structured through subsidiaries under ByteDance's global framework, with TikTok Ltd., incorporated in the , serving as the primary entity overseeing activities outside . This operational separation is enforced by the TikTok app detecting SIM cards from Chinese mobile operators upon startup, restricting access in mainland China and redirecting users to the domestic Douyin platform. This acts as an intermediary for regional subsidiaries, including TikTok Inc. , which manages local app operations and user data prior to the 2026 divestiture completion. The separation ensures compliance with international regulations while maintaining operational ties to ByteDance's core technology. In response to concerns, the implemented a divestiture framework approved by President on September 25, 2025, and completed in January 2026 through the establishment of TikTok USDS Joint Venture LLC, whereby divested direct control over U.S. operations to a involving U.S. firms like , though retains indirect influence through global subsidiaries and a minority stake. Reports from Chinese sources indicate that a "Byte TikTok US Company" entity remains fully owned by via its international arm, highlighting persistent structural links despite the deal. Similar regional adaptations exist elsewhere, such as TikTok Pte. Ltd. in for and TikTok Technology Limited in the for European compliance. TikTok maintains dual global headquarters in , , and to coordinate engineering, , and business development. Additional major offices support localized operations across (New York, , Austin), (, , , ), the (, with a new regional headquarters in opening in early 2025), and (, , ). These facilities employ thousands in roles spanning product development, safety teams, and advertising sales, with data flows routed through secure entities in the U.S., , and to facilitate cross-border transfers under privacy laws like GDPR.
  • North America: Los Angeles (HQ), New York, Chicago, Austin, Toronto, Mexico City.
  • Europe: London, Dublin, Paris, Berlin.
  • Asia-Pacific: Singapore (HQ), Jakarta, Seoul, Tokyo.
  • Middle East: Dubai, Riyadh (upcoming).
This distributed network enables TikTok to serve over 1.5 billion users globally while navigating varying regulatory environments, though critics argue it insufficiently insulates from ByteDance's Chinese parent influence.

History

Development of Douyin in China (2016–2017)

ByteDance launched Douyin, initially under the name A.me, on September 26, 2016, as a short-video sharing mobile application targeting the Chinese market. The app was developed leveraging ByteDance's existing artificial intelligence recommendation algorithms from its news aggregator Toutiao, enabling personalized content feeds to enhance user engagement. In December 2016, A.me was rebranded to Douyin, emphasizing its focus on music-synced short videos with integrated editing tools and effects. During its initial phase from September 2016 to April 2017, Douyin prioritized rapid iteration on features, such as a swipe-based for seamless video consumption and social sharing integrations to boost virality. reassigned a team of nearly ten engineers to accelerate development shortly after conceptualizing the app's style, focusing on in a competitive landscape dominated by other UGC platforms. The platform introduced music library access and AR filters early on, differentiating it from rivals by facilitating quick, creative . By the end of 2017, Douyin had achieved 100 million users, marking unprecedented growth driven by algorithmic precision in content recommendations and targeted marketing efforts including show sponsorships. From May to December 2017, the app refined its ecosystem by enhancing capabilities and tie-ins, solidifying its position amid intensifying competition in China's short-video sector. User numbers reportedly doubled monthly in late 2017, reflecting effective strategies like influencer collaborations and platform optimizations for mobile accessibility.

International Launch and Early Growth of TikTok (2017–2019)

ByteDance launched TikTok internationally in September 2017, initially targeting markets in Southeast Asia such as Indonesia and Vietnam, where it established a local office in Indonesia as early as August 2017 to facilitate regional expansion. The app differentiated itself from the domestic Douyin version by adapting content moderation and features to non-Chinese regulatory environments and user preferences, emphasizing short-form video creation with music synchronization. In November , ByteDance announced its acquisition of , a U.S.-based lip-syncing app with approximately 60 million monthly active users primarily among teenagers in and , in a deal valued between $800 million and $1 billion. The deal, which closed in 2018, allowed to merge Musical.ly's user base and technology into TikTok, effectively rebranding and redirecting users to the TikTok platform by August 2018, which accelerated adoption in Western markets. This merger catalyzed early growth, with TikTok achieving over 660 million global downloads by the end of 2018, driven by the influx of 's established audience and TikTok's algorithmic recommendation system that prioritized engaging, music-driven content. By , downloads surged to 693 million, reflecting rapid user acquisition in diverse regions, though growth was uneven and concentrated in youth demographics amid competition from platforms like and . The platform's emphasis on viral challenges and creator tools contributed to organic spread, but early international traction relied heavily on the Musical.ly integration rather than standalone organic growth in non-acquired markets.

Rapid Expansion and Key Acquisitions (2019–2023)

In 2019, TikTok experienced explosive growth, becoming the most downloaded app globally with 693 million downloads, driven by its addictive short-video format and algorithmic recommendations that prioritized user engagement over traditional social hierarchies. This surge followed the 2018 merger with Musical.ly's user base, but 2019 marked independent momentum, with monthly active users climbing into the hundreds of millions amid viral challenges and influencer adoption. Revenue remained modest at under $1 billion, primarily from in-app purchases and early advertising, as the platform focused on scaling rather than monetization. The accelerated expansion in 2020, with lockdowns boosting daily usage and content creation; downloads reached 850 million for the year, including a record 315 million in the first quarter alone. Meta responded by launching Instagram Reels in August 2020 as a direct competitor to TikTok's short-form video format. Despite the Indian government's ban in June 2020, which removed nearly 200 million users, TikTok's global monthly surpassed 700 million by mid-year, fueled by organic virality in the U.S., Europe, and . hit $1.14 billion, reflecting initial advertiser influx as users spent an average of 52 minutes daily on the app. By 2021, users exceeded 1 billion, with revenue doubling to approximately $4.8 billion, supported by enhanced live-streaming commerce features tested in select markets. From 2022 to 2023, TikTok consolidated dominance, reaching 1.5 billion users by 2023 amid pushes like the U.K. launch of TikTok Shop in 2022, which integrated directly into videos. Revenue soared to $9.4 billion in 2022 and $23 billion in 2023, with net ad earnings at $14.15 billion the latter year, as brands capitalized on the platform's skew (over 36% of users aged 18-24). Growth persisted despite regulatory scrutiny, with U.S. operations valued at $40-50 billion by 2023. ByteDance, TikTok's parent, pursued acquisitions to bolster underlying technology during this period. In 2019, it acquired Terark, a database compression firm, enabling faster for TikTok's recommendation , which handles billions of daily video interactions. The company made seven acquisitions that year overall, targeting AI and search capabilities to sustain algorithmic edge. In August 2021, bought Pico, a maker, to explore immersive content extensions for TikTok, though integration remained nascent amid platform focus on core short-form video. These moves, peaking in acquisition activity in 2019 and 2022, supported scalability but drew less attention than organic user-driven expansion.

Recent Developments and Challenges (2023–2026)

In April 2024, the United States Congress passed the Protecting Americans from Foreign Adversary Controlled Applications Act, signed into law by President Biden, mandating that ByteDance divest its ownership of TikTok's U.S. operations by January 19, 2025, or face a nationwide ban due to national security concerns over potential data access by the Chinese government. On January 17, 2025, the U.S. Supreme Court unanimously upheld the law, allowing it to take effect. The ban briefly disrupted service on January 19, 2025, before restoration efforts ensued. Following Donald Trump's inauguration, executive actions addressed the impasse. On September 16, 2025, President Trump issued 14350, extending the enforcement delay. By September 25, 2025, Trump approved a divestiture deal valued at $14 billion, prohibiting from storing U.S. user data in and enhancing safeguards, effectively averting a permanent ban while requiring structural separation from Chinese control. TikTok's Project Texas, initiated in 2022 to store U.S. data domestically with oversight, faced skepticism for insufficiently decoupling from 's Beijing-based decision-making, costing $1.5 billion yet failing to fully alleviate concerns over covert influence. Globally, regulatory pressures intensified. By 2025, 23 countries had imposed outright bans on TikTok, primarily citing security risks from ByteDance's ties to the , including Senegal's 2023 prohibition amid political sensitivities. In the , the launched formal proceedings against TikTok in December 2024 under the for alleged failures in protecting minors and systemic risk assessments, highlighting ongoing content recommendation and moderation deficiencies. Content moderation controversies persisted, with accusations of favoring Chinese state narratives and suppressing dissenting views, particularly on topics like Uyghur or . In May 2025, TikTok restructured its U.S. Content Advisory Council to include more libertarian and free-speech advocates, responding to criticisms of opaque practices amid government pressures. Dangerous viral challenges, such as the linked to teen deaths, underscored failures in proactive harm prevention, exacerbating lawsuits and parental concerns over youth addiction and impacts. Despite these, TikTok reported sustained user engagement, with trends evolving toward AI-generated content and hyper-personalization by mid-2025. On January 25, 2026, TikTok experienced a significant outage primarily affecting U.S. users, beginning early Sunday morning around January 24-25. Users reported issues including inability to upload videos, "0 views" on posts, login problems, slow loading, and disrupted feeds, as well as bugs in the TikTok Studio interface such as missing sections like "Account Check," incomplete analytics (e.g., video views displaying as zero despite activity), and missing or stuck tabs including monetization and Creator Rewards; these affected some accounts, were possibly isolated to U.S. users, and proved temporary. TikTok's USDS Joint Venture attributed the outage to a power outage at a U.S. data center, which caused cascading system failures. Issues peaked overnight with over 35,000 reports on Downdetector and persisted into January 26, with apologies and ongoing fixes issued. In February 2026, many TikTok creators and users reported significant drops in video views, including instances of zero views on new posts. These issues were widely discussed as a potential mass bug, glitch, or algorithm shift affecting visibility and reach, with complaints appearing on TikTok and forums like Reddit. Some attributed the problems to lingering effects from the January 2026 data center outage, though resolved by early February. TikTok issued no official statement confirming a specific February bug.

Platform Features and Technology

Core User Interface and Video Tools

The TikTok mobile application employs a minimalist, vertically oriented optimized for short-form video consumption and creation on smartphones. The bottom navigation bar consists of five icons: , which loads the For You Page (FYP) displaying full-screen, algorithmically curated videos; Discover, enabling search via hashtags, sounds, or users; a central "+" for initiating video recording or uploads; Inbox for direct messages, mentions, and notifications; TikTok lacks a traditional "add friend" function; users connect by following each other, with mutual follows denoting friends. Direct messaging, accessible via the Inbox or by navigating to a user's profile and tapping the message icon (profiles can be located by searching the username even if the user has no videos or posts), is restricted to users aged 16 and older, with both parties required to meet this age threshold. Sending DMs typically requires following the recipient, with mutual following ensuring reliable access unless overridden by privacy settings that allow messages from everyone, followers, or friends only; the absence of videos or posts does not directly block DMs, though new or inactive accounts may face temporary restrictions on messaging features to prevent spam. Users can adjust these settings under Profile > Menu > Settings and privacy > Privacy > Direct messages. Additionally, under Settings and privacy > Account > Deactivate or delete account, users can request account deletion, which initiates a 30-day deactivation period during which the account and content are hidden from public view but can be reactivated by logging back in; if not reactivated within 30 days, the account is permanently deleted along with all videos, followers, likes, comments, and other data. and Profile, showing the user's videos, liked content, favorites/bookmarks including automatically generated collections such as "Want to Go" for saving location-tagged videos like travel, restaurant, or place recommendations enabled by creators, and account settings. As of February 2026, TikTok allows users to control the visibility of their followers and following lists independently through privacy settings. Navigate to Profile > Menu > Settings and Privacy > Privacy > Following List (or Followers/Following controls). Options typically include "Everyone" (default), "Friends" (mutual followers), or "Only Me" to hide the lists completely. This setting applies to both followers and following lists and works separately from making the account private, which restricts visibility to approved followers only. As of 2026, TikTok supports multiple active accounts with a built-in feature to add and switch between them on the same device (typically up to 3-6 accounts, depending on the device), similar to Instagram and Facebook. Users can switch by tapping their username in the profile and selecting another account, with each requiring unique login credentials. The Activity Center, accessible via Profile > Menu > Settings and privacy > Activity Center, includes a Comment History section enabling users to view their past comments, including those made on live streams. Available in 2025 and 2026, the feature has experienced temporary removals or access issues as reported by some users. Users can edit their profile from the Profile tab by tapping "Edit profile," where they can change their display name (nickname) by tapping "Name," entering up to 30 characters, and saving; this can be done once every 7 days and must comply with TikTok's Community Guidelines. Similarly, to change the username (@handle), tap "Username," enter a new one using letters, numbers, underscores, and periods (not ending with a period), and save; this is allowed once every 30 days, and changing it updates the profile link. To copy a TikTok profile link as of 2026, navigate to the desired profile (yours or another user's) in the app, tap the Share button (arrow icon) at the top of the profile page, and select "Copy link" from the sharing options, which copies the URL (e.g., https://www.tiktok.com/@username) to the clipboard. On desktop or web, visit the profile at https://www.tiktok.com/@username and copy the URL from the address bar. TikTok offers a Profile View History feature allowing eligible users to see which accounts have viewed their profile over the past 30 days. Visibility is mutual, meaning another user can only see that you viewed their profile if both parties have the feature enabled. Disabling it prevents others from seeing your profile views and hides viewers from your own profile. This setting is restricted to users aged 16 or older with fewer than 5,000 followers. Navigation between videos on the FYP occurs via upward or downward swipes, with overlaid interactive elements including a heart icon for liking, speech bubble for comments, arrow for sharing, and a plus for following creators, all positioned at the screen's edges to minimize obstruction. Users can post comments via the speech bubble; however, spam violations such as commenting too fast may result in temporary restrictions, typically lasting 24 hours, with more severe or repeated violations potentially leading to longer durations (7-30 days) or contributing to permanent account bans. Users can check commenting restrictions via the Account check feature in TikTok Studio (Profile > Menu > TikTok Studio > More tools > Account check) or Safety Center (Settings and privacy > Support > Safety Center > Account check), which shows warnings for restricted features, with durations possibly indicated in notifications or when attempting to comment. TikTok does not allow editing comments after posting, including on one's own posts; instead, users can delete comments or manage visibility settings such as filtering or restricting who can comment. Additionally, on Android devices, TikTok links shared via WhatsApp may open the Google Play Store instead of the app due to battery optimization restrictions or default link handling settings. Common fixes include adjusting TikTok's battery usage from "Restricted" to "Optimized" in app settings, enabling "Open supported links" under the app's default apps configuration, or long-pressing the link in WhatsApp and selecting "Open in TikTok." To post videos on TikTok, users must download the app from the App Store or Google Play and install it, then open the app to create an account using email, phone, or social media or log in if they have an existing account; posting requires being logged in. Video creation begins by tapping the "+" icon, which activates the in-app camera for recording clips ranging from 15 seconds to 10 minutes in duration (as of February 2026, videos recorded directly in the app are limited to 10 minutes, while uploaded videos can reach up to 60 minutes), with support for multi-clip uploads and aspect ratios primarily at 9:16 for vertical mobile viewing; as of 2026, the built-in camera supports HD recording up to 1080p depending on device capabilities, with high quality enabled by default and no separate HD toggle; recommended specifications include 1080x1920 pixel resolution, MP4 format, and frame rates of 30-60 fps, though file size limits vary by platform and upload method (e.g., approximately 72 MB on Android mobile apps, 287 MB on iOS mobile apps, and up to 500 MB or more on web or TikTok Studio). TikTok videos are displayed at up to 1080p resolution, with the platform compressing higher resolutions to 1080p; to preserve HD quality on upload and avoid compression, enable the "Allow high-quality uploads" setting under Settings and privacy > More options; the platform supports 1080p HD and 4K uploads, with 1080p recommended for best results; user reports indicate that uploading in 1080p often results in better perceived quality than in 4K, as the platform applies heavier compression or downsizes 4K uploads, potentially to 720p in some cases, leading to artifacts. Common advice is to shoot in 4K for enhanced detail but export or downscale to 1080p before upload, leveraging supersampling for sharper results. Users can record a new video by holding the Record button or tap Upload to select from their device, then edit the video by adding effects, sound, text, filters, and other enhancements; next, tap Next to add a description, hashtags, tags, location, link, and adjust privacy settings before tapping Post to publish publicly or saving as a Draft. Best practices for video descriptions (captions), particularly for football reviews and highlights in 2025, emphasize engagement, SEO, and readability: front-load engaging hooks and keywords (e.g., "Epic goal from Messi in 2025 UCL! ⚽"); keep captions concise with the first line visible before truncation; use 3-5 relevant hashtags (#FootballHighlights, #SoccerReview, #TikTokFootball); add emojis sparingly for visual appeal (⚽🥅); include clear calls to action (e.g., "Comment your prediction!"); incorporate natural keywords for algorithm discoverability; and pair with on-screen text or subtitles highlighting key moments (e.g., "GOAL!" in bold) to boost retention and community interaction. Eligible creators and business accounts can instead use the Video Scheduler to schedule videos up to 10 days in advance via TikTok Studio on the web. Shoppable videos can be scheduled up to 30 days ahead via the app. As of 2025, scheduling is also available directly in the in-app post composer. Core recording tools include a , flash, grid overlay for composition, and beauty modes for facial smoothing or filters applied in real-time. Post-recording, the editing suite provides timeline-based trimming to adjust clip lengths, speed controls from 0.3x to 3x for slow-motion or fast-forward effects, and voice modulation options like or deep tones. To apply these voice effects in 2025 and 2026, users open TikTok and record or upload a video, then on the editing screen tap the Voice Effects icon (musical note or microphone symbol), scroll and select an effect from categories like characters or enhancers (e.g., chipmunk, robot, deep voice), preview the changed voice, adjust if available, and save and post; these effects are free and integrated. Editing extends to visual enhancements such as AR effects from a library exceeding 100,000 options as of 2023, green screen for background replacement, and transitions between clips. Users can overlay text with customizable fonts, including the official TikTok Sans typeface—a bold, uppercase sans-serif font with rounded edges based on circular shapes, available in bold weights and often used in pink and orange colors—along with animations, and durations; in multi-clip videos, text can be timed to specific clips by selecting the text after addition via the Text icon, then dragging the duration bar or arrows on the timeline to set the start at the clip's beginning and end at its conclusion, ensuring it appears only during that segment and disappears on cuts to subsequent clips—this process can be repeated for varied text across clips. Users can add stickers or GIFs; and apply filters for . Audio integration features synchronization with TikTok's catalog of over 1 billion licensed sounds, including trending music, original audio, or voiceovers, with precise beat-matching tools. These tools emphasize rapid, intuitive assembly, enabling users to finalize and post videos directly without external software, though advanced edits often leverage companion apps like CapCut for deeper capabilities.

Recommendation Algorithm and For You Page

The For You Page (FYP) constitutes the default feed upon opening the TikTok application, delivering a continuous, personalized sequence of short-form videos curated to align with individual user interests and past behaviors. Unlike follower-based feeds on platforms such as or , the FYP prioritizes algorithmic discovery over connections, enabling videos from unknown creators to achieve widespread visibility based solely on predicted user affinity. This feature has made TikTok a preferred home for many short video creators, as the strong algorithm facilitates effective content discovery and high engagement levels, allowing even new creators to achieve organic virality independent of established followings. This design fosters rapid content dissemination, with empirical analyses showing that high-engagement videos can propagate exponentially from initial small-scale exposure to millions of views within hours. TikTok's recommendation , which powers the FYP, employs a multi-stage process beginning with candidate generation from a massive video pool—estimated in the billions—followed by ranking via models that assign scores to each video based on projected engagement probability. The system draws on three primary input categories: user interactions (e.g., watch completion percentage, replays, likes, comments, shares, saves, and follows), video metadata (e.g., hashtags, captions, sounds, effects, and visual elements), and contextual user data (e.g., device type, preferences, , and network settings). Key factors for viral recommendations on the For You Page include user engagement signals such as watch time, completion rate, likes, shares, saves, and comments; video information like captions, hashtags, and sounds; interactions with followed accounts and created content; with device and account settings like language and location carrying lower weight. Follower count and past performance do not directly influence recommendations. For new users lacking interaction history, the algorithm addresses the cold start problem by presenting an initial batch of curated videos based on broad demographic and device signals, rapidly refining the profile through early interactions to personalize subsequent recommendations. Watch time emerges as the dominant signal, with full video completions weighted heavily to infer relevance, while like skips or reports downranks similar content. Videos initially test against a limited audience of hundreds; strong performance metrics trigger broader distribution, creating a feedback loop that amplifies virality independent of production or creator . Key signals for virality include completion rates, initial engagement velocity, and share-to-view ratios, which prompt escalation to larger audiences. A sudden increase in video views observed in TikTok Analytics typically indicates that the algorithm is promoting the content on the For You Page, resulting in initial traction primarily from non-followers. Creators aiming to maximize views in 2025-2026 can align strategies with these priorities, including posting consistently 3-5 times per week to boost visibility by up to 17%, hooking viewers in the first 3 seconds with strong openings, leveraging trending sounds, effects, challenges, and 3-5 relevant hashtags from TikTok's Creative Center, incorporating 2-3 targeted keywords in captions, on-screen text, and voiceovers for SEO optimization, producing authentic niche-focused content that sustains watch time and encourages likes, comments, shares, and rewatches, and in 2026 emphasizing saves and shares over likes, longer videos of 60-90 seconds, topic authority through niche consistency, and "search value" from spoken words or text for better query matching; actively engaging via responses, Duets, and Stitches, and refining approaches through TikTok Analytics review. To promote originality and protect creators, the algorithm detects duplicate content using audio fingerprinting, which analyzes elements like melody, rhythm, dialogues, and background sounds, and visual fingerprinting to identify reposts or highly similar videos; high similarity results in limited distribution, marking as duplicate, or removal. Straight reposts or reuploads of older videos tend to receive low engagement because the algorithm heavily favors original, new content with high novelty and penalizes recycled or duplicated material to reward creativity and prevent spam. At its technical core, the algorithm leverages a proprietary real-time infrastructure known as Monolith, which utilizes collisionless embedding tables to handle dense feature representations and process recommendations at scale with sub-second latency. This enables handling of heterogeneous signals through deep neural networks, incorporating collaborative filtering to match users with latent content preferences and content-based methods to analyze video semantics. To mitigate filter bubbles, the system incorporates mechanisms for introducing diverse and novel content into feeds, balancing personalization with exposure to varied material to sustain long-term engagement. Empirical studies of user data donations reveal that the system's precision in engagement prediction correlates with prolonged session times, averaging 52 minutes daily per active user as of 2023, though this efficacy also correlates with risks of compulsive scrolling due to optimized retention over diverse exposure. Official disclosures emphasize that the model avoids over-reliance on demographic proxies, focusing instead on behavioral causality to mitigate echo chambers, yet independent analyses indicate amplification of high-arousal content, such as emotionally charged or novel stimuli, which sustains dopamine-driven loops. Concerns over algorithmic bias have been raised, with documented instances of content suppression or amplification based on topics like politics or ideology, amid ongoing debates about the system's transparency due to ByteDance's limited disclosure of internal mechanics. The algorithm's opacity, often termed a "," stems from its proprietary nature, with limiting public details to high-level factors while proprietary elements like exact weighting equations remain undisclosed. Researchers accessing anonymized have quantified its superiority in retention over non-personalized feeds, with personalized FYPs yielding 20-30% higher rates in controlled experiments, underscoring a causal link between interaction-driven and platform stickiness. This performance, rooted in iterative and vast training datasets, has propelled TikTok's daily active users to exceed 1.5 billion globally by mid-2025, though it invites scrutiny for prioritizing metric-optimized content over informational balance.

Advanced Features (Duets, Stitches, Effects, and )

TikTok's advanced features enable users to interact with and build upon existing content, fostering collaborative creativity and real-time engagement. Duets allow users to record a video positioned alongside an original video in a split-screen format, synchronizing playback to facilitate reactions, harmonies, or complementary performances. This feature requires the original video creator to enable Duets in their , and users can add their own audio, effects, or text overlays during recording. Introduced prior to 2020 expansions like microphone activation and new layouts, Duets have driven viral challenges by enabling direct engagement with popular content. Stitches, launched on September 3, 2020, permit users to extract a short clip—typically up to five seconds—from another public video and prepend or append their own footage, creating a seamless extension or response. Creators must opt-in to allow Stitching of their videos, and the feature integrates the borrowed segment directly into the new video's timeline, distinguishable by a subtle overlay indicating the sourced content. Unlike Duets' side-by-side view, Stitches emphasize sequential storytelling, often used for commentary or tutorials, though they raise considerations around consent and potential misuse if originals are later restricted. Effects encompass (AR) filters, stickers, and animations that overlay videos, developed through TikTok's Effect House platform, which opened to creators without coding expertise in April 2022. Users access hundreds of built-in effects via the app's creation interface, applying face-tracking, animations, or interactive elements to enhance visuals during recording or editing. Advanced creators publish custom effects for community use, with tools supporting through high-engagement designs, though platform algorithms prioritize effects aligning with trending challenges for visibility. Symphony Creative Studio is an AI-powered video generation tool that produces TikTok-optimized videos from minimal inputs. Access is limited to users with a TikTok for Business account, which can be created for free at ads.tiktok.com, and the tool is available on desktop. Generated videos meeting disclosure requirements are automatically labeled as AI-generated. TikTok Tako is an integrated AI-powered chatbot that assists users by answering questions, recommending videos, generating content ideas, and providing in-app support. Initially launched in testing in select markets, including the Philippines, in 2023, it expanded by 2026 to include features such as AI image generation, editing, restyling, and tone selection for responses. As an experimental tool, it may produce errors. Live Streaming supports real-time broadcasting, requiring users to be at least 18 years old with a minimum of 1,000 followers (local threshold may vary slightly by region, but consistently reported as 1,000 in major markets including Europe). Features include multi-guest hosting, AR effects integration, Q&A pinning, and virtual gifting for (restricted to 18+ users), enabling interactive sessions like performances or discussions with viewer comments influencing content flow. TikTok LIVE Studio extends functionality to desktop for higher-quality streams, emphasizing guidelines to moderate harmful interactions. These tools collectively amplify user-generated content's reach, with empirical showing higher engagement rates for collaborative formats over solo videos.

Content Ecosystem

TikTok's dominant content categories encompass short-form videos focused on , , , pranks, fitness, beauty, DIY projects, and education. As of November 2024, leads in viewership, followed closely by and pranks, which capitalize on the platform's favoring quick, shareable clips that encourage user participation. videos, involving choreographed routines synced to trending music, remain a foundational category, with creators posting content ranking among the platform's top performers in user engagement metrics. skits and pranks exploit the 15-60 second format for rapid punchlines and surprises, often amplifying virality through duets and stitches. Fitness and sports content, including workout tutorials and challenge adaptations, appeals to health-conscious users, while DIY and home renovation videos provide accessible, step-by-step guidance. Beauty and skincare tutorials have surged in prominence, particularly since the 2023 rollout of TikTok Shop, where such content drove approximately 370 million item sales in the beauty category alone during 2024. Educational videos, categorized under hashtags like #LearnOnTikTok, represent a growing trend with over 858 billion cumulative views by mid-2025, shifting from pure entertainment toward practical knowledge dissemination in areas like science, language learning, and skills training. This category's expansion reflects algorithmic prioritization of retention-boosting content, though empirical data indicates it trails entertainment in raw volume but excels in sustained watch time. In 2024, longer TikTok videos (typically 2-10 minutes, often including compilations or storytelling content) generally performed better than single short videos (under 60 seconds) in terms of total views and watch time. Videos 3-10 minutes received the most views, 2-minute videos had the highest engagement, and videos over 1 minute achieved 63.8% more watch time than 30-60 second videos. Short videos had higher completion rates but lower overall reach and views. Emerging trends include niche sub-communities such as , which has propelled book sales through review and recommendation videos, influencing physical bookstore displays and publisher strategies by late 2024. Commerce-integrated content, like product unboxings and demos, has intertwined with core categories, with dominating TikTok Shop transactions and contributing to a 71% increase in total watch time in 2024. Hashtags signaling these trends, such as #dance, #comedy, and #learnontiktok, consistently rank among the most used, underscoring their role in discovery and algorithmic amplification. As of mid-February 2026, trending TikTok hashtags related to motivation and self-improvement include #morningroutine (29K posts, tied to personal development routines) and #teamworkmakesthedreamwork (high engagement, emphasizing motivational teamwork), alongside evergreen motivational hashtags such as #Motivation, #Inspiration, #Mindset, #SelfImprovement, #MotivationMonday, #PositiveVibes, and #StayMotivated, drawing from personal growth categories. Overall, content evolution favors hybrid formats blending entertainment with utility, driven by user-generated challenges that evolve rapidly, often peaking within days of a viral sound or template launch.

Viral Challenges and Cultural Phenomena

TikTok's and features like duets and stitches have enabled rapid dissemination of user-generated challenges, often originating from or short skits that users replicate and share. The Renegade challenge, created by teenager Jalaiah Harmon in late 2019, exploded in popularity in early 2020, with millions of videos using K CAMP's song "" and influencing mainstream celebrities to participate. Similarly, the Savage Challenge tied to Megan Thee Stallion's 2020 track "Savage" amassed over 2 billion views, demonstrating how challenges propel music virality. Cultural phenomena extend beyond dances, with —a promoting —revitalizing reading among since around 2020. Videos featuring emotional reviews and recommendations have driven sales surges; for instance, self-published authors reported life-changing revenue from TikTok exposure, while publishers noted shifts in industry trends toward interactive content. has created global bestsellers, connecting readers worldwide and prompting collaborations like Spotify's 2025 "Big on " hub for audiobooks. TikTok challenges have reshaped pop culture by accelerating trends, with platform snippets often determining chart success; artists like benefited early, but by 2022, labels actively adapted to TikTok's model for discovery. , memes, and propagate similarly, embedding platform-specific phrases into broader . However, many viral challenges pose physical and psychological risks, particularly to adolescents. The , involving self-induced oxygen deprivation, contributed to at least 20 U.S. child deaths by late , with TikTok's surfacing such content within minutes of account creation. The skullbreaker challenge, peaking in February 2020, encouraged two-person jumps to trip a third, resulting in concussions and fractures. Devious Licks in September 2021 spurred vandalism, damaging nationwide. Other trends, like the outlet challenge, caused electrical fires and system damage. These incidents highlight causal links between algorithmic amplification and real-world harm, with internal documents revealing TikTok's awareness of youth vulnerabilities yet persistent exposure issues.

Algorithm-Driven Content Moderation and Censorship

TikTok's relies heavily on its recommendation , which flags potentially violative material using AI-driven detection before human review, often resulting in reduced visibility or removal of videos. This process effectively implements by deprioritizing or shadowbanning content deemed sensitive, limiting its reach on the For You Page without explicit notification to creators. Internal moderation guidelines direct the algorithm to suppress videos referencing politically charged topics, particularly those conflicting with Chinese government positions. For copyright infringement, TikTok issues a strike upon removal of content following a valid claim; accounts face permanent bans after 3 strikes for copyright infringement, separate from trademark strikes, with strikes expiring after 90 days, though immediate bans may apply for severe violations or other policy breaches. Leaked ByteDance documents from 2019 revealed explicit instructions for moderators to censor content mentioning the 1989 events, Tibetan independence, practices, or criticism of China's socialist system, categorizing such material as violations or restricting it to "visible to self" status. These guidelines aligned with Chinese foreign policy priorities, prompting videos on or ethnic conflicts to be demonetized or removed. ByteDance claimed these rules were outdated by September 2019, asserting subsequent adoption of localized policies independent of Beijing's influence. However, subsequent analyses indicate persistent . A 2023 study by the Network Contagion Research Institute compared hashtag usage across platforms, finding TikTok underrepresented topics suppressed in , such as Uyghur issues, , and Hong Kong protests; for instance, the ratio of #HongKongProtest to #TaylorSwift posts was 174 times lower on TikTok than . Searches for "Tiananmen" yielded only 19.6% anti- content on TikTok, versus 64.6% on and 56.3% on , with pro- videos receiving an 87% higher views-to-likes ratio. Anti- content consistently showed lower algorithmic promotion, suggesting systematic deboosting. TikTok dismissed the study as methodologically flawed, relying on artificial accounts rather than organic user feeds. This algorithmic suppression extends to broader political content, fostering among creators who alter language or avoid triggers to evade detection, such as misspelling sensitive terms or using euphemisms. U.S. intelligence assessments acknowledge risks of covert manipulation under China's laws compelling cooperation, though no direct evidence of U.S.-targeted has surfaced. Heavy TikTok users exhibited 49% greater positivity toward China's record in surveys, correlating with exposure to amplified pro-CCP narratives over critical ones.

Tips for New Users in 2026

As of 2026, new TikTok users are recommended to strictly adhere to the platform's community guidelines, with enhanced AI detection leading to stricter enforcement of violations. Maintaining consistency in content genres helps avoid declines in account evaluation by the algorithm. Users should engage with comments and avoid low-quality posts to sustain engagement. Videos crafted to prioritize high viewer retention rates, saves, and replays perform better under the algorithm. Beginners are advised to start with short-form videos to build familiarity. Compliance with guidelines is crucial to prevent shadowbans or account suspensions. For privacy management, blocking a phone number on the device does not impact TikTok's features like user blocking, friend suggestions, or account interactions, which are handled separately within the app; friend suggestions rely on optionally synced contacts managed in TikTok settings, independent of device-level phone blocking. TikTok prohibits image-based sexual abuse and sextortion under its Community Guidelines. To report non-consensual intimate images, users may submit via the dedicated form for nonconsensual intimate imagery, child sexual abuse material, or explicit deepfakes, or report in-app by selecting the content and an appropriate violation category. For blackmail or sextortion, report posts by pressing and holding, tapping Report, and selecting Violence, abuse, and criminal exploitation; for direct messages, navigate to Inbox, open the chat, tap Report, select a reason, and confirm. Users should cease responding to threats, document evidence, and seek assistance from trusted adults or authorities if endangered. Adults may use StopNCII.org to hash and block non-consensual images, while minors can utilize Take It Down for removal support; contact law enforcement for imminent threats.

User Base and Engagement

Global Demographics and Usage Statistics

As of early , TikTok reported approximately 1.59 billion monthly globally, positioning it as one of the largest platforms excluding its Chinese counterpart, Douyin. This figure reflects sustained growth amid regulatory pressures in various markets, with downloads reaching 192 million in the second quarter of 2025 alone. No publicly available data exists on TikTok's new account growth specifically in the first 24 hours of 2026 (January 1, 2026), as the platform does not release such granular daily sign-up figures, with no specific early-2026 spikes noted. Demographically, TikTok's user base skews young, with nearly 70% of users aged 18 to 34; the largest segment is adults aged 25 to 34, comprising about 30% of the total. Gender distribution shows a slight majority globally, at around 55% female and 45% male, though regional variations exist—such as a more balanced split in the United States.
Top Countries by TikTok Users (2025)Monthly Active Users (millions)
136
108
91.7
85.4
66.9
Asia-Pacific dominates regionally with over 700 million users, including approximately 17 million users aged 18+ in Japan as of 2024 (about 17% adult penetration), with strong popularity among teens and 20s and steady historical growth but no specific forecasts for 2026, followed by significant penetration in the and , though adoption remains uneven due to bans or restrictions in countries like . In North America, Canada exemplifies strong penetration, with 16.6 million users aged 18 and above as of late 2025 (the most recent data available in early 2026), according to DataReportal's Digital 2026: Canada report. This represents TikTok's potential ad reach, sourced from TikTok's advertising resources, equivalent to 50.6% of the adult population and 43.5% of the internet user base; the ad reach grew by 36.4% (+4.44 million users) from late 2024 to late 2025. Note that this data excludes users under 18 and may not reflect total active users. In Africa, Nigeria exemplifies strong penetration in emerging markets, with 47.8 million users aged 18 and above in late 2025, according to DataReportal's Digital 2026: Nigeria report (published November 2025). This represents TikTok's potential ad reach, sourced from TikTok's advertising resources, equivalent to 38.2% of the adult population (18+) and 44.0% of the internet user base; the ad reach grew by 43.4% (+14.5 million users) from late 2024 to late 2025. Note that this data excludes users under 18 and may not reflect total active users. Average daily usage stands at about 55 to per user worldwide, with U.S. users averaging 53.8 minutes; this equates to roughly 95 minutes in some estimates, underscoring high engagement driven by short-form video consumption. For small accounts under 5,000 followers, videos average approximately 860 views, reflecting benchmarks such as a 43% reach rate for accounts around 2,000 followers or 86% for 1,000-follower accounts, though some sources report typical views of 200-500, with stronger performance exceeding these based on engagement and algorithmic distribution.

Age-Specific Patterns and Risks (Including Underage Access)

TikTok's user base skews heavily toward younger demographics, with approximately 30.2% of global users aged 18-24 and 23.3% aged 25-34 as of 2024, while users under 18 constitute a significant portion, including high penetration among teenagers. In the United States, 67% of individuals aged 13-17 report active use of the platform. Teens in this group exhibit intense engagement patterns, with about one-quarter of Black or Hispanic adolescents accessing TikTok almost constantly, compared to 8% of White teens. Underage access remains prevalent despite TikTok's restricting registration to those 13 and older, with no robust age verification required at signup. Studies indicate that 68.2% of children under 13 in surveyed populations maintain TikTok accounts, often created with parental assistance or evasion tactics, making it the most popular platform among this group where 63.8% hold at least one account overall. TikTok bans accounts believed to belong to users under 13 and provides appeal processes via in-app notifications, employing verification methods such as government-issued ID with selfies, facial age estimation, parent/guardian confirmation (for ages 13-17, including credit card verification of the adult), and credit card authorization for 18+. Similar appeals apply to restrictions on age-gated features, including LIVE streaming (requiring 18+) and direct messaging, which prohibits users aged 13-15 from sending or receiving messages from any users, including those 18 and older, as part of safety policies requiring users to be at least 16 to access DM features (16+). Successful appeals restore account or feature access and update the date of birth; unsuccessful appeals or lack thereof may lead to permanent account deletion after 23 days in the US, 120 days in other regions, or 180 days in the EEA. Enforcement efforts, including AI-based age detection implemented by 2025, have proven insufficient, as evidenced by regulatory fines for permitting up to 1.4 million under-13 users in the UK alone prior to enhanced measures. In January 2026, TikTok announced it would begin deploying advanced age-detection technology across Europe, using profile information, posts, and behavioral signals to identify and restrict accounts of users under 13, in response to regulatory pressures. TikTok's Family Pairing parental controls enable parents to link their account to their teen's for oversight, providing access to screen time summaries (total time spent and app openings over the last 4 weeks), the teen's following and follower lists, blocked accounts, and management of settings such as daily screen time limits, scheduled downtime, content filters, Restricted Mode, and privacy options. However, these controls do not allow parents to view their child's watch history or a detailed log of specific videos watched. Youth users, particularly adolescents, face elevated risks from the platform's , which prioritizes short-form, dopamine-driven content conducive to and deterioration. Curated personas fuel upward social comparison, leading to body dissatisfaction and lower well-being, especially through appearance-related content and influencer exposure that reduces body satisfaction. Heavy use links to higher psychological distress via these social comparison mechanisms. Notably, 46% of adolescents aged 13-17 report that social media worsens their body image. Studies among youth aged 18-30 in Pakistan confirm that social comparison positively predicts social media addiction and correlates strongly with fear of missing out (FoMO). Frequent TikTok use correlates with heightened anxiety and depression symptoms, especially among those under 24, as internal documents reveal deliberate addictive design features despite awareness of harms like disruption and . Lawsuits from multiple U.S. states in 2024 accused TikTok of fostering profound psychological harms through features that encourage prolonged sessions, with 20% of young users exceeding recommended time limits. Additional dangers for minors include exposure to harmful content and participation in viral challenges, which have resulted in documented injuries and fatalities. The platform's has amplified depressive, suicidal, or material toward young users, while challenges involving burns from candied sugar or gel blasters (e.g., Orbeez injuries) have led to pediatric hospitalizations, with trends contributing to non-fatal injuries ranking among top risks for children. Older users (35+) show lower engagement and fewer reported risks, comprising smaller shares like 12.6% in the 35-44 group, with patterns shifting toward informational or commercial content rather than high-risk trends.

Commercial and Influencer Utilization

Brands leverage TikTok for advertising through in-feed ads, branded hashtag challenges, and trend-jacking, with global ad revenue reaching $23.6 billion in 2024 and projected to exceed $33 billion in 2025. TikTok Shop, an integrated e-commerce feature launched in select markets including the US in 2023, enables direct purchases via short videos and live streams, driving gross merchandise value (GMV) to $33 billion globally in 2024. In the US, TikTok Shop GMV grew from $15.1 million in July 2023 to $1.1 billion in July 2025, with average shopper spending of $708 per user in 2024 and 43.8% of US users making at least one in-app purchase that year. Influencers utilize TikTok primarily through sponsored content, affiliate links via TikTok Shop, and the platform's Creator Rewards Program, which replaced the earlier Creator Fund in 2024 and pays $0.40 to $1.00 per 1,000 qualified views— a significant increase from the prior $0.02 to $0.04 rate. Business accounts can add a clickable website link to their profile bio upon meeting eligibility criteria, including at least 1,000 followers, public account status, and compliance with TikTok's community guidelines; these requirements apply equally to personal and business accounts, with no unique provisions for business accounts or announced alterations for 2025 or 2026. Top influencers secure brand deals, with 66% of brands incorporating TikTok into their strategies as of 2025, contributing to the broader influencer industry's $21.1 billion valuation after 13.7% year-over-year growth. This model fosters a where micro-influencers (under 100,000 followers) often achieve higher engagement rates than larger accounts, enabling brands to target niche audiences cost-effectively through authentic, algorithm-amplified endorsements. In 2025, average engagement rates (calculated as interactions per followers) showed an inverse relationship with follower count: under 100K followers at 7.50%, 100K–500K at 5.10%, 500K–1M at 4.48%, 1M–5M at 3.76%, 5M–10M at 4.22%, and over 10M at 2.88%, with an overall average of approximately 2.50%; projections for 2026 indicate stability at 2.45–2.55%. Some sources report higher platform-wide averages (e.g., 3.7% in 2025), but these may reflect different methodologies such as per views or brand-focused data, with segmented influencer benchmarks remaining consistent across reports. However, earnings variability persists, with many creators relying on diversified revenue streams amid platform policies prioritizing high-engagement, original content over reposts. For optimal account growth, a 2025 Buffer analysis of over 11 million posts found that posting 2-5 times per week delivers the most efficient gains in views (up to 17% more per post) and viral potential compared to once weekly, while higher frequencies (6-10 or more) increase total views but with diminishing returns per post and greater quality demands. The study emphasizes consistency and quality over maximum volume, though TikTok has recommended 1-4 posts per day in some guidance. Creators seeking to increase direct messages from users adjust privacy settings to permit direct messages from "Everyone" or "Friends" via Settings > Privacy > Direct messages. Effective strategies include adding calls to action in videos and bios, such as "DM me your questions!" or "Message me for collabs," creating engaging content that prompts interaction like asking questions or offering advice, going live frequently to enable viewer messaging, actively engaging in and replying to comments, posting consistently with trending sounds, hashtags, and high-quality videos to boost visibility, and building community through collaborations and cross-promotion. These tactics enhance overall engagement and visibility, leading to higher direct message volumes.

Economic and Business Impacts

Revenue Model and Advertising Ecosystem

TikTok's centers on as its dominant source, accounting for approximately 77% of total platform in 2024, when global earnings reached an estimated $23 billion, reflecting a 42.8% year-over-year increase. This income derives from targeted placements integrated into the For You Page feed, leveraging the platform's recommendation to match ads with user interests derived from viewing history and interactions. Supplementary include in-app purchases of virtual gifts during live , which users buy to support creators, and commissions from integrations like TikTok Shop, though these constitute a smaller share compared to ads. Projections for 2025 estimate alone could exceed $33 billion globally, driven by expanded ad and international , assuming no major regulatory disruptions. The advertising ecosystem operates through TikTok for Business, a suite of tools including Ads Manager for campaign creation, targeting, and analytics, enabling advertisers to reach over 1.5 billion users with performance-based metrics such as cost-per-click or cost-per-mille. Core ad formats encompass In-Feed Ads, which appear natively in users' feeds as short videos indistinguishable from organic content except for a subtle label; TopView Ads, full-screen immersive videos shown upon app launch; and Brand Takeover Ads, high-impact 3-5 second banners that dominate the initial user session. Interactive formats like Branded Challenges encourage tied to sponsor campaigns, amplifying reach through viral participation, while Branded Effects and Spark Ads allow brands to overlay custom filters or promote existing creator videos with added promotions. These formats prioritize short-form video creativity, with advertisers optimizing for engagement via of hooks, music, and trends, often yielding higher than static ads on legacy platforms due to TikTok's youth-skewed, high-engagement audience. Advertiser participation spans small businesses to multinational corporations, with the platform supporting over 7 million U.S. businesses in through accessible entry points like automated bidding and tracking for conversion attribution. Revenue growth hinges on the algorithm's efficacy in sustaining session lengths averaging 52 minutes daily for U.S. adults, which maximizes ad impressions, though this model has drawn scrutiny for prioritizing retention over user autonomy. Global ad spend on TikTok is forecasted to capture 4.2% of the U.S. digital ad market in , underscoring its maturation into a full-funnel that funnels users from awareness to purchase via shoppable videos and live events. Despite reliance on Chinese parent ByteDance for infrastructure, TikTok's ad policies enforce compliance with regional to mitigate geopolitical risks, enabling sustained ecosystem expansion.

Creator Economy and Monetization Opportunities

TikTok provides multiple monetization avenues for creators, primarily through the Creator Rewards Program and live gifts, alongside features, and integrations. The Creator Rewards Program, introduced in 2024 and expanded by July 2025 to replace the earlier Creator Fund, compensates eligible creators based on video performance metrics such as views, originality, and engagement duration, with payouts ranging from $0.40 to $1.00 per 1,000 qualified views and up to $8.00 for exceptional content. To qualify for rewards, videos must be original (not Duets, Stitches, or Photo Mode), at least one minute in length, high quality with good audience retention, receive at least 1,000 qualified views on the For You Page, and exclude prohibited content such as politics, misleading information, or divisive topics. Eligibility for the program requires creators to be at least 18 years old, have at least 10,000 followers, achieve at least 100,000 valid video views in the past 30 days, maintain an account in good standing without violations of Community Guidelines, and typically use a personal account rather than a business account, reflecting TikTok's shift toward rewarding higher-quality, longer-form content over sheer volume. In contrast, the deprecated Creator Fund offered lower rates of $0.02 to $0.04 per 1,000 views, yielding $20–$40 per million views, which many creators found insufficient for sustainable income. Live streaming represents a significant revenue stream via virtual gifts, where viewers purchase coins to send animated items during broadcasts, which creators redeem as diamonds convertible to cash at a rate determined after TikTok's commission—typically retaining about 50% of the gift value post-platform fees. High-engagement streams can generate substantial earnings; for instance, dedicated creators have reported up to $20,000 weekly from gifts alone, though this depends on audience size and interaction. Video Gifts extend this model to non-live content, allowing similar tipping mechanisms. However, updated Music Terms of Service effective July 25, 2025, prohibit alterations to copyrighted music, ban standalone copyrighted audio in livestreams, and restrict music use to approved or royalty-free options, limiting viral song incorporation and potentially reducing engagement in monetized streams. E-commerce opportunities through TikTok Shop enable creators to earn commissions as affiliates by promoting seller products via shoppable videos, lives, or links, with rates often set between 10% and 50% of sales value, varying by category and negotiation. Creators with strong followings can achieve significant , with some reporting nearing $200,000 annually from affiliate sales without handling inventory or fulfillment. These opportunities are constrained by the July 25, 2025, Music Terms updates, which prohibit general TikTok sounds—including trending or viral songs—in promotional or commercial content, raising takedown risks for branded videos while non-commercial videos using the official music library remain largely unaffected. The Creator Marketplace facilitates direct brand partnerships, where influencers pitch for sponsored content deals, often commanding $50–$150 per post for nano-influencers (under 10,000 followers) and over $100,000 for top-tier accounts like . Despite these options, earnings remain uneven: while top influencers average $44,250 annually, most creators earn modestly due to algorithm dependency and competition, with only a fraction qualifying for programs amid TikTok's 1.5 billion users as of 2025. The primary direct platform revenue sources—live gifts and the Creator Rewards Program—offer low per-view earnings, equivalent to tens of yen per 10,000 views under prior structures and still lagging competitors like YouTube in direct payouts, fostering growth through sponsored deals. Additional features like subscriptions and series collections provide recurring for loyal audiences, but success hinges on consistent, engaging content and optimal posting frequency; a 2025 Buffer study analyzing 11.4 million posts found that 2-5 posts per week deliver the most efficient gains in views (up to 17% more per post) and viral potential compared to posting once weekly, thereby enhancing monetization through increased engagement, though higher frequencies yield more total views with diminishing per-post returns and greater quality demands. TikTok's For Business resources, such as the blog post "Data-driven tips to make your organic content stand out" published on December 14, 2021, provide guidance for creators on improving organic content performance through video best practices and performance tracking.

Effects on Traditional Media and Industries

TikTok has significantly disrupted the music industry by prioritizing short, algorithm-favored audio clips for virality, often bypassing traditional promotion channels like radio and labels. Songs gaining traction through user-generated videos have topped charts without conventional marketing, as seen with tracks like Lil Nas X's "" in 2019, which amassed billions of streams post-TikTok exposure. However, this reliance has homogenized toward repetitive, hook-heavy structures optimized for 15-second clips, reducing diversity in songwriting and favoring viral potential over artistic depth. In the U.S., TikTok users spend 46% more monthly on music than average listeners, with 52% higher expenditure on live events and 62% on merchandise, indicating boosted consumption but tied to platform algorithms. Industry analysts note that while TikTok accelerates hits—streaming numbers in hundreds of millions to billions annually—it exposes labels to risks from licensing disputes, as evidenced by Universal Music Group's 2024 withdrawal of catalog amid royalty negotiations. In television and film, TikTok's short-form format has eroded time spent on long-form content, particularly among younger demographics, contributing to declining viewership for traditional broadcasts and streaming series. A 2024 study linked TikTok viewing to heightened brain activation in attention-related areas but correlated it with fragmented focus, reducing sustained engagement with movies and TV episodes. Nielsen data shows short-video platforms like TikTok and siphoning viewing hours from premium streaming services, with Gen Z diversifying away from scripted narratives toward user clips. Conversely, TikTok aids marketing: 69% of users in a 2021 study co-created promotional content for shows or movies, driving box-office surges like the "Gentleminions" trend for Minions: The Rise of Gru in 2022, which added millions in ticket sales via viral challenges. This dual effect pressures Hollywood to adapt narratives for clip-ability, shortening pilots and emphasizing meme-worthy moments to compete with endless scrolling. TikTok has accelerated the decline of traditional news media by emerging as a primary source for younger audiences, fostering "newsfluencers" over established outlets and amplifying unverified clips during events like protests or disasters. As of September 2025, 43% of U.S. adults under 30 regularly consume news on TikTok, a sharp rise from 9% in 2020, often via algorithmic feeds rather than followed journalists—most users track zero traditional media accounts. This shift erodes ad revenue for print and broadcast journalism, as short videos prioritize sensationalism over depth, with Pew noting low active following of credible sources amid rising misinformation risks. Mainstream media's institutional biases, compounded by platform opacity, exacerbate distrust, as users encounter ideologically skewed content without gatekeeping. The publishing industry has seen TikTok's community revive print sales, particularly in genres, countering digital fatigue with viral endorsements driving bookstore traffic. propelled 20 million print units sold in adult fiction in 2021 alone, per , with a 30% U.S. YA sales increase attributed to platform trends as of 2023. Viral videos have resurrected older titles and launched careers, influencing publishers to prioritize TikTok-friendly covers and tropes, though this favors niche romance and fantasy over broader literature. Independent bookstores report surges post-viral hits, as seen in dedicated sections like those at . Advertising has pivoted toward TikTok's ecosystem, where short-video formats yield higher engagement—15% above static ads in 2024—and outperform traditional or print in ROI for 75% of advertisers in a 2025 Nordic study. now emphasize creator collaborations over endorsements, with measurable lifts like 10% brand search increases from campaigns, diverting budgets from legacy media amid TikTok's 1.5 billion users. This disrupts agencies reliant on long-form buys, forcing adaptation to algorithm-driven, user-generated ads that prioritize authenticity over polished commercials.

Societal and Cultural Effects

Positive Innovations and Entertainment Value

TikTok's short-form video format, limited to 15–60 seconds, has innovated content consumption by prioritizing rapid, bite-sized entertainment that aligns with diminished attention spans, enabling users to engage with diverse, high-velocity media without commitment to longer narratives. This structure, combined with built-in editing tools like effects, filters, and music overlays, lowers for creation, allowing novices to produce professional-looking videos using cameras alone. The platform's For You Page (FYP) further enhances discovery by recommending content based on user interactions such as views, likes, shares, and completion rates, rather than solely follower counts, which democratizes visibility and surfaces niche or emerging creators to broad audiences. In entertainment value, TikTok excels through viral challenges, duets, and stitches that foster interactive, communal experiences, such as lip-syncing, dance trends, and comedic skits, which have amassed billions of views and built global communities around shared creativity. The algorithm's efficiency in matching content to preferences—evidenced by its ability to retain users through personalized feeds—has made the app a for lighthearted , with users reporting heightened mood improvement from quirky, authentic videos. A key innovation lies in revitalizing the music industry, where user-generated videos propel tracks to virality; for instance, a 2025 Luminate report found U.S. TikTok users are 74% more likely than average short-form video users to discover and share new music, contributing to successes, increased streaming royalties, and merchandise sales for independent artists. This effect stems from seamless integration of licensed audio libraries, enabling remixes and trends that drive organic promotion beyond traditional radio or labels. TikTok also blends entertainment with via initiatives like #LearnOnTikTok, launched in 2019, which features short explainer videos on topics from facts to skills tutorials, attracting millions of views and supported by a $50 million Creative Learning Fund announced in May 2020 to incentivize quality creators. Early content under this hashtag predominantly covered STEM subjects in engaging, entertaining formats, broadening access to knowledge without formal gatekeeping. Overall, these features have empowered underrepresented voices, with the platform's design facilitating raw, unfiltered expression that celebrates individuality over polished production.

Criticisms of Addiction, Mental Health, and Cultural Degradation

TikTok's , which prioritizes short-form videos optimized for rapid consumption, has been linked to addictive usage patterns through mechanisms resembling variable reward schedules, similar to slot machines, triggering releases that reinforce habitual scrolling. A 2025 study found that TikTok exhibits the highest rates among platforms, with users averaging 53.8 minutes daily, contributing to global estimates of 210 million people affected by social media addiction. Problematic TikTok use, measured via scales adapted from established assessments, correlates with increased daily times, rising from 95 minutes per day in 2022 to over 200 minutes weekly averages by 2023 in surveyed cohorts. Empirical research indicates that excessive TikTok consumption exacerbates declines, particularly among adolescents and young adults. Addictive users report higher levels of depression, anxiety, stress, and compared to moderate or non-users, with one 2023 study of adolescents showing statistically significant elevations in these metrics. Among , prolonged exposure associates with disrupted patterns, including reduced duration and quality, which in turn amplify vulnerability to mood disorders. Curated personas on the platform fuel upward social comparison, particularly in appearance-related content from influencers, leading to body dissatisfaction and reduced well-being; for instance, TikTok use among teenagers correlates with high social comparison and negative body image. Additionally, 46% of adolescents aged 13–17 report that social media worsens their body image, with heavy use linked to higher psychological distress via these comparison mechanisms. Studies among Pakistani youth aged 18–30 confirm that social comparison positively predicts social media addiction and correlates strongly with fear of missing out (FoMO). A of 2024 studies concluded an overall negative impact on , though causal evidence remains correlational and requires further longitudinal validation. Critics argue that TikTok's emphasis on vapid, high-stimulation content fosters cultural degradation by eroding sustained and depth. Frequent exposure to fast-paced videos, often under 15 seconds, contributes to shortened attention spans, with 2025 demonstrating reduced capacity for prolonged focus in heavy users, including students struggling with extended reading or tasks. This "TikTok brain" phenomenon, observed in emerging and behavioral studies, promotes mindless scrolling over creative or analytical pursuits, diminishing skills like deep reading and original thought. Such patterns align with broader concerns over platform-driven homogenization of , prioritizing viral ephemera over substantive , though these effects are debated as potentially overstated without controlling for pre-existing user traits.

Promotion of Extremism, Misinformation, and Ideological Bias

TikTok's recommendation has facilitated the spread of content, including white supremacist , misogynistic rhetoric, and glorification of . A 2021 analysis by the Institute for Strategic Dialogue (ISD) examined 1,030 videos on the platform that promoted hatred or , finding that such material often evaded through coded and profile aesthetics. The (ADL) documented in 2020 how extremists employed hashtags, duets, and ironic memes to disseminate ideologies like while bypassing filters. Similarly, a 2022 on and report identified militant accelerationist trends, including calls for , gaining traction among far-right users. Post-October 7, 2023, following the attack on , TikTok saw a surge in antisemitic material, with empirical studies recording heightened negative portrayals of and . A on analyzed content spikes, attributing them to algorithmic amplification of pro-Palestinian narratives that veered into tropes like theories about Jewish control. The Center's 2025 assessment highlighted TikTok's role in proliferating such extremism, noting users who promoted harmful ideologies amassed millions of views before removals. These patterns underscore causal links between short-form video dynamics—favoring emotional, rapid consumption—and the normalization of radical views, as evidenced by user engagement metrics in ISD's tracking. The platform has also amplified , particularly in and , where false claims spread faster than corrections due to algorithmic prioritization of novelty over veracity. Studies on content revealed widespread inaccuracies about psychiatric treatments, with problematic videos garnering higher engagement than factual ones, potentially exacerbating self-harm risks. In the 2024 U.S. elections, a investigation tested 47 pieces of disinformation, finding TikTok failed to block or label over half, including fabricated claims about voter fraud and candidate scandals. Following Taiwan's 2024 presidential election, TikTok and its Chinese counterpart Douyin proliferated edited videos alleging vote-rigging, such as spliced footage depicting discrepancies in counting procedures. Taiwan's Central Election Commission reported 105 false election-related messages to TikTok, with 54 videos removed by January 22, 2024, while the Investigation Bureau prosecuted creators for fabricating and disseminating such content under election laws, interpreting the campaign as cognitive operations aimed at eroding public trust in democratic institutions. in June 2024 identified misleading election news, such as altered videos of U.K. leaders, pushed to young users' feeds, correlating with the platform's 1.5 billion global users encountering unverified political content daily. Ideological biases in TikTok's stem from opaque design choices, including favoritism toward state-aligned narratives tied to its Chinese parent company, . A Network Contagion Research Institute analysis found consistent amplification of pro-Chinese Communist Party (CCP) content—such as sanitized Xinjiang depictions—while suppressing dissent like references, with affected videos receiving 30-50% fewer recommendations. ISD's study on search demonstrated reproduction of societal prejudices, linking neutral queries to hateful outputs targeting minorities. Political skews vary by context: a preprint detected recommendations favoring Republican-aligned U.S. videos in controlled tests, while reported pro-AfD () pushes to neutral users ahead of elections, raising integrity concerns despite platform denials. These discrepancies highlight non-neutral , where empirical reveals prioritization of divisive or regime-favorable material over balanced discourse.

Privacy and Security Risks

Data Collection Practices and User Tracking

TikTok collects a wide array of personal information from users, as outlined in its last updated February 5, 2026, including user-provided details such as name, age, username, password, , phone number, profile image, uploaded content like videos and comments, direct messages, purchase information including payment details and addresses, and contacts from phone or social networks when explicit permission is granted. The early 2026 privacy policy update modified aspects of data practices, including location tracking, and users are advised to review it for changes. TikTok's contact syncing feature, which remains available as of 2026, allows users to optionally sync their device contacts to suggest friends based on matching phone numbers or emails from those contacts; adding one's own phone number to the TikTok account is optional for purposes like login, recovery, or security and is not required for contact syncing, with no significant changes to these features occurring in 2025 or 2026; users can unlink a phone number from their account globally, including in Malaysia, without requiring an OTP or verification code by navigating to Profile > Menu > Settings and privacy > Account > User Information > Phone number > Unlink phone > Unlink, though adding or changing a phone number requires verification, and TikTok recommends linking an email as an alternative login method for security, including enabling two-step verification. The platform also gathers data automatically, encompassing IP addresses, approximate geolocation derived from IP or SIM card data (with precise GPS disabled for U.S. users since August 2020), device identifiers including model and operating system, platform usage patterns such as viewed content and interaction durations, for ad tracking, and metadata from user activities. In addition to direct collection, TikTok obtains information from third-party sources, such as social media login providers like or , advertisers and partners providing browsing activity and mobile advertising IDs, affiliated entities, and public databases; however, there is no reliable evidence that TikTok directly tracks or accesses users' Google search history or internal Google queries. TikTok collects in-app search history, device information, location data, and tracks web activity through pixels embedded on third-party websites (even if the app is not in use), which can capture visits, clicks, or searches on those sites. User tracking occurs through unique identifiers like device IDs and advertising IDs, enabling cross-device linkage and monitoring of off-platform behaviors for personalized ads via tools like the TikTok . The app records engagement metrics, including time spent on videos and contents of direct messages, to refine algorithmic recommendations. Controversial practices include access to clipboard contents, which privacy indicators revealed TikTok copies repeatedly—potentially with every keystroke when interacting with in-app content—allowing capture of sensitive data like passwords or financial details shared via copy-paste. Independent research from August 2022 identified that TikTok's in-app logs every keystroke when users click links or ads, facilitating potential beyond stated policy bounds, though TikTok attributes such functions to , bot detection, and spam prevention. Biometric data, such as facial and voiceprints, is collected with user consent for features like effects or , but reports indicate broader inference from video uploads without always explicit opt-in. TikTok's denies collecting device IMEI or SIM serial numbers, yet analyses highlight extensive device fingerprinting that achieves similar tracking granularity. Independent audits, such as those commissioned from in 2023, have verified some data controls but focused more on storage than comprehensive tracking verification, amid ongoing scrutiny of policy adherence.

Potential for Chinese Government Exploitation

TikTok's parent company, ByteDance, is headquartered in Beijing and subject to Chinese national security laws, including the 2017 National Intelligence Law, which mandates that Chinese organizations and citizens support, assist, and cooperate in intelligence work, potentially enabling government access to user data stored by ByteDance entities. While TikTok maintains that U.S. user data is not shared with the Chinese government and is isolated via Project Texas (storing data on Oracle servers in the U.S.), internal practices have raised concerns: in 2022–2023, ByteDance employees accessed sensitive U.S. journalist data without authorization, and U.S. Department of Justice filings in 2024 revealed that TikTok staff used the China-based Lark platform to transmit U.S. user data—including IP addresses, device information, and location data—to ByteDance servers accessible by personnel in China. The platform's recommendation algorithm, which drives content visibility, is developed and maintained under ByteDance's Chinese operations and cannot be exported without approval from Chinese authorities under regulations updated in 2020 to classify such technologies as sensitive. This structure creates potential for algorithmic manipulation to amplify or suppress content in alignment with Chinese state interests, as evidenced by ByteDance's internal directives and the company's embedded committee, which includes senior executives obligated to prioritize national objectives. Academic analyses have documented underrepresentation on TikTok of topics suppressed in China, such as Uyghur abuses and protests, compared to platforms like or , suggesting rather than mere failures. Content moderation practices further illustrate compliance risks: leaked ByteDance guidelines from 2019 instructed global moderators to censor references to , Tibetan independence, and , while promoting neutral or positive portrayals of . Although TikTok denies direct government-directed censorship, these patterns align with Chinese regulatory pressures, and U.S. intelligence assessments have warned of the platform's capacity for influence operations, including spreading or collecting behavioral data for targeted , given ByteDance's obligations under laws like the 2021 Data Security Law. No conclusive public evidence confirms active exploitation for as of October 2025, but the legal framework and operational ties substantiate ongoing vulnerabilities, prompting divestiture requirements in the U.S. to sever Chinese control.

Notable Breaches and Internal Security Lapses

In December 2022, , TikTok's parent company, confirmed that four employees had improperly accessed the personal data of two U.S.-based journalists investigating the platform's data practices, including location data derived from IP addresses. The incident stemmed from an internal effort to identify leaks about TikTok's handling of U.S. user information, with employees using TikTok's tools to track the reporters' physical locations. fired the involved staff and stated the actions violated company policies, prompting a U.S. Department of Justice investigation into potential of American citizens, including journalists. Beyond this case, ByteDance's internal inquiries revealed broader unauthorized access to U.S. TikTok user data by employees based in , occurring multiple times despite safeguards like Project Texas, which aimed to store U.S. data domestically and limit overseas access. In 2022, an identified instances where China-based staff bypassed restrictions to view sensitive , including non-public videos and device details, raising concerns about compliance with data localization promises made to regulators. These lapses contributed to ongoing scrutiny of TikTok's security practices, with reports indicating repeated policy violations that exposed U.S. users' data to potential foreign review. TikTok has also faced alleged external breaches, though many remain unconfirmed by the company. In August 2020, a class-action accused the platform of mishandling from approximately 89 million users, including biometric from facial recognition scans, though this centered on privacy practices rather than a direct hack. In May 2025, a known as "Often9" claimed to have exploited an internal vulnerability to steal 428 million unique user records—encompassing emails, phone numbers, and usernames—and offered them for sale on forums, with cybersecurity firm Kaduu verifying sample authenticity. TikTok did not publicly confirm the incident, consistent with its denials of prior claimed intrusions, such as a separate April 2025 assertion by hackers of compromising over 900,000 user credentials. These events underscore persistent vulnerabilities in TikTok's , amplifying risks of amid its ties to ByteDance's headquarters.

National Security Concerns and Bans

National security concerns about TikTok center on its ownership by , a Beijing-based company subject to Chinese national intelligence, cybersecurity, and security laws that mandate cooperation with government requests for and assistance in intelligence activities. These laws, including the 2017 National Intelligence Law, compel Chinese firms to provide without public disclosure, raising fears that the (CCP) could access sensitive user information such as location , biometric identifiers, and behavioral profiles collected by the app. U.S. intelligence officials, including the FBI, have warned that this could enable CCP of Americans, device control, or deployment, though claims no U.S. user requests from have been received. Additional risks include algorithmic manipulation for influence operations, where ByteDance's opaque recommendation system—shared with its Chinese counterpart Douyin—could prioritize CCP-favored content or suppress dissent, as evidenced by internal reports of moderation favoring Beijing's narratives on topics like Xinjiang and Taiwan. Concerns extend to potential espionage vectors, with security researchers highlighting vulnerabilities for injecting malicious software via app updates or data flows to Chinese servers. While some analyses question the immediacy of these threats relative to other apps, the combination of vast data troves (from over 170 million U.S. users) and mandatory CCP access distinguishes TikTok from Western platforms. These issues have prompted outright bans or restrictions in several nations. imposed a permanent ban on TikTok and 58 other Chinese apps on June 29, 2020, following deadly border clashes with in the region, citing threats to "sovereignty and integrity" from unchecked data flows to foreign servers. banned the app in 2022 under rule to curb perceived moral corruption, while followed suit in 2023 for similar cultural reasons alongside security fears. has enacted repeated temporary bans since 2020, often invoking and "immoral content," though enforcement varies. Many Western governments, including the U.S., U.K., , and members like and , prohibited TikTok on official devices by 2023, reflecting institutional caution over espionage risks without extending to full public bans in most cases.

International Restrictions and Probes

India imposed a nationwide ban on TikTok on June 29, 2020, citing threats to data privacy, , and sovereignty, shortly after a deadly border clash with ; the ban affected over 200 million users and was upheld permanently in January 2021. Nepal followed with a full ban in November 2023, pointing to the app's role in spreading and disrupting social harmony. Other countries with outright prohibitions include under Taliban rule since 2021 and since 2023, primarily over moral and security concerns. Numerous nations have restricted TikTok on government and official devices rather than enacting total bans, driven by fears of data access by the Chinese government via . Australia prohibited the app on federal government devices in April 2023 following intelligence warnings. banned it on all government-issued devices in February 2023, with the policy expanding to federally regulated sectors by June 2023. Similar measures were adopted in the in March 2023, , , the , and , as well as across European Union institutions. These restrictions stem from assessments that 's Chinese ownership poses risks, though TikTok maintains efforts mitigate such threats. In the , regulatory probes under the (DSA) have intensified scrutiny of TikTok's practices. The initiated an investigation in February 2024 into TikTok's child protection measures, including risks of addiction and harmful content exposure. A December 2024 probe examined potential foreign interference via TikTok during Romanian elections. On October 24, 2025, the Commission preliminarily found TikTok in breach of transparency obligations, specifically failing to provide adequate data access to independent researchers studying systemic risks like online harms to minors; fines could reach 6% of global annual turnover if upheld. In February 2026, the Commission issued preliminary findings that TikTok's design features, including infinite scroll and personalized algorithms, promote addictive behavior and breach the DSA. TikTok rejected these findings as "categorically false" and meritless, stating its intention to respond formally and potentially propose its own solutions before any fines up to 6% of global turnover. Canada's Privacy Commissioner launched a joint probe in 2023 into TikTok's compliance with privacy laws, focusing on data handling amid the government device ban. In the Philippines, TikTok suspended real-money gambling advertisements starting August 22, 2025, in response to directives from the Department of Information and Communications Technology (DICT) amid concerns over online gambling operations. In and , authorities have imposed fines and required local data storage or partnerships instead of bans.

US-Specific Actions and 2025 Divestiture Outcomes

The Protecting Americans from Foreign Adversary Controlled Applications Act, signed into law by President on April 24, 2024, targeted ByteDance-owned TikTok by mandating divestiture of its U.S. operations to a non-Chinese entity by January 19, 2025, or face a nationwide prohibition on app stores and web hosting services. The legislation cited risks from ByteDance's obligations under Chinese laws, such as the 2017 National Intelligence Law, which compel companies to assist intelligence efforts, potentially exposing U.S. user data—estimated at over 170 million accounts—to Beijing's access. TikTok contested the act's constitutionality, arguing free speech violations, but federal courts upheld it, and the U.S. declined to intervene on January 17, 2025, affirming the deadline. In response, TikTok suspended U.S. services voluntarily on January 18, 2025, blocking access for domestic users hours before the cutoff. Upon assuming office, President issued 14166 on January 20, 2025, delaying enforcement by 75 days to facilitate a sale, followed by additional extensions—including a third in June 2025 and further postponements to September 17 and then December 16, 2025—to negotiate divestiture amid stalled talks. Amid this uncertainty, prediction markets like Polymarket and Kalshi showed 81-90% probabilities of a ban by May 2025, but these markets resolved against a ban due to the extensions and eventual resolution. By October 2025, a tentative $14 billion agreement emerged, led by and U.S. investors, purporting to transfer TikTok's American operations while retaining the platform's functionality; however, terms reportedly allocate 50% of U.S.-generated revenue to indefinitely, prompting skepticism over whether this severs effective control or mitigates data and algorithmic influence from . App stores restored TikTok post-initial suspension, enabling continued operation under the extensions, though critics, including security analysts, argue the revenue-sharing structure undermines the act's intent by preserving financial incentives for compliance with Chinese directives. Following further negotiations, TikTok finalized a joint venture in January 2026, with majority American ownership allowing continued U.S. operations and averting a full ban; ByteDance retains a 19.9% stake. Ongoing prediction markets imply low odds of an imminent ban, such as by March 31, 2026.

Ongoing Litigation and Supreme Court Involvement

In TikTok Inc. v. Garland, the U.S. unanimously upheld the Protecting Americans from Foreign Adversary Controlled Applications Act (PAFACA) on January 17, 2025, rejecting TikTok's First Amendment challenge to the law's requirement that divest its U.S. operations or face a ban effective January 19, 2025. The Court applied , determining that the government's interests in mitigating data access by the Chinese government outweighed content-neutral restrictions on TikTok's operation, without altering the platform's editorial choices. Following the ruling, President Trump issued delaying enforcement, including one on April 4, 2025, postponing it until June 19, 2025, and another in September 2025 extending the delay to December 16, 2025, to facilitate negotiations. On September 25, 2025, Trump signed an approving a divestiture deal transferring a majority stake in TikTok's U.S. operations to American investors, further delaying non-enforcement until January 23, 2026, pending completion. This arrangement aims to sever Chinese control while allowing continued U.S. operation, though retains a subject to reviews. Separate state-level litigation persists, including Iowa's consumer fraud suit filed in January 2024, alleging TikTok misrepresented content risks to minors; as of October 24, 2025, TikTok contests the state's jurisdiction before the Iowa Supreme Court. In North Carolina, a business court denied TikTok's motions to dismiss in a case advancing claims of deceptive practices toward youth. Multi-district federal litigation over TikTok's alleged role in youth mental health harms and addictive design continues, with bellwether trials selected in June 2025 encompassing hundreds of suits against TikTok and peers for violations including COPPA data collection from children. Minnesota's August 2025 suit by Attorney General Keith Ellison accuses TikTok of predatory algorithms targeting minors, while Texas pursued similar deception claims in January 2025. These cases focus on platform harms rather than foreign ownership but intersect with regulatory scrutiny of TikTok's practices.

References

Add your contribution
Related Hubs
User Avatar
No comments yet.