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Social Networks

What’s going on with TikTok, China, and the US government?

Source: Vox
December 16, 2019 at 14:24
A visitor passes the Tiktok booth at the 2019 Smart Expo in Hangzhou, China, on October 18, 2019. Costfoto/Barcroft Media/Getty Images
A visitor passes the Tiktok booth at the 2019 Smart Expo in Hangzhou, China, on October 18, 2019. Costfoto/Barcroft Media/Getty Images

The wildly popular video app’s ties to China are prompting some US users and politicians to panic.

TikTok, the short-form video app that’s been downloaded 1.5 billion times, is one of the most exciting and goofiest places on the internet, and possibly the only truly fun social media network in 2019. It is also based in China — and that’s the part that has some users, and now, politicians, concerned.

Over the past year and a half, TikTok, where under-60-second videos often feature bizarre memes, inside jokes, and bite-sized sketch comedy, has become the defining social media app of Gen Z, not only in the US but around the world in places like India and Europe. Though it originated as Musical.ly, a nearly identical app known mostly for lip-synching and popular with pre-teens, in 2017 the Chinese internet company ByteDance bought the app and relaunched it as TikTok, with all Musical.ly accounts migrating over to TikTok in August 2018. ByteDance is now the world’s largest startup, estimated to be valued at $78 billion.

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