Blocking Tick Tok app.. Fear of a Chinese social network!

in #tiktok4 years ago (edited)

Like Huawei before it, Tic-Tok has become the embodiment of US concern over concerns about Chinese government espionage, but is there a solution for the app not to meet the same fate as Huawei?

Over the past few days, Tick-Tok application the world's most frightenest social network. Last week, US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo told Fox News that the US administration is definitely looking at a ban on the application within the United States, a step so unprecedented that it's even hard to know how much Tick Talk is threatening the US government.

While India has already taken a similar action and banned Tic-Tok along with 58 other Chinese apps, an email was issued from Amazon telling its employees that they should uninstall the app from the company's phones due to security concerns, although company officials later retreated. They mentioned that the email was sent by mistake!

Maybe it's the same kind of concern you'd expect from privacy and security issues on the scale of Cambridge Analytica scandals or Yahoo data leaks, for example, but it's hard to determine what TickTalk has actually done to lose America's confidence in this way.

Blocking Tick Tok app.. More than just privacy problems!

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The latest scandals of the app were when it was known to spy on users' wallet data for Apple devices, a scandal that suddenly appeared due to the new privacy feature of iOS 14, but it was not only Tick-Tok app accused, but more than 50 other apps that do the same, including the LinkedIn, PUBG Mobile and the official New York Times reader app, a security override that was largely ignored and did not make a big fuss compared to scandals of the same size.

If tic-tuk app is different, it's because of one apparent which is China affiliation. Although Tick Tok is operated from within the United States, it is owned by the famous BeiteDance Chinese company based in Beijing, and most of the concern comes from doubts as to how well ByteDance controls the exact day-to-day operations of the Tick Tok application.

Like Huawei before it, TechTuk has become the embodiment of US concern about Chinese government espionage, driven by the increasingly aggressive piracy and intellectual property theft previously carried out by Huawei. These fears mean that many users will simply not accept a social network supported by China on American phones.

In terms of collecting users' personal data, it is not clear that Tick-Tok does anything out of the ordinary, as the app already collects a lot of data, much of which is without a clear purpose, whether it's keystroke data, background tracking or knowledge of other applications installed on Your phone. But this kind of data collection is quite common anyway, and security researchers have tried to show that Tick-Tok doesn't do anything out of the ordinary with that data.

Therefore, while the problems of the past weeks may seem like a privacy and security scandal only, they are part of something more complex and difficult to solve, with more potential effects on the Internet in general.

The problem of tic-tuk application in its relationship with China!

image.png

The latest scandals of the app were when it was known to spy on users' wallet data for Apple devices, a scandal that suddenly appeared due to the new privacy feature of iOS 14, but it was not only Tick-Tok app accused, but more than 50 other apps that do the same, including the LinkedIn, PUBG Mobile and the official New York Times reader app, a security override that was largely ignored and did not make a big fuss compared to scandals of the same size.

If tic-tuk app is different, it's because of one apparent which is China affiliation. Although Tick Tok is operated from within the United States, it is owned by the famous BeiteDance Chinese company based in Beijing, and most of the concern comes from doubts as to how well ByteDance controls the exact day-to-day operations of the Tick Tok application.

Like Huawei before it, TechTuk has become the embodiment of US concern about Chinese government espionage, driven by the increasingly aggressive piracy and intellectual property theft previously carried out by Huawei. These fears mean that many users will simply not accept a social network supported by China on American phones.

In terms of collecting users' personal data, it is not clear that Tick-Tok does anything out of the ordinary, as the app already collects a lot of data, much of which is without a clear purpose, whether it's keystroke data, background tracking or knowledge of other applications installed on Your phone. But this kind of data collection is quite common anyway, and security researchers have tried to show that Tick-Tok doesn't do anything out of the ordinary with that data.

Therefore, while the problems of the past weeks may seem like a privacy and security scandal only, they are part of something more complex and difficult to solve, with more potential effects on the Internet in general.

The problem of tic-tuk application in its relationship with China!

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