An anonymous reader shared this report from the New York Times:
Russia fined TikTok for not removing prohibited content. The results of a presidential election in Romania were thrown out over concerns the app had been used to spread foreign influence. Albania banned TikTok for a year following the stabbing death of a teenager by another one after the two quarreled online… That was all in just the last month…
TikTok has confronted legal and political scrutiny around the world in recent years, facing outright or partial bans in at least 20 countries, as governments have grown alarmed by its ties to China and its wide influence, especially among young people… [A]s TikTok’s algorithm captured attention spans around the world, it alarmed lawmakers, who say TikTok has quickly turned from a domain of cat videos and dance trends into a potentially disruptive social, political and economic force. Officials from Montana to New Zealand have warned that TikTok could be used to incite violence, spread false information and worsen mental health. Lawmakers also worry TikTok could share user data like location and browsing history with the Chinese government. Young people need to be protected from “the frightening pitfalls of the algorithm,” [Albania prime minister Edi] Rama said.
TikTok lost its largest audience (India) “after India’s simmering geopolitical conflict with China boiled over into hand-to-hand combat along their shared border” — resulting in a total ban in the world’s single most-populous country. And the article notes TikTok is also blocked on government devices in Taiwan, Britain, Australia, France, and Canada, “as well as the executive arm of the European Union and New Zealand’s Parliament…”
But “Despite the mounting scrutiny, TikTok remains incredibly popular worldwide. More than a billion people use the app every month.”