TikTok mother grants employees access to data from US journalists

Washington TikTok’s Chinese parent company, ByteDance, has admitted that employees had unauthorized access to data from two US journalists. The employees have now been fired, it said in an email that the Reuters news agency saw on Thursday.

The data was accessed in the summer in connection with an unsuccessful investigation into how information from the group had been leaked. A person familiar with the matter said four employees had been laid off, two in China and two in the US. TikTok CEO Shou Zi Chew said in a separate email to employees that the misconduct was inconsistent with the video service’s values.

The newspaper “New York Times” had first reported on the process. TikTok is under pressure in the US. MPs from both parties have introduced bills to ban the video app. A few weeks ago, FBI Chief Chris Wray warned the Chinese government could use the app to take control of millions of US citizens’ data.

They can also manipulate the software’s recommendation algorithms in order to exert influence. Several states have banned the installation of TikTok on devices under their jurisdiction. China has denied allegations of espionage. In Germany, Digital Minister Volker Wissing rejected a special law regulating TikTok in June.

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