Categories: Violation

TikTok Faces Investigation by French Data Watchdog

France’s privacy watchdog opened a probe into TikTok, marking another examination of ByteDance Ltd social media app TikTok, which is facing broader scrutiny of its privacy policies.

The French authority CNIL, is looking at a number of issues, including how the company communicates with users and the protection of children, a spokesman said Tuesday. The questions are part of an investigation into TikTok’s plan to set up a European Union headquarters for data purposes.

The EU’s data protection chiefs in June pledged to coordinate potential investigations into the Chinese company, establishing a task force to get a better understanding of TikTok’s processing and practices across the EU.

The EU taskforce would also likely give the final decision on plans by the company to set up an EU base for data purposes in Ireland. This could mean that future probes would be led by the Irish data authority, which is already the lead privacy regulator for tech giants, including Google, Facebook Inc. and Twitter Inc.

TikTok didn’t immediately reply to a request for comment.

CNIL also said it had closed a separate probe based on a TikTok user’s complaint. CNIL said that for TikTok to set up a headquarters in Ireland, it would need to prove that its base there fulfills the necessary conditions under the bloc’s data protection rules.

The Dutch data-protection commission said in May that it is looking into TikTok’s policies to protect children’s data and the Danish watchdog in June also announced a probe. The U.K.’s Information Commissioner’s Office has been looking into TikTok since last year.

TikTok rejected claims that it’s controlled by the Chinese government or that user data is at risk.

TikTok is also under increasing pressure in the U.S. President Donald Trump said he would ban the app, best-known for lip-syncing videos, on the grounds that it jeopardizes national security. Microsoft Corp. is in talks to acquire the operations of TikTok in the U.S. Canada, Australia and New Zealand.

The 27-nation EU has some of the strictest data-protection laws in the world. The General Data Protection Regulation, or GDPR, gives EU authorities the power to fine companies as much as 4% of global annual sales for the most serious violations.

Source: Bloomberg

Spread the love
tiktokdeath

Recent Posts

TikTok Challenge Leaves Teenager With 75% Of Body Burns

North Carolina - US: A TikTok challenge left a 16-year-old North Carolina boy with 75%…

1 year ago

Australia Bans TikTok On Government Devices, Following US, UK

Australia banned TikTok on all government devices over security concerns, joining a list of TikTok…

1 year ago

UK Watchdog Fines TikTok $15.9M Over Misusing Children’s Data

The UK’s privacy data watchdog fined TikTok $15.9 million for breaching data protection law including…

1 year ago

Cerebral Admits Health Data Sharing With Meta, TikTok, and Google

Cerebral, a mental health startup admits it shared the private health data of over 3.1 million…

1 year ago

Belgium Too Bans TikTok From Official Devices After U.S, E.U

Brussels - Belgium: Belgium banned TikTok from government devices over worries about cybersecurity, privacy and misinformation, after recent…

1 year ago

US Agencies Have 30 Days To Ban TikTok On Federal Devices

The Biden administration on Monday gave 30 days to remove the TikTok from government issued devices.…

1 year ago