Biden's campaign told staffers to delete TikTok from their personal and work phones citing security and privacy concerns

Authored by businessinsider.com and submitted by grepnork

Joe Biden's campaign told staffers to "refrain from using and downloading TikTok" on their personal and work phones, first reported by Bloomberg Monday and confirmed by Business Insider.

Biden's top lawyer told staffers in an email to avoid using the popular social media app due to security and privacy concerns, according to Bloomberg.

TikTok has come under increasing scrutiny from US government officials who worry that its Chinese parent company ByteDance could cave to censorship or data requests from Beijing.

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Former Vice President Joe Biden's campaign told its staffers to avoid using popular social media app TikTok, Bloomberg first reported Monday and a campaign official confirmed to Business Insider.

Biden's general counsel, Dana Remus, told staffers in an email that they should "refrain from downloading and using TikTok on work and personal devices," citing concerns around data privacy and security, according to Bloomberg.

A campaign official told Business Insider the guidance reflects similar a recommendation from the Democratic National Committee, which along with the Republican National Committee, have warned staff not to use the app.

TikTok, which is owned by the Beijing-based internet company ByteDance, has faced increasing scrutiny in the US from lawmakers as well as intelligence and military officials who worry that has the potential to be influenced by the Chinese government.

A TikTok spokesperson did not comment on the Biden campaign's guidance, but directed Business Insider to the company's previous statement about the DNC and RNC warnings, where it told CNN that it is "fully committed to protecting our users' privacy and security" and that it welcomes "dialogue with anyone who has questions."

The Guardian reported last year that internal documents instructed moderators to censor content that could anger Chinese officials, though TikTok said at the time that those policies are no longer in use.

Following the report, top US senators called on intelligence agencies to investigate the app's connection to China and whether it poses national-security risks.

Since then, the US military and several government agencies, including the Department of Homeland Security, have prohibited their troops and employees from using the app, and President Donald Trump has floated the idea of banning the app from operating in the US entirely — though he cited China's response to the coronavirus pandemic as his reason for wanting to curb its use.

Trump officials have also claimed that TikTok's data collection practices pose privacy risks to users. While the company has faced repeated allegations that it fails to protect children's information, experts also told Business Insider that TikTok's privacy policy suggests companies like Facebook and Google are similarly intrusive.

Biggmoist on July 28th, 2020 at 07:01 UTC »

So in Australia theres now a radio advert with someone from "tiktok Australia" saying theres nothing wrong with it and to leave it out of anything to do with politics, then goes on in that fast talk about how its spoken and paid for tiktok and it representatives.

If that doesn't scream suspicious then what does?

Alcohooligan on July 28th, 2020 at 03:02 UTC »

I'm still amazed people put it on their work phones.

therris5 on July 28th, 2020 at 01:54 UTC »

Yea. Everyone should.