Wednesday, July 29, 2020
By
AFP

´We are not the enemy´: Tik Tok claims it helps competition in the US market

By
AFP
|
The comments by TikTok came hours ahead of a hotly anticipated antitrust hearing with the top executives of Facebook and three other Big Tech firms. Photo: Geo.TV/File

Chinese video-sharing application TikTok on Wednesday pushed back at what it called "maligning attacks" by Facebook as the fast-growing social media platform claimed it helps competition in the US market.

The comments by TikTok came hours ahead of a hotly anticipated antitrust hearing with the top executives of Facebook and three other Big Tech firms, and amid suggestions, the app may be banned due to its connections to China.

TiKTok welcomes "fair competition" chief executive Kevin Mayer said in a blog post, while adding that "without TikTok, American advertisers would again be left with few choices."

He added: "Let´s focus our energies on fair and open competition in service of our consumers, rather than maligning attacks by our competitor -- namely Facebook -- disguised as patriotism and designed to put an end to our very presence in the US."

The comments appeared to respond to claims by Facebook CEO last year that TikTok had censored information about protests in China, the home of TikTok parent firm ByteDance.

TikTok, which has grown its user base to an estimated one billion, is striving to show that "we are responsible and committed members of the American community," according to Mayer, who pledged more transparency from the platform.

Read more: US looking into accusations Tik Tok violated children's privacy: sources

"With our success comes responsibility and accountability," he said.

"The entire industry has received scrutiny, and rightly so. Yet, we have received even more scrutiny due to the company´s Chinese origins. We accept this and embrace the challenge of giving peace of mind through greater transparency and accountability."

Mayer said TikTok has established a policy on transparency and added that "we believe all companies should disclose their algorithms, moderation policies, and data flows to regulators."

He repeated the company´s claims that it has no ties to the Chinese government after TikTok was banned in India and US officials said they were looking at potential actions against it.

"We are not political, we do not accept political advertising and have no agenda — our only objective is to remain a vibrant, dynamic platform for everyone to enjoy," he said.

"TikTok has become the latest target, but we are not the enemy."