TikTok is now in U.S. hands. Here's what the app wants to know about you.
CBSN
TikTok — now in U.S. hands after the social media service split from China-based ByteDance earlier this year — is raising concerns among some users about its new privacy policy, prompting questions about the scope of its data collection. Edited by Alain Sherter In:
TikTok — now in U.S. hands after the social media service split from China-based ByteDance earlier this year — is raising concerns among some users about its new privacy policy, prompting questions about the scope of its data collection.
TikTok on Jan. 22 confirmed that a new U.S.-based entity was in control of the app, with the venture formed to sidestep a federal law that forced ByteDance to either sell its stake in the platform or be cut off from the U.S. market. That same day, the company posted its new user terms and conditions and privacy policy.
Backlash to the new policies quickly spread on social media, with some users saying they deleted the app over privacy fears, while others flagged the changes for their followers. One complaint: a new provision stating that TikTok may collect "precise location information" from users' devices if they enable location services in their device settings.
Some social media users attacked the new privacy policy as "beyond invasive and predatory," while others decried the app's "surveillance."
TikTok's new geolocation practices are a change from its previous policy under ByteDance, experts said.

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