TikTok Eliminates Accounts Tied to Chinese Disinformation Campaign
TECH DIGEST- In response to the recent revelation that Facebook’s parent company, Meta, had eradicated approximately 9,000 accounts linked to a Chinese political spam network, TikTok has taken swift measures by removing 284 accounts associated with a disinformation campaign.
The overarching operation unveiled by Meta had targeted users across the globe, resulting in Meta’s proactive takedown of numerous Facebook and Instagram accounts, groups, and pages affiliated with the network.
READ ALSO: Meta Exposes, Eradicates Vast Chinese Political Spam Network
The parent company’s diligent investigation unearthed the operation’s reach across more than 50 online platforms and forums, encompassing widely used platforms such as YouTube, TikTok, Reddit, Pinterest, Medium, Blogspot, Livejournal, and even X (formerly Twitter), aside from Instagram and Facebook.
A recurring pattern within the operation saw the network propagate positive sentiments regarding China and Xinjiang province, while simultaneously disseminating negative commentary about the United States, Western foreign policies, and critics of the Chinese government, including journalists and researchers.
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TikTok, in a decisive move, affirmed the removal of 284 accounts directly tied to the same operation, citing a breach of its policies against covert influence campaigns. While TikTok did not provide a direct explanation for the delay in detecting these accounts, the company’s stated counter-influence policy underscores its focus on discerning behavioral patterns and linkages between accounts to identify coordinated attempts at misleading its community or systems.
The forthcoming quarterly community guidelines enforcement report from TikTok is expected to offer a detailed breakdown of these takedowns. Fergus Ryan, a senior analyst specializing in cyber technology and security at the Australian Strategic Policy Institute (ASPI), commended the action but underscored that proactive measures should have been in place.
Ryan emphasized, “Over the past year, we’ve been actively monitoring Spamouflage accounts on TikTok.” He further urged TikTok to collaborate with ASPI to analyze and identify covert influence operations, mirroring the productive cooperation with Meta.
Albert Zhang, an ASPI analyst who co-authored a report on the Spamouflage operation earlier this year, highlighted that despite the removals, some of the identified accounts were still active on TikTok. He stressed the need for greater transparency from TikTok, allowing independent entities to evaluate their actions thoroughly, and suggested that TikTok follow a model similar to Meta’s comprehensive disclosure of state-backed influence operations on its platforms.
TikTok’s involvement in global politics and concerns about ties to the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) have been at the center of public discourse. The platform faced bans in various countries, including Australia, due to such apprehensions. Despite TikTok’s consistent denials of CCP influence on content, an Australian parliamentary committee, chaired by James Paterson, recommended extending the ban to government contractors. Furthermore, it recommended monitoring developments in the United States, including the possibility of TikTok’s parent company, ByteDance, divesting itself from the platform under government pressure.