Showing posts with label TikTok. Show all posts
Showing posts with label TikTok. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 17, 2020

TikTok announces a new licensing deal with Sony Music Entertainment

 Chinese short-video making app TikTok has announced a new licensing agreement with Sony Music Entertainment (SME).


As part of the deal whose financial details were not disclosed, TikTok will continue to offer songs from Sony Music artists for use by creators on its platform.

"With this deal, the TikTok creator community will have access to sound clips from Sony Music's massive catalog of current hits, cutting edge new releases, emerging favourites, iconic classics and deep cuts from every genre of music for use in their TikTok content," the company said in a statement late on Monday.

TikTok and Sony Music will work together to support greater levels of TikTok user personalisation and creativity on the platform, and drive new and forward-looking opportunities for fan engagement with SME's artists and music.

"Short form video clips have developed into an exciting new part of the music ecosystem that contribute to the overall growth of music and the way fans experience it," said Dennis Kooker, President, Global Digital Business and U.S. Sales, Sony Music Entertainment.

"TikTok is a leader in this space and we are pleased to be partnering with them to drive music discovery, expand opportunities for creativity and support artist careers".

TikTok had already struck short-term licensing deals with Universal, Sony and Warner.

"We are thrilled to enter in to this agreement with Sony Music so that we can continue to work together to connect the incredible roster of Sony artists in the US and across the globe to new audiences and harness the power of TikTok," noted Ole Obermann, Global Head of Music for TikTok.

The company said it would work with Sony to support "greater levels of TikTok user personalization and creativity" and "drive new and forward-looking opportunities for fan engagement with SME's artists and music."

According to a Billboard report, TikTok will pay Sony a "notable increase" over its previous rights deal.


Wednesday, October 7, 2020

Technology News: Latest Smartphones, Mobile Phones, Gadgets, Tech Reviews & Ratings, Tech News

 


Snapchat and TikTok are more popular social media apps than Instagram among US teenagers, said a new report.

While Snapchat is the favourite social media platform, Instagram fell from second spot to third as TikTok moved up to No. 2, said the latest semiannual Taking Stock With Teens survey from Piper Sandler, a leading investment bank and institutional securities firm.

Concerns about TikTok's future in the country increased after US President Donald Trump issued an executive order threatening a ban unless it quickly divests its US operations.

The survey found that 34 per cent of the participants picked Snapchat as their favourite social app, while 29 per cent preferred TikTok.

About 25 per cent of teenagers in the US chose Facebook-owned Instagram as their favourite social media app, according to the survey, published on Tuesday.

However, in terms of engagements, Instagram topped the list, followed by Snapchat and TikTok.

The Piper Sandler Taking Stock With Teens survey is a semi-annual research project that gathers input from thousands of teenagers with an average age of 15.8 years.

Among other findings, the report said that teenagers in the US spend 34 per cent of their daily video consumption on Netflix followed by YouTube.

Tuesday, November 19, 2019

TikTok's chief Alex Zhu is on a mission to prove it is not a menace

Like almost everybody who runs a big tech company these days, Alex Zhu, the head of the of-the-moment video app TikTok, is worried about an image problem.

To him — and to millions of TikTok’s users — the app is a haven for creativity, earnest self-expression and silly dance videos. In almost no time, TikTok has emerged as the refreshing weirdo upstart of the American social media landscape, reconfiguring the culture in its joyful, strange wake.

But to some people in the United States government, TikTok is a menace. And one big reason is the nationality of its owner, a seven-year-old Chinese social media company called ByteDance. The fear is that TikTok is exposing America’s youth to Communist Party indoctrination and smuggling their data to Beijing’s servers.

The desire to fix this perception gap is what brought Mr. Zhu last week to a WeWork in Manhattan, where a handful of his colleagues are based. Mr. Zhu, a trim 40-year-old who speaks fluent if lightly accented English, helped found Musical.ly, a Shanghai-based lip-syncing app that ByteDance acquired in 2017 and folded into TikTok.

In an interview — his first since taking the reins at TikTok this year — Mr. Zhu denied, in unambiguous terms, several key accusations.

No, TikTok does not censor videos that displease China, he said. And no, it does not share user data with China, or even with its Beijing-based parent company. All data on TikTok users worldwide is stored in Virginia, he said, with a backup server in Singapore.

But China is a murky place for companies. Even if TikTok’s policies are clear on paper, what if Chinese authorities decided they didn’t like them and pressured ByteDance? What if China’s top leader, Xi Jinping, personally asked Mr. Zhu to take down a video or hand over user data?

“I would turn him down,” Mr. Zhu said, after barely a moment’s thought.

Washington at this moment is suspicious of Chinese tech companies to a degree that can feel like paranoia. The Trump administration’s biggest target has been Huawei, the giant supplier of smartphones and telecommunications equipment. But it has also tried kneecapping Chinese producers of microchips, surveillance gear and supercomputers.

That a lip-syncing app now finds itself in the same position shows the extent to which any Chinese advancement is seen in Washington as harmful to American interests. Over the past year, TikTok’s app has been downloaded more than 750 million times — more than Facebook, Instagram, YouTube and Snapchat, according to the research firm Sensor Tower.

The weapon being wielded against TikTok is the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States. The secretive federal panel, known as CFIUS, is looking into ByteDance’s purchase of Musical.ly.

Earlier this year, the committee forced a different Chinese company to relinquish control over the dating app Grindr, which it had bought in 2016. The concern was also that Beijing might gain access to personal information.

Mr. Zhu said TikTok user data was segregated from the rest of ByteDance, and was not even used to help improve ByteDance’s artificial intelligence and other technologies.

“The data of TikTok is only being used by TikTok for TikTok users,” he said.

It is unclear how such assurances will be received in Washington.

“If Instagram or Facebook wanted to be sold to a Chinese firm in some way, I would 100 percent see the same issues at hand,” said Clark Fonda, a former congressional chief of staff and an author of a 2018 law that expanded CFIUS’s powers. “It’s about the underlying distrust of the Chinese government and what, theoretically, they could do with this data.”

In this tense time, Mr. Zhu is an unlikely peacemaker. With his long salt-and-pepper hair and light mustache and goatee, he looks more like a poet than a tech founder. He seems to relish a little artsy oddness. On his LinkedIn profile, he describes himself as a “designtrepreneur” and gives his work location as “Mars.”

“In the past, my personal focus was always design and user experience,” Mr. Zhu said. He spent a lot of time thinking about the colors of buttons.

Now as TikTok’s boss, he reports to ByteDance’s 36-year-old founder, Zhang Yiming. Mr. Zhu said dealing with TikTok’s sudden crisis had been “very interesting,” if nothing else.

“I am quite optimistic,” he said.

Mr. Zhu grew up in the landlocked Chinese province of Anhui. After studying civil engineering at Zhejiang University in eastern China, he worked in the United States at SAP, the German software company.

As he tells it, the idea for Musical.ly came to him as an epiphany. On a train once from San Francisco to Mountain View, Calif., he noticed the teenagers around him listening to music, taking selfies and passing their phones around. Why not combine all that into a single app?

Musical.ly debuted in 2014. It quickly attracted tens of millions of monthly users, and Mr. Zhu moved to Shanghai.

He went to great lengths to learn about the young — sometimes very young — Americans flocking to his platform. He registered fake Musical.ly accounts so he could comment on videos and understand their creators, he said in 2016.

Around the same time, ByteDance was storming phone screens in China with a news aggregator called Jinri Toutiao. In 2016, the company released a video app for China named Douyin; TikTok followed soon after. The platforms are similar but separate — TikTok is unavailable in mainland China and vice versa.

In late 2017, Musical.ly agreed to be taken over by ByteDance. Last year, the Musical.ly app was merged into TikTok.

Mr. Zhu stayed to help with the transition. He then took a few months off last year to rest, go clubbing in Shanghai and listen to jazz. He rejoined TikTok early this year, not long after ByteDance raised funding at a valuation of around $75 billion, making it one of the planet’s most richly valued start-ups.

TikTok surely owes some of its success to the sunny, fun-for-its-own-sake vibe it has cultivated. But that has led to suspicions that TikTok suppresses material, such as clips of the Hong Kong protests, that could be a buzzkill. The company says it previously penalized content that “promoted conflict.”

Now “we don’t take any action on any politically sensitive content as long as it goes along with our community guidelines,” said Vanessa Pappas, general manager for TikTok in the United States. Those cover things like hate speech, harassment and misleading information.

Mr. Zhu said TikTok, which makes money by selling ads, was still drawing up its content policies.

“Today, we are lucky,” he said, “because users perceive TikTok as a platform for memes, for lip-syncing, for dancing, for fashion, for animals — but not so much for political discussion.”

He acknowledged this could change. “For political content that still aligns with this creative and joyful experience, I don’t see why we should control it,” he said.

The deeper concern is that ByteDance’s vast business in China could give Beijing leverage over the company, and over TikTok. In its brief existence, ByteDance has had plenty of run-ins with Chinese authorities. This month, regulators hauled up company executives after finding search results from ByteDance’s search engine that supposedly defamed a revolutionary hero.

There are other steps ByteDance could take to try to convince Washington of TikTok’s independence, such as reorganizing TikTok as a separate company with a new board of directors.

Mr. Zhu said the company wouldn’t rule out such possibilities. But there had been no discussion about selling off TikTok’s American business, he said. Harry Clark, a CFIUS specialist at the law firm Orrick, said that was probably what the committee would end up demanding. CFIUS might have entertained other options had the companies applied for a review before doing the deal, Mr. Clark said. Now, he said, Washington’s concerns about China and data protection are deepening.

“Three years ago, I doubt any CFIUS expert would have said it’s crucial that you go to CFIUS here,” Mr. Clark said. “Now, most would.”

Monday, November 18, 2019

TikTok owner ByteDance in talks with labels for music streaming launch

TikTok owner Beijing ByteDance Technology Co Ltd is in talks with big music labels - Universal Music, Sony Music and Warner Music - for global licensing deals to include their songs on its new music subscription service, the Financial Times reported on Sunday.

ByteDance is looking to launch its music streaming as soon as next month, initially in emerging markets such as India, Indonesia and Brazil, before a future opening in the United States, the FT reported https://on.ft.com/37brU3U, citing people familiar with the matter.

In addition to on-demand music, ByteDance's app will include a library of short video clips for listeners to search through and synch to songs as they listen, the report added.

ByteDance has not given a name to its music app yet and pricing remains unclear, although it is expected to cost less than the $10 a month charged by Spotify Technology SA, Apple Inc and others in the United States, according to the report.

The company was not immediately available for comment on Sunday.

Tuesday, October 29, 2019

Video-sharing app Firework ramps up India operations to take on TikTok

Video sharing app Firework, which recently hogged the limelight with reports stating that internet giant Google is considering buying the firm, is ramping up its operations in India as it gears up to take on TikTok.

While the Silicon Valley-based startups has recently brought on board former AltBalaji COO Sunil Nair as its India CEO, it is also looking at investing around $20 million in its first leg of expansion plan in the country.

A large chunk of this investment would go towards building premium contents targeting the Indian users, Nair said. “At this point, we are not focusing on volumes or milestones, but on (building) premium quality of content. We are already in talks with leading Indian players for strategic tie-ups that will give us access to a very large captive audience,” said Nair.

Firework app has been created by Loop Now Technologies, a US-based incubator start-up that focuses on next-generation consumer mobile applications.

The company, which introduced the app last month in India plans to cross a million users within the first three months and five million user base within the next six months. “Even globally, our growth has been fueled by our strategic partnerships and the passion for our users to publish creatively strong content,” added Nair.

The app differentiates itself from TikTok in terms of the levels of moderation the content go through before going live on the platform. The app has an AI tool called ‘Clarify’ which screens any nudity or violence in videos and flags it off to the moderators sitting in the company’s Mohali or Dominican Republic moderation centres. A moderator takes into consideration the cultural nuances of a place to decide whether to block a video in that certain geography or not. There are three levels of human screening that a video goes through if it is flagged off as offensive by the Clarify tool.

TikTok which is owned by Chinese internet giant ByteDance earlier this year landed in controversy after the government ordered it to be removed from app stores following allegations that the contents hosted on its platform were promoting pornography.

“Our content is a big differentiator. We don’t want to do silly memes or lip sync videos. We want to give a service which is a cut above others with content ranging from food to health, fashion, parenting and sports,” said Nair.

While Firework is currently valued at $100 million, TikTok is valued at a whopping $75 billion.

With the short video content market gaining popularity around the globe, Facebook too has launched a similar app called Lasso though it’s yet to pick up.

Wednesday, September 18, 2019

TikTok removed 135,000 videos in 1.5 years of its operations in India

Chinese short video app TikTok removed nearly 135,000 videos from its platform in 1.5 years of its operations in India, its parent Bytedance told the government.

In response to a specific question on how TikTok dealt with abuse on its platform between January 2017 and June 2019, Bytedance said it received 1.7 million complaints against content, from both users and legal channels. It took down 134,844 videos.

Of the 700,257 accounts that were reported, 181,926 were permanently banned. Currently, India is TikTok’s largest market, with more than 200 million users; the US is the second-largest market.

The Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology had asked TikTok and its sister app Helo a set of 24 questions in July, threatening to ban these apps if it did not receive appropriate responses.

The action followed a complaint by Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) affiliate Swadeshi Jagran Manch (SJM) to the Prime Minister.

TikTok also said it did not publish transparency reports such as big technology firms Facebook, Google, Microsft and so on, but was in the process of doing so.

The ministry had also asked TikTok to specify the kind of information requested by law enforcement agencies.

“Law enforcement agencies have sought information mainly with regard to user details such as registered mobile number, email, other social media accounts associated with TikTok, internet protocol (IP) addresses tagged to activities of users. From January to mid-July this year, we have received 127 such requests,” TikTok said.

Bytedance also said on receiving such a request, TikTok collates details based on the information shared with them.

“A majority of the requests have been serviced within three hours. An initial non-automated response is sent within 15 minutes of the receipt of a request. We understand from our interaction from these agencies in India that we have the fastest average response times in the industry,” it added.

According to sources, Bytedance has been having regular conversations with the government after submitting these responses.

In response to a question on whether Helo spent money on 11,000 morphed political ads on other social media platforms as reported in the run up to general election, Bytedance said, “These political news articles were not created by our company, but was instead material in the public domain that was posted on Helo by its users, and picked up for the advertisement by automated ad tools.”

Bytedance also provided detailed responses to a question on whether it complies with the definition of an intermediary under the Information Technology (Intermediary Rules) 2011.

TikTok has been in the eye of a storm in India especially since the beginning of this year, mostly because of content deemed objectionable by users and law enforcement agencies alike. In April, TikTok was taken off Google and Apple app stores for a week following an order by the Madras High Court to ban the app.

In July, Bytedance, the world’s most valuable start-up, said it would set up a data centre in India within 18 months as part of the $1 billion it has committed to the Indian market.

Monday, June 24, 2019

Youngsters first, ministers next: TikTok now wants to influence the govt

Following in the footsteps of Facebook and Twitter, Chinese internet technology giant and TikTok owner Bytedance is trying to make deep inroads into the government space by making efforts to bring the Centre on its platform to promote various initiatives.

Apart from continuing dialogue with the government independently as well as via industry bodies such as Internet and Mobile Association of India, the company is trying to work with the Centre on various initiatives on tourism as well as health programmes and has put its campaigns on short video service app TikTok.

In a short span, the Chinese app has captured a huge chunk of the Indian market. Bytedance has close to 300 million users in India with more than 200 million on TikTok itself. The world’s most valuable tech start-up Bytedance, valued at $75 billion, also owns Helo, an app that lets users create and share content in their own language, making it popular in the tier-2 and tier-3 cities.

Meeting stakeholders

Post elections, the company has been making frequent visits to various ministries, including the IT ministry, commerce ministry, as well as different agencies to get the hang of things in the administration. The idea is to educate stakeholders about TikTok and other products to avoid situations such as the ban it was put under in April.

“As we are still in our early stages of growth in India, we are meeting relevant stakeholders on a regular basis to educate them about our products and safety measures. We also take this opportunity to share with them Bytedance’s vision,” said Helena Lersch, director, global public policy, Bytedance.

Aggressive hiring

Lersch joined Bytedance after spending over six years as a public policy professional in Google and Instagram.

Now, TikTok has been aggressively hiring people who have worked with Google, Facebook, and Uber in India, especially in the policy space. The idea is to work with people who are familiar with the way the government works in India.

Several people Business Standard spoke to said the general mistrust against Chinese companies has caused some weariness in government corridors.

The company is now making an effort to bridge the differences and collaborating with governments both at national and state levels, something that Google and Facebook have managed to do well.

Facebook has partnered the likes of women and child development ministry, and collaborated with ministries on issues like education and disaster response. The US social media giant has run these “soft programmes”, helping it create goodwill and collaborate closely with the brass in the government. Google India has had a similar trajectory, partnering the government on initiatives like its virtual tours of historical monuments in partnership with the Archaeological Survey of India and its internet access initiatives, a partnership it has with an arm under the railway ministry.

The Centre and states actively use Twitter to run campaigns and communicate with the young in the country.

TikTok is trying to pull a leaf out of the same playbook. What works in its favour is the huge number of young people who make short videos on the platform.

Recently, on International Yoga Day, it ran a campaign to raise awareness around #YogaDay2019 on TikTok. “This initiative received a massive response. We’ve also got Kerala Tourism on board for the India edition of our global campaign #TikTokTravel. Kerala Tourism made its debut on TikTok earlier this week,” Lersch said.

The company currently has more than 500 employees and aims to double the count by the end of 2019.

It wants to invest the billion dollars it has set aside for India in various areas, including forging content partnerships across platforms, building tech infrastructure and expanding its workforce.

Courting controversy

The company is continuously enhancing its existing measures and introducing additional technical and moderation processes. It has also placed an India-based grievance officer who can coordinate directly with law enforcement authorities and is providing additional information on a case-to-case basis.

In April, TikTok was banned by the Madras High Court for a week, following which Apple and Google pulled it off their play stores. During one of the hearings, TikTok told the court the ban was causing it to lose $500,000 each day.

Last year, Indonesia had banned TikTok temporarily for “inappropriate content”. But, this year, TikTok has partnered the country for a campaign on tourism, a model it had earlier said it will replicate in other countries as well.

Sunday, May 12, 2019

TikTok is the new music kingmaker, and labels want to get paid

Fitz and the Tantrums were wrapping up the tour for their third album last year when their label, Atlantic Records, told them that their song HandClap was climbing the charts in South Korea. “We were shocked,” says Lisa Nupoff, one of the group’s managers. The Los Angeles-based pop band had never been there, or anywhere in Asia for that matter. But by April of 2018, HandClap had topped the international charts in the world’s sixth-largest music market, outperforming Camilla Cabello’s Havana, the most popular song in the world last year. A couple months later, the song surpassed one billion streams in China—even more than it had received in the US.

Nupoff credits much of the song’s success in Asia to TikTok, a social video app that allows users to record and share short clips of pranks, dance routines, and skits set to music. The song took off in South Korea after the 1Million Dance Studio troupe recorded a video set to the song, which other users replicated in their own videos. It went viral in China after a player of the video game PlayerUnknown’s Battlegrounds uploaded a film combining gunshots of a weapon from the game with HandClap to Douyin, TikTok’s China-only equivalent. “It was just fans listening to the song, posting videos, and doing dances in their homes,” Nupoff says.

TikTok and Douyin, both owned by the Chinese startup Bytedance, are propelling songs from obscurity to ubiquity overnight, rewriting the path to stardom for some acts. While Fitz and the Tantrums had already experienced success at home, the burst of fame on TikTok persuaded the band to focus on Asia as it rolls out its new album.

The list of acts that owe sudden success to TikTok grows by the day. Lil Nas X just scored a No.1 song on the Billboard charts—and a record deal—after his song Old Town Road went viral on TikTok. And Supa Dupa Humble, a producer from Brooklyn, doubled his daily streams. “If you can get a song on Douyin, you suddenly get a viral impact,” says Simon Robson, the head of Warner Music’s Asian operations.

Musicians first met TikTok as musical.ly, a lip-syncing app founded in California and Shanghai in 2014 that had amassed more than ten million daily users—mostly teens—by the middle of 2016. Music writers labeled it the new Vine, the now defunct short-form video app owned by Twitter. Bytedance, which also operates one of China’s most popular news apps, saw enough potential in short music-enhanced video that it created its own service, Douyin, later that year. Douyin attracted 100 million users in less than 12 months; a separate app, TikTok, was created for outside the mainland.

Bytedance swooped in to acquire Musical.ly in November 2017 and folded it into TikTok, centralising the pranks—and the music licensing—under one company. The app’s popularity has since surged. TikTok has been downloaded more than 1 billion times worldwide, and is available in more than 150 markets. It was the most downloaded free app in the world for a time last year.

The app’s sudden rise caught record labels off-guard and revived an old debate in the music industry: Is this new internet service giving artists free promotion, or simply getting rich off their work? Record labels have resisted hundreds of companies, including MTV and YouTube, that wanted to offer music for free and pay little in return. As paid streaming services Spotify and Apple Music have revived record sales in recent years, labels have tried to squelch any app that offers music for free.

TikTok, however, presented a new way to promote songs. Unlike YouTube, which features full songs, TikTok lets its users include only snippets of music in their 15-second clips. So record labels licensed TikTok the rights to music for a flat fee of only tens of millions of dollars, comparable to what record labels get from Spotify each week, to test what would happen. The growth of TikTok and the news app Toutiao has boosted the valuation of Bytedance to about $75 billion, making it one of the world’s most-valuable startups. That rankles the music labels, which are still being paid under the original low-priced deal. “When I left [last year], the industry said these deals are not going to work anymore,” says John Bolton, a music executive who helped Bytedance strike its previous deals with music companies. “It sounds like that still has not been figured out.”

Labels are now asking Bytedance for hundreds of millions of dollars in guaranteed licensing payments, and they’ve threatened to pull their music from the app’s library if they aren’t rewarded.

TikTok would be rather boring without music, says Yang Lu, the general manger of music for Bytedance, which is now planning its own paid music service. But he’s quick to add that the app has been beneficial to the music industry, by creating programs to support independent artists in China, Japan, and South Korea, and has teamed up with labels around the world to help promote releases. And there’s little question that Bytedance’s apps motivate music lovers: On any given day, as many as half the songs in the top 10 on Chinese music services have been made popular by TikTok or Douyin. “We are not a music promotion app,” Lu says. “But we did happen to have a huge impact on music promotion. We are a very positive force.”

Many artists agree. Supa Dupa Humble promoted his song Steppin on Instagram when he first released it in 2017. The popularity of songs on Bytedance’s TikTok app, downloaded more than 1 billion times worldwide, is pushing musical acts to shift their touring schedules toward Asia.

Wednesday, April 17, 2019

Why India's ban on Video app TikTok is unnerving the tech industry

An Indian ban on downloading TikTok, one of the world's most popular mobile applications, has heightened industry worries that technology companies could now face increased scrutiny and regulatory challenges in one of their most important markets.

TikTok, which allows users to create and share videos with special effects, has become a sensation in India, where it has been downloaded by nearly 300 million users so far, according to analytics firm Sensor Tower, out of more than 1 billion installs globally.

Its runaway popularity has attracted criticism from some politicians, however, in a largely conservative society that can have a low boiling point for even moderately racy content.

In the case of TikTok, 15-second dance clips and memes dominate the platform, although some videos do show youngsters, some scantily clad, lip-syncing and grooving to popular tunes. Local media have also reported several accidental deaths when users attempted to make videos with knives and guns.

The IT minister of Tamil Nadu, M. Manikandan, said in February that "young girls and everybody is behaving very badly" on TikTok.

On Wednesday, TikTok vanished from Google and Apple's app stores in India. The rare takedown of such a popular app came after the Madras High Court said the app encouraged pornography and asked the government to ban it. The federal IT ministry then issued a follow-up directive to Google and Apple.

Industry executives, technology lawyers and free-speech activists interviewed by Reuters on Wednesday said the ban was a major concern.

"It does unnerve me," said a senior executive working for a social media company in New Delhi. "For the industry, it sets a worrying precedent in India."

A TikTok spokesman said on Wednesday that it had faith in the judicial system and was "optimistic about an outcome that would be well received by" its millions of users in India. The state court will next hear the case on April 24.

Google told Reuters late on Tuesday it does not comment on individual apps but adheres to local laws. Apple did not respond to requests for comment.

CRITICAL MARKET

TikTok is not the first social media company to run into trouble in India.

Facebook and its messenger app WhatsApp, which count India as their biggest market, have been under pressure from authorities to better tackle fake news and monitor content on their platforms.

Global video streaming giant Netflix was dragged into a legal battle last year following a complaint that one of its fictional series insulted a former Indian prime minister.

But industry executives said the ruling against TikTok was particularly worrisome, given that it originated from a public interest complaint brought by an individual in Tamil Nadu - opening their digital content to judicial scrutiny that could potentially derail their India strategy overnight.

"It shows a level of uncertainty which is not great for investors, for private equity firms and for venture capital," said Apar Gupta, executive director at advocacy group Internet Freedom Foundation.

India is a critical market for social media and mobile digital content companies as the country is witnessing a sharp surge in use of smartphones. An estimated half-a-billion Indians now have access to the Internet.

Singapore-based Bigo, which has a live video streaming app, has also been expanding in India. TikTok's owner Bytedance Technology Co, one of the world's most valuable start-ups, also runs another social app named Helo, which allows users to share content in local languages.

Bytedance has more than 250 employees in India, with plans to expand further, one of its court filings showed. It had about two dozen India job openings listed on LinkedIn as of Wednesday.

SEXUAL PREDATORS

Such is the TikTok craze that a Reuters photographer recently saw more than a dozen youngsters shooting TikTok videos on their smartphones at a popular Mumbai promenade. While some danced as they lip-synced to songs, others used teddy bears as props.

The Tamil Nadu court, which ruled against TikTok, said inappropriate content was its dangerous aspect and that the app could expose children to sexual predators.

The ban does not apply to use of the TikTok app if it has already been downloaded.

The Chinese company unsuccessfully argued at the Supreme Court last week that a ban "amounts to curtailing of the (free speech) rights of the citizens of India".

A "very minuscule" proportion of TikTok's videos were considered inappropriate or obscene, the company said in its Supreme Court filing, adding that it was primarily an entertainment platform.

That argument cut no ice with the app's critics, however.

Hindu nationalist group Swadeshi Jagaran Manch, which is close to India's ruling party and had previously criticised the app's content, on Wednesday welcomed the ban, saying TikTok was "against Indian culture and morality".

It also struck a chord in some family living rooms in India.

"From small kids to old ladies, it is spoiling the minds of everyone," said S. Nithyajothi, a homemaker from Madurai. "I strictly ask anyone coming to my house to not talk about TikTok, it is addictive and it is unnecessary."

Tuesday, April 16, 2019

TikTok vanishes from Google Play Store after Madras HC ban, govt order

Google has removed TikTok from its Play Store, some users reported Tuesday night, but the popular short video app was available on Apple's App Store.

The Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology had asked Google and Apple to take down TikTok after the Madras High Court banned the app on April 3 for "pornographic and inappropriate content".

Google, in an email response to Business Standard, said it does not comment on individual apps but adheres to local laws. Users who had the app will continue to be able to use it.

The High Court, earlier on Tuesday, refused to remove its ban and appointed senior advocate Arvind Datar as an independent counsel to examine TikTok's implications.

In an email statement, TikTok had said, "We welcome the decision of the Madras High Court to appoint Arvind Datar as Amicus Curae (independent counsel) to the court. We have faith in the Indian judicial system and we are optimistic about an outcome that would be well received by over 120 million monthly active users in India, who continue using TikTok to showcase their creativity and capture moments that matter in their everyday lives."

S Muthukumar had filed a public interest litigation for TikTok to banned citing the use of inappropriate content being posted and shared on the app by minors.

Android, the Google owned operating system, accounts for 70-80 per cent market share in India, and Apple's iOS accounts comes far behind it. TikTok was targeted at people who own lower-end Android smart phones.

A search for TikTok on Google Play Store Tuesday night showed other apps similar in name or logo.

Saturday, April 6, 2019

Record labels demand more money for songs played on TikTok, Douyin

The three biggest record labels are demanding more money for songs played on TikTok and its Chinese counterpart Douyin, setting up a showdown with the hugely popular video apps, people with knowledge of the matter said.

Deals between the labels and the Chinese owner of the services, ByteDance, expire this spring, according to sources. The two sides have made little progress in negotiations that have been going on since last year, they said.

If the talks fail, the labels — Universal Music, Sony Music and Warner Music — could ultimately pull their catalogs from the applications.

The burgeoning popularity of the apps has helped boost the valuation of ByteDance to at least $75 billion, and emboldened record labels to seek better terms. They want ByteDance to pay them hundreds of millions of dollars in guaranteed money. ByteDance has agreed to increase its payments, but balked at the labels’ demands, they said.

TikTok argues that it’s not a music-streaming service and shouldn’t be treated that way.

“TikTok is for short video creation and viewing, and is simply not a product for pure music consumption that requires a label’s entire collection,” said Todd Schefflin, who oversees global music business development at ByteDance. “The platform provides an exciting way for content to trend and break through to wider audiences.”

TikTok has gotten big enough that it can help turn an obscure song into a hit. “Old Town Road,” a mashup of country and hip-hop from Lil Nas X, reached the Billboard charts after going viral on TikTok.

“A short video on TikTok can become a valuable promotional tool for artists to grow their fan bases and build awareness for new work,” Schefflin said.

Industry Rebound

The music industry grew 9.7 percent in 2018, thanks largely to the rise of paid streaming services Spotify and Apple Music. But big record labels have also been trying to increase the money they get from social-video apps.

A previous iteration of TikTok was known as Musical.ly, an app focused on lip-sync videos. ByteDance acquired that service in 2017 and later folded it into its TikTok app.

The idea is to take the long view when it comes to music, Schefflin said.

“TikTok’s music team partners with many great labels every day around the world forming long-term relationships, rather than just relying on transactional deals for a catalog of full songs,” he said.

Wednesday, April 3, 2019

Madras HC asks govt to ban video app TikTok, says it encourages pornography

The Madras High Court on Wednesday asked the federal government to ban Chinese video app TikTok, saying it was “encouraging pornography”.

Created by Beijing Bytedance Technology Co, TikTok allows users to create and share short videos with special effects. It has become hugely popular in rural India, home to most of the country’s 1.3 billion people.

Jokes, clips and footage related to India’s thriving movie industry dominate the platform, along with memes and videos in which youngsters, some scantily clad, lip-sync and dance to popular music.

Speaking to Reuters in February, the IT minister of Tamil Nadu described some of its more suggestive dance content as “unbearable”, while a Hindu nationalist group close to the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) has called for the app to be banned.

Also in February, the BJP’s chief of information technology, Amit Malviya, said the party was tracking TikTok conversations and called it “a brilliant medium for creative expression”.

The Madras High Court, which has been hearing a public interest litigation against the app, on Wednesday said children who were using TikTok were vulnerable to exposure to sexual predators.

“Inappropriate” content was TikTok’s “dangerous aspect”, the court said in an order seen by Reuters, adding that “there is a possibility of the children contacting strangers directly”.

A TikTok spokesman told Reuters the company was committed to abiding by local laws and was awaiting a copy of the court’s order, following which it would take appropriate action.

“Maintaining a safe and positive in-app environment ... is our priority,” he said.

India’s federal IT ministry did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

As well as asking the government to ban the application and prohibit its downloads, the court said TikTok videos should not be broadcast by media.

TikTok, whose video-only interface makes it less elaborate and easier to use than platforms such as Facebook or Twitter, has been downloaded more than 240 million times in India, according to app analytics firm Sensor Tower.