ByteDance says TikTok and Douyin are different, but they face similar criticisms

Both TikTok and the Chinese version called Douyin find themselves at the center of controversy related to detention camps in Xinjiang

(Picture: Dado Ruvic/Reuters)
TikTok has fallen on hard times. The popular short video app recently deleted the account of an American teen who criticized China’s detention camps in Xinjiang before later apologizing and restoring it.

Then a new report from the Australian Strategic Policy Institute (ASPI) found that the Chinese version of the app, Douyin, has been working with public security bureaus to disseminate state propaganda about the western region of China where a large number of Uygur Muslims reside.

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