Short video app TikTok, under scrutiny for ties to China, postpones meeting with US lawmakers
- TikTok has reached 1.5 billion total downloads on the App Store and Google Play, according to data provider Sensor Tower
Short video platform TikTok, which has attracted scrutiny from Washington for its ties to China, is postponing meetings between its CEO and US lawmakers that were planned for this week.
Republican Senator Marsha Blackburn was among the first to confirm a meeting with Zhu, following her open letter to the TikTok chief last month where she expressed concerns over how the app could help the Chinese government “gain unfettered and unsupervised access” to American children’s lives.
The seven-year-old start-up has become the first major Chinese social media company to achieve success in the overseas market. TikTok, which has said it would never censor videos that displeased the ruling Chinese Communist Party, has reached 1.5 billion total downloads on the App Store and Google Play, according to data provider Sensor Tower. It is the third most downloaded non-gaming app of the year after WhatsApp and Messenger.
Separately, TikTok’s parent Bytedance, the world’s most valuable start-up, is testing a music app in emerging markets to scale up its global services.