Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Phones
  3. Mobile
  4. Social Media
  5. News

Former ByteDance exec claims China had access to TikTok data

Add as a preferred source on Google

TikTok is feeling the heat again after a former leading executive at its parent company, Byte Dance, made a series of damning claims in a wrongful dismissal lawsuit filed recently in the San Francisco Superior Court

Among the allegations made by Yintao Yu was that the Chinese Community Party (CCP) “maintained supreme access” to TikTok data stored in the U.S. when he worked for the company between 2017 and 2018.

TikTok logo on an iPhone.
Digital Trends

Yu also said in the lawsuit that he believes ByteDance “has served as a useful propaganda tool for the Chinese Communist Party.”

Recommended Videos

The suit comes as U.S. lawmakers continue to consider the future of the social media app amid growing concerns over TikTok’s impact on U.S. national security and data privacy, Axios reported.

Yu, who reportedly worked as head of engineering for ByteDance’s U.S. operations, claimed in the lawsuit that the CCP had a “special office or unit” operating inside the Beijing-headquartered company, adding that it “played a significant role” by influencing “how the company advanced core Communist values” within the app.

The lawsuit accused the company of promoting “nationalistic content [that] served to both increase engagement on ByteDance’s websites and to promote support of the CCP,” adding that the CCP could also access U.S. user data via a “backdoor channel in the code.”

Yu’s suit alleges that ByteDance was “aware that if the Chinese government’s backdoor was removed from the international/U.S. version of the app, the Chinese government would, it feared, ban the company’s valuable Chinese-version apps.”

TikTok has always insisted that the Chinese state has no access to its user data and that U.S. data is stored in the U.S. and Singapore. Responding to the allegations, ByteDance said it will “vigorously oppose what we believe are baseless claims and allegations in this complaint.”

Since Yu left the company in 2018, TikTok has taken several measures to protect U.S. user data, some of which are part of a $1.5 billion initiative called Project Texas.

The future of TikTok’s existence in the U.S. is still hanging in the balance as lawmakers from across the political divide consider moves that would potentially give the American government the power to ban TikTok nationwide.

Trevor Mogg
Contributing Editor
Not so many moons ago, Trevor moved from one tea-loving island nation that drives on the left (Britain) to another (Japan)…
Google starts testing Gmail Live, its new voice search tool for your inbox
The feature lets you ask questions about your inbox with your voice and is set to roll out later this summer.
Gmail Live screenshot on gradient background

At I/O this year, Google showcased Gmail Live, a new Gemini-powered feature that lets users search their inbox using their voice instead of typing. The feature has now moved into testing, with 9to5Google reporting that it's rolling out to a small group of Android and iOS users this week.

How Gmail Live works

Read more
Apple and Google sat for discussions to unlock 50W wireless charging for smartphones
Wireless Charger

The next major leap in wireless charging may not come from a flashy smartphone launch, but from behind closed doors where some of the biggest names in the tech industry are working together, according to an ITHome report.

Apple, Google, Xiaomi, and several other leading technology companies recently gathered in Beijing for the Wireless Power Consortium's (WPC) Qi Off-cycle Meeting, where discussions centered around the upcoming Qi 50W wireless charging standard. The four-day event, hosted by Xiaomi, focused on refining technical specifications, testing prototype hardware, and ensuring devices from different brands can work seamlessly together.

Read more
Minimal Phone 2 looks like a deliberate antidote to doomscrolling
The coming phone leans on a keyboard, calmer software, and a smaller body to fight smartphone overload.
Electronics, Phone, Mobile Phone

Minimal Phone 2 has entered waitlist mode with a clear promise. Minimal says its next phone is coming soon with a smaller, more refined design, a better keyboard, an aluminum body, and improved software.

The first Minimal Phone already tested whether people wanted an Android device that slowed phone use down without cutting off everyday tools. Its e-paper screen and physical keyboard made endless feeds less comfortable, while keeping apps, messaging, payments, and other basics within reach.

Read more