The company points out two of the employees were from China and two were from the United States. One of the journalists was from the Financial Times and the other was from BuzzFeed News. TikTok Chief Executive Shou Zi Chew spoke to employees in an email and said that such “misconduct is not at all representative of what I know our company’s principles to be.” He added the company “will continue to enhance these access protocols, which have already been significantly improved and hardened since this initiative took place.” ByteDance points out that the employees were purposely targeting the journalist to spy on them. In August, I reported on how some ByteDance employees were found working for the Chinese government.
History
ByteDance has long been accused of working with the Chinese government and supplying user data from people around the world. According to Forbes, scanning the LinkedIn profiles of people working for TikTok shows that 300 of them previously worked with Chinese state media outlets. Last week, a bill to ban TikTok from all US government devices moved closer to reality. Specifically, a new bill was approved Wednesday that will prevent federal employees from installing and/or using TikTok on government-owned hardware. Before it becomes law, The bill (PDF) must now get approval by the US House of Representatives. Tip of the day: Windows Update downloads can often be frustrating because they are several gigabytes in size and can slow down your internet connection. That means your device may work with reduced performance while the update is downloading. In our guide we show you how to limit bandwidth for Windows Update downloads, so they won’t bother you again.