TikTok has been accused of collecting sensitive data available in China (Photo: Shutterstock)

TikTok may have a problem in the US after US communications regulators asked Apple and Google to ban the apps for “national security”.

On Tuesday, FCC Commissioner Brendan Karma tweeted that he wrote to Apple CEO Tim Cook and Google CEO Sundar Pichai highlighting the threat of China-owned video-sharing apps.

“TikTok is more than just a video app. They’re sheep’s clothing. It’s collecting sensitive data that shows new reports are being accessed in Beijing,” Karma told Apple and Google CEOs. I mentioned it in a Twitter message with the photos I sent. .

In the letter, Karma said that TikTok “causes widespread data collection through Beijing’s apparently unconfirmed access to this sensitive data, posing an unacceptable risk to national security.”

The letter cites a recent report from Buzzfeed News, which reveals that US user data on TikTok has been repeatedly accessed from China.

Door argued that TikTok’s “patterns of behavior and misunderstandings around unlimited access to sensitive data of US users in Beijing” are the basis for Apple and Google removing them from the app store.

This is not the first time that the country has banned TikTok for security reasons. In 2020, India banned TikTok by stealing and secretly transmitting user data.

Many US military affiliates, including the Navy, Army, Air Force, Coast Guard and Marine Corps, have also banned government-launched TikTok teams.

“TikTok does more than just watch a user’s dance video. It collects search and browsing history, keyboard shortcuts, biometric IDs, message summaries and metadata, and text, images, and videos stored on the device’s clipboard.” I will,” said Karma.

He also said that the company promised to comply with China’s surveillance requirements.

The short video app is owned by Bytedance, a Chinese company based in Beijing with legal headquarters in the Cayman Islands. With around 80 million users in the United States, banning a country can cost your app and its creators dearly.

In 2020, Trump repeatedly threatened to ban the app if it wasn’t sold to US owners, calling it a national security threat.

He asked TikTok for a comment.