Vietnam says monitoring bite-sized TikTok videos for ‘toxic’ content harder than other platforms
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TikTok has nearly 50 million users in Vietnam aged 18 and above.
PHOTO: EPA-EFE
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HANOI - Vietnam will probe TikTok’s operations in the country from May, as “toxic” content on the short-video platform “poses a threat to the country’s youth, culture and tradition”, the Information Ministry said last Thursday.
Moderating content on the popular Chinese-owned app that carries bite-sized videos was “far more difficult” than on other platforms, ministry representative Le Quang Tu Do said at a news conference. “We will need tougher measures to combat that content, removal only is not enough,” he said, without elaborating.
The app, owned by ByteDance, has nearly 50 million users in Vietnam aged 18 and above, the government has said, citing data from research firm DataReportal.
According to company data, TikTok removed 1.7 million videos in the fourth quarter of 2022, which it said did not follow its community guidelines.
Asked if TikTok would be banned in the South-east Asian country, Mr Do said those who did not comply with local rules would not be welcome.
“TikTok, Facebook and YouTube are all cross-border social media with international standards. But when operating in Vietnam, the platform needs to abide by local regulations on both content and tax obligations,” he said, adding that TikTok had recently allowed “toxic, offensive, false and superstitious” content
TikTok is the only platform being probed because it is the only one with local offices, the ministry official said.
The company said in February it was told by the Authority of Broadcasting and Electronic Information that a government team would visit its Vietnam offices in the second quarter.
“This is an interdisciplinary inspection activity planned by the government and in line with Vietnam law for companies operating in Vietnam, not only TikTok,” TikTok Vietnam said in an e-mail.
In a statement to Reuters last Thursday, TikTok Vietnam said it had updated its guidelines, expected to take effect from April 21, to be more transparent about its rules and how it enforces them. REUTERS

