Sunday, September 14, 2025
Digital Rights Monitor
  • DRM Exclusive
    • News
    • Court Updates
    • Features
    • Comment
    • Campaigns
      • #PrivacyHumSabKe
    • Vodcasts
  • In Media
    • News
    • OP-EDs
  • Editorial
  • Gender & Tech
    • SheConnects
  • Trends Monitor
  • Infographics
  • Resources
    • Laws and Policies
    • Research
    • International Frameworks
  • DRM Advocacy
    • Exclusives
    • Featured
    • Publications
    • Statements
No Result
View All Result
Digital Rights Monitor
  • DRM Exclusive
    • News
    • Court Updates
    • Features
    • Comment
    • Campaigns
      • #PrivacyHumSabKe
    • Vodcasts
  • In Media
    • News
    • OP-EDs
  • Editorial
  • Gender & Tech
    • SheConnects
  • Trends Monitor
  • Infographics
  • Resources
    • Laws and Policies
    • Research
    • International Frameworks
  • DRM Advocacy
    • Exclusives
    • Featured
    • Publications
    • Statements
No Result
View All Result
Digital Rights Monitor
No Result
View All Result

in DRM Exclusive, News

More social media regulation coming in 2023, say US lawmakers

Usman Shahidby Usman Shahid
January 2, 2023
UK to fine tech companies for failure to remove self-harm material

Photo: Archive

US lawmakers have said there will be increased regulation of social media platforms in 2023. The development comes just days after Congress passed a bill banning the use of TikTok on government devices.

The critical and regulatory scrutiny around TikTok in the US has increased significantly in the past year as the short-video app became one of the world’s most popular social media platforms with over a billion monthly active users. Since TikTok is owned by the Beijing-based tech firm ByteDance, concerns are echoing in the federal ranks about the Chinese government’s potential contamination of US citizens’ personal data collected by the app. Some critics and regulators have expressed concerns that TikTok, under the country’s laws, can be forced to transfer specific datasets from the US to the Chinese government, especially information that is sensitive and confidential. 

TikTok, on the other hand, has repeatedly claimed that it protects a user’s personal data properly. Last month, however, the company confirmed a few employees had managed to get hold of location information of a few US journalists and other TikTok staffers to investigate the potential leaks of confidential company information that circulated in the press earlier. The employees were fired after an internal investigation. The journalists whose locations were tracked were associated with such leading publications as BuzzFeed and Financial Times.

Despite its high pecuniary potential to empower individuals, communities, and small independent businesses, the resistance against TikTok and the efforts to get it banned are becoming more pronounced across the US. Even though TikTok has reiterated its US data is not based in China, lawmakers and some advocates refuse to believe the data is not accessible in China. Wisconsin Representative Mike Gallaghar, who is quite vocal against TikTok, has called for a nationwide ban on the app. 

“It’s highly addictive and destructive,” Gallaghar said Sunday. “We’re seeing troubling data about the corrosive impact of constant social media use, particularly on young men and women here in America.”

The congressman’s statement indicated TikTok is surreptitiously tracking users’ location.

“Tiktok is owned by ByteDance, ByteDance is controlled by the CCP [Chinese Communist Party], that means the CCP can track your location, it can track your keystrokes, it can censor your news — why would we give our foremost adversary that amount of power?”

Frances Haugen, former Meta employee turned whistleblower behind the widely reported on Facebook Papers in 2021, is of the opinion that leading social media platforms such as TikTok, YouTube, and Twitter have the same algorithmic infrastructure and that there should be more transparency around their business practices. “This is like we’re back in 1965, we don’t have seatbelt laws yet,” Haugen said on the NBC show Meet the Press.

TikTok is among the fastest growing social media platforms in the world with more than one billion downloads globally. It took over Meta-owned platforms, Facebook and Instagram, in 2022 and penetrated various foreign markets, rapidly expanding its reach around the world. At the same time, however, user privacy and data protection on the platform have attracted ample scrutiny, with critics calling for more transparency around TikTok’s privacy and data-sharing practices.

Tags: Regulationsocial media
Previous Post

Probe announced into Twitter data leak claims involving ‘400m’ accounts

Next Post

Twitter relaxing ban on political ads

Share on FacebookShare on Twitter
PTA denies role in massive data leak, says 1,372 sites blocked

PTA denies role in massive data leak, says 1,372 sites blocked

September 11, 2025
Khyber Pakhtunkhwa police crack down on TikTokers for ‘promoting obscenity’

Khyber Pakhtunkhwa police crack down on TikTokers for ‘promoting obscenity’

September 11, 2025
Afghan refugee children at Girdi Jungle refugee camp. Photo credits: Ramna Saeed

Pakistan blocks SIMS of Afghan refugees after deportation deadline

September 9, 2025
No Content Available

Next Post
Twitter

Twitter relaxing ban on political ads

About Digital Rights Monitor

This website reports on digital rights and internet governance issues in Pakistan and collates related resources and publications. The site is a part of Media Matters for Democracy’s Report Digital Rights initiative that aims to improve reporting on digital rights issues through engagement with media outlets and journalists.

About Media Matters for Democracy

Media Matters for Democracy is a Pakistan based not-for-profit geared towards independent journalism and media and digital rights advocacy. Founded by a group of journalists, MMfD works for innovation in media and journalism through the use of technology, research, and advocacy on media and internet related issues. MMfD works to ensure that expression and information rights and freedoms are protected in Pakistan.

Follow Us on Twitter

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In

Add New Playlist

No Result
View All Result
  • DRM Exclusive
    • News
    • Court Updates
    • Features
    • Comment
    • Campaigns
      • #PrivacyHumSabKe
    • Vodcasts
  • In Media
    • News
    • OP-EDs
  • Editorial
  • Gender & Tech
    • SheConnects
  • Trends Monitor
  • Infographics
  • Resources
    • Laws and Policies
    • Research
    • International Frameworks
  • DRM Advocacy
    • Exclusives
    • Featured
    • Publications
    • Statements