In today's #vatniksoup, I'll talk about TikTok (@tiktok_us), why some of the US legislators want to ban it, what are the app's connections to the Chinese Communist Party, and how the app has changed the social media landscape, especially among young people.
1/23
Tiktok's potential reach and potential political impact is actually huge, which is why US politicians are currently having such a heated debate over it right now. First of all, TikTok has over 1 billion monthly active users & it's been downloaded more than 4.1 billion times.
2/23
The app tends to appeal to younger users - 41% of the app's users are aged between 16 and 24. By Jul 2023, TikTok had become the primary news source for British teens and in Finland, around half of 13-18 year-olds get their news from TikTok.
3/23
Chinese citizens also have their "own version" of TikTok called Douyin. The Chinese version offers a child-friendly version that shows its users science experiments, museum exhibits, CCP propaganda and educational videos. It also limits the use time to 40 minutes per day.
4/23
TikTok has also been accused of censorship. The app's policies ban content related to a specific list of foreign leaders, including Vladimir Putin and Turkish president Recep Tayyip Erdogan. Its moderators were also told to suppress content from creators who were "too ugly".
5/23
A 2023 study by Rutgers University said that there's a "strong possibility that content on TikTok is either amplified or suppressed based on its alignment with the interests of the Chinese government." TikTok later removed the ability to analyze hashtags of sensitive topics.
6/23
Many conspiracy theories, including Pizzagate and QAnon, are extremely popular on the platform. In Dec 2023, @O_Rob1nson and @Shayan86 BBC reported that they had discovered nearly 800 fake accounts on Tiktok promoting Russian propaganda and disinformation.
7/23
In 2021, the app received praise from Kremlin officials for removing content related to protests in Russia. Russia's censorship agency Roskomnadzor thanked TikTok because they "actively cooperated with us, which cannot be said about others."
8/23
TikTok is also one of the few social media platforms still available in Russia, because TikTok has caved to the Russian government's influence and banned content from foreign creators. Most Russian TikTok creators spread pro-invasion and pro-Kremlin views.
9/23
Recently, in the US, a bill that could lead to TikTok being banned in the US received unanimous bipartisan support (50-0). The bill would require the Beijing-based owner of the app, ByteDance, to give up their shares of the app to avoid the ban & put it under new ownership.
10/23
ByteDance replied by showing their US-based users a pop-up message, urging people to call their representatives and tell them to vote "No" on the legislation. The company also claimed that it's a violation against their First Amendment rights.
11/23
TikTok's former head of engineering in the US revealed in Jun 2023, that some CCP members had "super user" access to TikTok data, and that they used this access to spy on Hong Kong protesters and civil rights activists by monitoring their locations and devices.
12/23
TikTok's parent company ByteDance's employees in the US and China also accessed the app's user data in an attempt to track down Buzzfeed News and Financial Times journalists who exposed information about the company's eavesdropping activities.
13/23
The current controversy is not the first one that TikTok is facing - in 2020, Donald Trump sought to ban TikTok but was eventually blocked by the courts. Recently he backtracked, saying that banning TikTok would help Facebook and "double their business".
14/23
Why are some countries trying to ban TikTok? First of all, TikTok is owned by a Chinese company called ByteDance. According to National Intelligence Law of the People's Republic of China,the CCP can demand ByteDance to give up any data for intelligence-gathering operations.
15/23
TikTok also collects vast amounts of data from its users, thus creating a "digital fingerprint" of social behavior, trends and opinions of its +1 billion active users. This data can then be used to persuade the masses and predict future trends relatively accurately.
16/23
The app is especially popular among children and teenagers, a target group much more vulnerable to manipulation and addictive use. In the Western version of the app, TikTok's safeguards in protecting children are generally considered to be insufficient.
17/23
Due to this, the EU Commission opened an investigation into TikTok over "suspected breach of transparency and obligations to protect minors". According to the Commission, there were big problems with TikTok's addictive design, rabbit hole effect and age verification.
18/23
There's no doubt that TikTok could play an important role in the upcoming 2024 US presidential election. Because of this, the potential ban has probably been opposed by Trump and his henchmen like @VivekGRamaswamy and @KellyannePolls.
19/23
TikTok's popularity has also annoyed Facebook's parent company Meta. They hired one of the biggest Republican consulting firms, Targeted Victory, to undermine TikTok and present it as a "danger to American children and society" & as the "most harmful social media platform".
20/23
In my view, the dangers of TikTok stem from three issues: 1) ByteDance not being transparent about the app's connections to the CCP (and them lying about it previously), 2) the aggressive collection of massive amounts of data, and 3) the lack of safeguards for young users.
21/23
As long as TikTok ownership is somehow related to the CCP, there is a chance that the National Intelligence Law is being invoked, and Chinese officials potentially have full access to the data TikTok collects from its users and creators, making it a huge security risk.
22/23
Most of the creator data,including tax forms, social security numbers & other information from creators & outside vendors are actually stored in datacenters in China. But I guess giving up your personal information is the price you have to pay in order to be paid by TikTok.
23/23
In today's #vatniksoup, I'll talk about the Ukrainian Orthodox Church of the Moscow Patriarchate (UOC-MP) and how pro-Kremlin propagandists, oligarchs and lawyers are using its "persecution" as a tool to reduce support for Ukraine and its government.
1/20
In Oct 2023, @tuckercarlson published an episode on Joe Biden "backing the Ukrainian government as it throws priests in jail," in which he interviewed Bob Amsterdam, a lawyer representing the UOC-MP. He was hired by a Russian oligarch, Vadym Novynskyi, for the job.
2/20
The case is related to so called Draft Law 8371, a bill that would give Ukrainian authorities power to investigate the connection of religious groups in Ukraine to the Russian Federation and to ban those that have leadership under the control of the Kremlin.
In today's #vatniksoup, I'll introduce an Irish social media personality and propagandist, Chay Bowes (@BowesChay). He's best-known for his collaboration with a Russian SVR operative @Dpol_un, and for spreading pro-Kremlin propaganda while working as a correspondent for RT.
1/20
For years, Bowes was looking for his place in this world, trying his wings as a gunshop owner and health insurance middle manager. At some point, he did some online studies so that he can put up "MA in strategic studies" in his bio to gain some credibility.
2/20
For some years, Chay has claimed to be an "investigative journalist". In 2021, Chay, businessman Paddy Cosgrave and few others launched an Irish political news website called The Ditch. It was funded by Cosgrave, and Chay was one of the three main shareholders.
In today's #vatniksoup, I'll talk about hybrid operations in the context of information operations. Hybrid operations are a blend of political warfare and influencing methods like employing troll/bot farms, and spreading fake news, propaganda and disinformation.
1/21
In this thread, I will demonstrate four case studies on how Russian operatives conduct hybrid operations on three different continents. All of them have distinct characteristics, but rely on the same mechanisms, like using social media to spread the message.
2/21
Hybrid operations often combine real-world, and orchestrated and pre-planned scenarios with online activities. Sometimes Russia shills attempt to mobilize people for real-life events like protests by inflating these events on social media and fake news sites.
In today's #vatniksoup, I'll introduce a Belgian political activist, Luc Michel (@LucMichelPCN). He's best-known for his extreme far-right views, supporting and promoting Russia-orchestrated fake elections, and organizing a vast African fake news network, Russosphère.
1/18
In his early years, Michel became part of Front de la Jeunesse, a far-right militia. In 1980, members of the organization killed a French-Algerian man in Brussels. In 1981, they burned down a publishing house for a magazine who exposed the organization's internal structures.
2/18
During the 80s Michel become an assistant of Jean Thiriart, a Belgian far-right political theorist and former Waffen SS member. Thiriart and Michel moved later towards National Bolshevism, and they also collaborated with Russian fascist Alexander Dugin.
In today's #vatniksoup, I'll introduce an Australian hacker, publisher and activist, Julian Assange. He's best-known as the founder of WikiLeaks, leaking hacked and stolen data, cooperating with the Russian intelligence, and for being under criminal investigation in the US.
1/22
Julian's activism probably comes from his father, John Shipton, an "anti-war activist" who's helped Julian with launching WikiLeaks and the WikiLeaks Party. He also arranged a trip to Syria to meet with Bashar al-Assad and even planned to open an office for the party there.
2/22
In recent years, Shipton has been seen regularly at Australian "Z-rallies" in support of the Kremlin's war on Ukraine. Incidentally, Shipton got interested in Julian after he became famous in Australia - before that, he was almost completely absent from Julian's life.
In today's #vatniksoup, I'll introduce a Dutch right-wing activist, conspiracy theorist & social media personality, Eva Vlaardingerbroek (@evavlaar). She's best-known for her promotion of the "decline of the Decadent West" trope, and for promotion of pro-Kremlin narratives.
1/19
Eva's main audience is conservative traditionalists, and basically everything she does revolves around this theme. She also promotes various conspiracy theories about the "global elites", COVID-19 and vaccines, World Economic Forum and digitalisation of society.
2/19
She's also a raging populist, and is not afraid to take current events and rally around them to get more attention to her conspiratorial ramblings. Recently, she's been involved with the protests by European farmers against increasing costs and tiny margins.