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Vietnam says TikTok’s content censorship isn’t effective: media

    • TikTok hasn’t put in place measures to protect children from being exposed to inappropriate information or ensure their privacy, according to the report.
    • TikTok hasn’t put in place measures to protect children from being exposed to inappropriate information or ensure their privacy, according to the report. PHOTO: AFP
    Published Thu, Oct 5, 2023 · 08:56 PM

    VIETNAM’S communications ministry accused TikTok of failing to effectively block content that violates the law after the authority conducted inspections of the platform’s operations in the country, VietnamNet news website reported.

    TikTok also stored illegal information, including content that could incite violence and posed risks to children, according to the report, which cited Le Quang Tu Do, the director of Vietnam’s Authority of Broadcasting, Television and Electronic Information under the ministry, during a meeting on Thursday (Oct 5).

    “We respect local laws and regulations and will continue to work in collaboration with MIC, ABEI and the relevant ministries to address the feedback raised today,” Nguyen Lam Thanh, TikTok’s Vietnam representative, said in a statement, referring to the ministry and broadcast authority. “The safety of our users is our top priority. We have, and will continue to, pro-actively implement public education initiatives to raise awareness of online safety.”

    In April, Do cited poor management and oversight that had led to the spread of fake news and anti-government content on TikTok, threatening and corrupting the country’s culture and morals.

    TikTok hasn’t put in place measures to protect children from being exposed to inappropriate information or ensure their privacy, according to the report. The platform also violated some regulations tied to intellectual property rights, it said.

    Unlike China, people in Vietnam have access to the world’s most popular social platforms. The nation’s Internet, though, is tightly monitored by the communist government, which is stepping up efforts to rid websites of content it objects to. Officials are proposing a decree that would require telecoms and Internet service providers to halt services to organisations and individuals who post illegal content online.

    TikTok in the third quarter last year was ranked the third most used social media platform in Vietnam, with 77.5 per cent of the country’s Internet users aged 16 to 64 using it, according to a report compiled by Kepios and We Are Social.

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