New Report: TikTok Brainwashed America’s Youth
China’s ‘indoctrination isn’t hypothetical. It’s real.’
Since its U.S. launch in 2018, people have worried that the
Chinese-owned social media giant TikTok is vacuuming up data on America’s
teenagers and transforming them into modern, digital versions of the throngs
who once enthusiastically waved Chairman Mao’s Little Red Book.
Now, an
updated study conducted by Rutgers University’s Network Contagion
Research Institute (NCRI)—provided exclusively to The Free Press—finds
that those fears may be justified.
The new research is being released as the Supreme Court is
scheduled to
hear arguments this week about whether the U.S. site must be sold or
shut down. TikTok, owned by the Chinese media giant ByteDance, is arguing that
federal legislation forcing a sale by January 19 is an unconstitutional limit
on free speech. (A lawyer for Donald Trump has asked the Court to delay the
sale date so the president-elect can pursue “a
political resolution.”)
A preliminary version of the study was released
in August and “faced significant pushback,” according to Joel
Finkelstein, director and chief science officer at NCRI. The updated study has
“twice as much evidence,” he said, and will be published in the peer-reviewed
journal Frontiers in Social Psychology. “It is now the first
peer-reviewed, data-driven study to establish that TikTok is actively
manipulating perceptions of China and the Chinese Communist Party through
algorithmic bias.”
The researchers found that TikTok significantly downplayed
negative content related to China, such as Beijing’s bloody 1989 crackdown on
democracy protesters in Tiananmen Square and the government’s treatment of its
minority population of Uyghurs in the western Xinjiang province.
The report presents TikTok as an example of the “persuasive
technologies” China is developing to shape public opinion in the West. Another
major conclusion of the report, based on online polling, found that the more
time users spent on TikTok, the more positively they viewed China’s human
rights record and its desirability as a travel destination.
“This scaled indoctrination isn’t hypothetical. It’s real,”
Finkelstein told The Free Press. “I think that the Supreme Court
hearing now isn’t about whether or not we’re dealing with a hypothetical
threat. The Supreme Court hearing is about whether we’re going to allow this
continued indoctrination.”
According to NCRI, more than 80 percent of the content
generated in an Instagram search on the Uyghurs was negative toward China,
compared to around 11 percent on TikTok. A search for “Tiananmen” on YouTube,
meanwhile, generated content that was 65 percent negative for the Chinese
government, compared to just 20 percent on TikTok.
The “results strongly suggest that algorithmic amplification
of pro- and anti-CCP content on Instagram and YouTube is largely determined by
commercial consideration, whereas advancing CCP propaganda plays some role in
the algorithmic curation of TikTok content,” the study reads.
TikTok has more than 170 million users in the U.S. and over
a billion globally. It played
a major role in the 2024 presidential campaign and is widely used by
American companies and organizations to sell their services and products.
To judge how TikTok treated various topics, NCRI created
fake TikTok accounts to fit the profile of American teenagers. The researchers
then engaged the TikTok algorithm on issues related to the Chinese government
and CCP and compared the search results to those generated by the site’s main
rivals, YouTube and Instagram—which are owned by the U.S. tech giants Google
and Meta, respectively.
The report says searches on TikTok generated videos and
other content that was significantly more positive or neutral than what was
found during searches on these other sites. Rather than finding political
content, for example, TikTok generated videos about Chinese culture or tourism.
A TikTok spokesman strongly criticized the NCRI report and
the methodology used in the study. “This flawed experiment was clearly
engineered to reach a false, predetermined conclusion,” he told The
Free Press. “Previous research by NCRI has
been debunked by outside analysts, and this latest paper is equally
flawed. Creating fake accounts that interact with the app in a prescribed
manner does not reflect real users’ experience, just as this so-called study
does not reflect facts or reality.”
The Chinese embassy in Washington also denied that the
Beijing government plays any role in TikTok’s operations. “The claim that
‘TikTok is essentially serving Beijing’s interests’ has no factual basis and is
full of prejudice and malicious speculation against China,” a spokesman said.
He added that 60 percent of ByteDance is owned by international investors and
that TikTok “is fully registered in accordance with U.S. law, operates legally
and in compliance with regulations, and is subject to U.S. supervision.”
Criticism of TikTok is hardening on Capitol Hill as the
January 19 deadline nears and lobbying intensifies on all sides. Small
businesses and companies in the U.S. are preparing to comply with the TikTok
ban, should
it go into effect this month. Many federal employees are already
banned from using TikTok on their government devices, as are many federal
contractors. A majority of the states have also banned the app on
governmental devices.
“The same people concerned about China
owning American farmland should be concerned that China already owns
170 million properties on Americans’ phones,” U.S. Representative Kat Cammack
(R-FL), an original co-sponsor of the House TikTok bill, told The Free
Press. “This has far-reaching national security implications for
generations.”
Cammack accused TikTok of using strong-arm tactics in its
battle with Congress—including pressuring users of the app to lobby lawmakers
or risk losing access to their accounts. “My office received hundreds of phone
calls from young constituents not even knowing why they were calling in the
first place,” she said.
TikTok, in a letter to Congress last year, acknowledged it
sent messages to certain users regarding their rights to petition their
lawmakers about the legislation. But the company denied threatening to restrict
access to the app. “No one was forced to enter their zip code or contact their
representative to use TikTok,” the letter said.
A number of recent studies have raised concerns about
China’s development of information warfare capabilities, including harvesting
data on potential adversaries and secretly seeking to influence their
leadership and populations. This is achieved through the deployment of troll
farms, online influencers, and seemingly commercial social media and
advertising sites.
A November
report by the Australian Strategic Policy Institute tracked the
activity of dozens of Chinese companies engaged in ideological training, online
emotional detection, and managing public opinion. Many of the firms tracked by
the institute either have commercial ties to the Chinese military and the CCP
or are partly owned by them.
“The rapid adoption of persuasive technologies,” the report
concludes, “will challenge national security in ways that are difficult to
predict. This presents malign actors with the ability to sway opinions and
actions without the conscious autonomy of users.”
https://www.thefp.com/p/jay-solomon-pro-china-tik-tok-brainwashes-american-youth
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