TikTok knew app posed mental health risks for children

According to the lawsuit, TikTok’s own research found that “compulsive usage correlates with a slew of negative mental health effects like loss of analytical skills, memory formation, contextual thinking, conversational depth, empathy, and increased anxiety”.

In redacted comments, the complaint refers to an internal TikTok group known as “TikTank” that studied the app’s effect on users and wrote a report arguing that its recommendation algorithm and advertising-based business model encouraged “optimisation for time spent in the app”.

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Such optimisation is common in social media, where apps compete for attention and cultural cachet. But the TikTank report also noted that “TikTok is particularly popular with younger users, who are particularly sensitive to reinforcement in the form of social reward and have minimal ability to self-regulate effectively,” according to the complaint.

In a statement, TikTok spokesman Alex Haurek called it “highly irresponsible” for news outlets to publish information that is under seal, and said the complaint “cherry-picks misleading quotes and takes outdated documents out of context to misrepresent our commitment to community safety”.

Other states’ complaints were also heavily redacted when filed, but public officials have signalled they plan to push state courts to make more of them public.

Earlier this week TikTok pushed back on the state lawsuits, which Haurek said were based on “inaccurate and misleading claims”.

TikTok is currently fighting a federal law to force a sale or ban of the app, whose China-based parent company ByteDance has stoked national security concerns in the US. TikTok argues the measure would infringe on the free speech rights of the millions of app’s millions of American users.

Under the law, TikTok can avoid a ban if ByteDance sells the app to non-Chinese owners before January 19, a deadline the president can extent by 90 days if TikTok is making progress on a sale. Such a sale appears unlikely, given TikTok’s huge potential price tag of more than $100 billion and the short window for completing such a geopolitically sensitive deal. China has also said it would ban the sale and export of one of TikTok’s most critical components, its recommendation algorithm.

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A panel of three judges on the federal DC Court of Appeals is expected to rule on TikTok’s challenge of the law. The company and the Justice Department have requested an expedited judgment by December, allowing time for a potential appeal to be filed with the Supreme Court before January 19.

Washington Post

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