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New Zealand lawmakers banned from TikTok amid data use fears : NPR


An icon for the video-sharing app TikTok is seen on a smartphone, Tuesday, February 28, 2023, in Marple Town, Pa. New Zealand lawmakers and other staff members of the nation’s Parliament will be banned from using the TikTok app on their government phones, officials said Friday, March 17, 2023.

Matt Slocum/AP


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Matt Slocum/AP


An icon for the video-sharing app TikTok is seen on a smartphone, Tuesday, February 28, 2023, in Marple Town, Pa. New Zealand lawmakers and other staff members of the nation’s Parliament will be banned from using the TikTok app on their government phones, officials said Friday, March 17, 2023.

Matt Slocum/AP

WELLINGTON, New Zealand — New Zealand lawmakers and other people who work in the nation’s Parliament will be barred from installing the TikTok app on their government phones, officials said Friday.

The ban took effect at the end of the month following similar moves in many other countries.

However, New Zealand’s ban will only apply to about 500 people in the parliament complex, not all government employees such as ban in the US And England. Other New Zealand bodies may later decide to impose their own bans.

The global concern about the app comes after warnings by the FBI and other agencies that TikTok’s parent company in China, ByteDance, could share TikTok user data – such as browsing history, location, intelligence and biometric identifiers – with China’s authoritarian government.

New Zealand Prime Minister Chris Hipkins said he doesn’t have TikTok on his phone.

“I’m not that stylish and trendy,” he told reporters.

Parliamentary Services executive director Rafael Gonzalez-Montero said New Zealand’s move was made on the advice of government cybersecurity experts.

He said the app would be removed from all devices with access to the congressional network, although officials could make special arrangements for anyone who needs TikTok to fulfill its democratic obligations. Surname.

“This decision was made based on the analysis of our experts and after discussion with our colleagues in government and internationally,” Gonzalez-Montero said in a statement. “Based on this information, the service has determined that the risks are unacceptable in the current New Zealand parliamentary environment.”

Hipkins said the cybersecurity advice came from New Zealand’s intelligence agency, the Government Communications Security Bureau. He said New Zealand did not apply a common approach to all government employees and that decision-making on cybersecurity would be up to each ministry or agency.

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