The Italian antitrust regulator has fined TikTok roughly $10.94 million for failing to protect children and vulnerable people from harmful content on the popular video-sharing application.
The Italian regulator launched an investigation into TikTok last March, saying that numerous videos on its platform showed young people adopting self-harming behavior, particularly content related to a trend called “French scar.” The TikTok challenge, which became viral in Italy last year, involves the act of continuously and violently squeezing the skin of one’s cheeks until causes lasting bruises on the cheekbones.
The authority said on Thursday its probe had verified TikTok’s responsibility in spreading content “likely to threaten the psycho-physical safety” of users, including videos related to the “French Scar” challenge.
TikTok said it disagrees with the Italian regulator’s decision. “There were only on average 100 daily searches in Italy for so-called ‘French Scar’ content before the AGCM announced its investigation last year,” a spokesperson for the company said in a statement.
The competition authority said Thursday that “potentially dangerous content” was circulated through TikTok’s profiling algorithms, which could automatically select videos to match users’ interests. Its purpose, the regulator added, was to increase the time people spend on the app and drive user engagement to boost advertising revenue
“TikTok has not taken adequate measures to prevent the spreading of such content, and has not fully complied with the guidelines it has adopted, reassuring customers that the platform is a ’safe' space.”
Growing Scrutiny in the West
The costly fine adds to TikTok’s woes in Europe. The European Commission opened multiple formal investigations last February into whether the Chinese-owned social media company breached the block’s new law, the Digital Services Act, which requires social media platforms, particularly the very large ones, to combat harmful content or disinformation. Non-compliance could lead to a fine of up to 6 percent of companies’ global turnover. The probe will look into issues including TikTok’s “addictive design“ and the potential failure to protect children.The video-sharing app is hugely popular among Americans, with roughly 170 million users nationwide. In comparison, TikTok has an average of 125 million monthly active users in the EU.