American TikTok is Censoring Everything - podcast episode cover

American TikTok is Censoring Everything

Feb 01, 202628 minSeason 6Ep. 5
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Episode description

On January 22, 2026, TikTok officially became an "American" company. The $14 billion deal, brokered by a consortium of politically connected investors, was supposed to end the years of national security concerns and protect the data of 170 million US users. Instead, the new TikTok USDS Joint Venture has stumbled out of the gate with a series of "technical glitches" that look suspiciously like targeted censorship. From the inexplicable blocking of the word "Epstein" in direct messages to the suppression of protest videos in Minneapolis, the new management’s first week has raised a troubling question: did we actually solve the problem of algorithmic manipulation, or did we just ensure that the people doing the manipulating are the ones who helped broker the deal?This video examines the bizarre political U-turn that turned TikTok from a national emergency into a sweetheart deal for insiders. We look at the new owners, the incredibly invasive "biometric harvesting" hidden in the new Terms of Service, and the "Rational Business Actor" theory that suggests no company would be dumb enough to break its own product on day one. We also explore the "Mecha-Hitler" problem of content moderation, and why the "National Security" label may now be acting as a permanent shield against transparency for a platform that is now 100% domestic, 100% private, and perhaps, 100% MAGA.

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Transcript

Last week, around 170 million Americans open TikTok on their phones to find that the usual stream of teenagers explaining how to flip real estate and influencers promoting the health benefits of sunlight charged water had been replaced by a digital speed bump. A pop up message informed users that if they wanted to keep scrolling, they had to agree to new terms of service and an updated privacy policy. The average user probably clicked the accept button and

kept going. For the platform, it marked the official transition to a new corporate identity known as the TikTok USDS Joint Venture LLC Users reported that the digital atmosphere changed almost immediately. Within hours, reports began to surface that the platform had developed a sudden sensitivity to certain terms.

Users were suddenly unable to send the word Epstein in direct messages, a quirk confirmed by reporters at CNBC and NPR, who encountered an error message stating that the text was blocked to protect our community. This will have made that morning particularly tough for the 13,000 Americans with that surname. While TikTok later characterized this as a technical glitch in its safety systems, the timing struck many as a rather

surprising coincidence. The apparent censorship wasn't just limited to historical scandals in Minneapolis. The fatal shooting of protesters by federal agents had ignited a wave of protests around the country and a parallel wave of what felt like suppression on the app. High profile creators reported that videos documenting the ICE raids were being shadow banned or failing to upload altogether.

The comedian Megan Stalter told The Rap that while one of her posts on ICE raids had thrived on other platforms, it remained invisible on TikTok, leading her to delete her account in protest. In a viral Twitter post, the freelance journalist David Levard shared a screenshot that his political videos were being flagged as ineligible for recommendation, resulting in view counts that sat stubbornly at 0, almost as bad as the box office performance of the new

Melania film. By the end of the weekend, the #tik T.O.K censorship was trending across rival social media platforms as users attempted to document what felt like a coordinated purge of critical discourse, even prompting California regulators to question whether the platform was violating state laws by suppressing content critical of

the current administration. As the first few days of American majority ownership drew to a close, it appeared that the new TikTok was off to a very rocky and for its critics, very quiet start. The rocky roll out was the first public act of a corporate transformation that had been

finalized just days earlier. On January 22nd, TikTok had announced that it had successfully established TikTok USDS joint venture LLCA, new entity designed to satisfy the federal mandate for the Chinese owned Byte Dance to divest it's American operations. However, any expectation of a clean break from Beijing was quickly dispelled by the details of the deal. Despite the divestment label, Byte Dance remains significantly involved in TikTok.

They retain a 19.9% ownership stake in the new structure, the maximum allowed under the 2024 law. More importantly, the spin off is far from a total separation. In a memo to employees, CEO Xiaozichu horrified that while the joint venture would handle data security and content moderation, Bytedance would continue to run Tik Tok's primary money making engines in America, including its advertising, marketing and the rapidly growing TikTok shop.

The deal consolidated control of the platforms American operations within a consortium of investors whose media ambitions have become increasingly controversial. Oracle Co, founded by Larry Ellison, and the private equity firm Silverlake each took a 15% stake alongside the Emirati

backed MGX. The deal placed the apps most sensitive functions, including the recommendation algorithm and content moderation, under the oversight of Oracle, according to Donald Trump September 2025 executive order. Trusted security partners may also share information with

other U.S. government officials. For the Trump aligned Ellison family, this acquisition is one piece of a broader politically charged expansion into the American media landscape following the merger of Skydance and Paramount Global. David Ellison, Larry Ellison's son, installed conservative figures at CBS News, a move that coincided with a $16,000,000 settlement paid to President Trump over a 60 Minutes interview added. This payment was made just before the FCC approved the merger.

At present, the Ellisons are in the middle of a hostile bid to buy Warner Brothers Discovery, the parent company of CNN. Larry Ellison has reportedly discussed the network's future direction and the potential firing of specific anchors with White House officials, while David Ellison has allegedly promised sweeping changes to the network to appease the administration, suggesting that the changes at TikTok might be part of a much larger and more coordinated media strategy.

Financial analysts were quick to point out that the consortium got TikTok at a bargain price. The $14 billion deal was announced by JD Vance rather than the corporate CEO, and Trump gave Vance the credit for brokering the deal, which sat at a staggering discount from the previous estimates of 35 to $50 billion. In a final bit of theater, CNBC reported that no representatives from Bytedance were even present at the signing, and the deal was reportedly made with President

Xi Jinping's direct approval. At $14 billion, TikTok US is trading at a price to sales ratio of about 1.4 *, a valuation usually reserved for mature industrial businesses like ExxonMobil or General Mills. As a reminder, Elon Musk paid $44 billion for Twitter, which has about 1/4 of the daily users of TikTok.

And users stay on TikTok much longer than they stay on Twitter. To understand how TikTok went from a national emergency to a sweetheart deal for politically connected insiders, we have to go back to August 2020, when Donald Trump issued an executive order declaring Tik Tok's Chinese ownership a threat to national security.

At the time, the administration argued that the APPS data collection was a tool for the Chinese Communist Party to build dossiers on millions of Americans for the purposes of blackmail and corporate espionage. While that order was blocked by the courts, the underlying fear of foreign influence and spying was one of the few things both political parties could agree on. In April 2024, Joe Biden signed a bipartisan law that gave Byte

Dance an ultimatum. Sell the APPS US operations within a year or face a total nationwide ban. For a moment, it looked like Tik Tok's days in America were numbered. However, as the 2024 election cycle intensified, the political calculations began to shift. Trump, once the apps primary enemy, underwent A remarkable change of heart. He began publicly defending TikTok, arguing that a ban would only benefit Mehta, the parent company of Facebook, which he characterized as a greater

threat to the country. This sudden U-turn coincided with a major American investor in Byte Dance emerging as one of the most prolific donors in US politics. Reports indicate that Jeff Yass played a pivotal role in reversing Trump's support for the ban while contributing over $16,000,000 to the Trump aligned MAGA Inc Super PAC. On top of that, the Trump campaign realized that TikTok had been extremely helpful in reaching Gen. Z voters, who increasingly get their news from the platform's

passive feed. Trump himself credited the app for his newfound popularity with young voters, amassing over 16,000,000 followers on his personal account. The new owners were quick to insist that the timing of these

issues was purely coincidental. In their first major communication since the takeover, a series of statements posted on Twitter, the TikTok USDS joint venture blamed the platform's erratic behavior on a major infrastructure issue caused by a power outage at one of Oracle's U.S. data centers. It is, of course, quite funny for a massive social media app to be forced to communicate with its users on another, much

smaller social media app. Oracle spokespeople later pointed to a severe winter storm as the ultimate culprit for the server timeouts. To be fair to the new management, there was objective evidence of a broader system failure. Site tracking services like Down Detector showed a massive spike in reports of outages, and even the NFL found itself shouting into the void when several of its posts were hit with the same 0 View bug.

Whether this was a genuine case of bad luck or a convenient screen for a more targeted retraining of the algorithm is a question that would linger as users began to look more closely at the new rules they had just agreed to. To understand why a $14 billion price tag and a few technical glitches matter, we have to look at how the architecture of the Internet has changed over time. In the early days of the web, and even the early days of YouTube, you had to search for

what you wanted to see. In this model, the user is the driver. If you wanted to find out about the Minneapolis protests or the contents of the Epstein files, you had to actively go looking for them. TikTok represents a change to a push model. On TikTok, the search bar is an ornamental relic. Users don't usually open the app to search for something. They open it instead to be shown something.

It's a mostly passive entertainment experience, a digital conveyor belt that uses a sophisticated black box algorithm to work out exactly what will keep you engaged for the next three hours. In this model, you're no longer the driver, you're a passenger in a high tech self driving car. It's a comfortable ride and you can see out the windows just fine, but you never actually selected a destination.

You're just going wherever the car's programmer thinks you should go. For a politician or a corporate owner, this is the ultimate prize. If you control a search engine, you can only hide information from people who are already looking for it. But if you control a passive feed, you have a much more subtle and powerful tool, the ability to set the ambient reality of 170 million users. You don't have to ban a topic outright to kill it. You just have to turn the dial

down by a few percentage points. This is what researchers call algorithmic nudging. If the algorithm decides to show you a bit more content that's favourable to one political side rather than the other, you've no way of knowing. There's no neutral feed to compare it to. Every user's feed is different because the algorithm is proprietary and hosted on private servers. In this case, oracles, the thumb on the scale, can be effectively

invisible. In a world where people increasingly get their news by simply opening an app and waiting to be told what's happening, the person who writes the code for that discovery algorithm holds a level of influence that would make a 20th century media mogul blush.

For years, the American political establishment on both the right and left has characterized Tiktok as a digital Trojan horse, a sophisticated piece of spyware that was allegedly funneling the private habits of 170 million Americans directly into the hands of the Chinese Communist Party. While most users were content to treat this as a background noise, security researchers were becoming increasingly alarmed by what they found under the app's

hood. Throughout 2022 and 2023, experts documented technical behaviours that led many to recommend the app never be installed on any device used for sensitive communications. The creepy stuff wasn't just theoretical, researchers discovered.

The Tik Tok's In App Browser was designed to inject JavaScript into every external website a user visited, giving the app the technical capability to log every keystroke typed while visiting external websites, including passwords and credit card numbers, The app was caught poking at the phone's system clipboard every few seconds, potentially capturing private messages or any other data copied from other apps.

This was combined with aggressive device fingerprinting that collected everything from battery levels to Wi-Fi network names, ensuring a user could be tracked even if they tried to remain anonymous. Despite these warnings, the average user remained indifferent. Most were perfectly happy to trade their privacy for a more

efficient dopamine hit. The 2022 admission that Byte Dance employees had used the app to spy on Western reporters and monitor their physical locations to work out who their sources were should have been a breaking point. But for the millions of people scrolling through the For You page, it was just another headline to be swiped away. The irony of the 2026 American takeover is that the new management hasn't removed this surveillance architecture, they've simply made it more explicit.

While the permission to collect face prints and voice prints has been lurking in the US policy since 2021, the new ownership has shifted the context from marketing to compliance. According to a report by Secure Privacy, once a user grants camera permission on TikTok, often for a simple filter or a shopping feature, the A can use the front facing camera whenever it wants to monitor things like involuntary physical responses

in real time. This biometric harvest includes the tracking of micro expressions, facial movements lasting a fraction of a second, and even pupil dilation to measure emotional engagement with a product in the shopping app or a post. The goal is possibly to build an emotional profile so detailed that the algorithm can predict a user's reaction before they've even consciously processed what

they're seeing. On top of that, the 2026 update introduced several new red flags that have privacy advocates sounding the alarm. Most notably, the app has moved from tracking your approximate location via IP address to precise GPS tracking. Experts at Epic warn that the new policy allows TikTok to track your whereabouts down to the specific floor of an apartment building. Combined with this precise tracking is a more aggressive disclosure regarding sensitive personal data.

The new terms explicitly state the TikTok may collect and process information about your racial or ethnic origin, religious beliefs, sexual orientation and citizenship or immigration status. In a political climate where ICE raids have become a daily headline and people who attend protests are being described as domestic terrorists, the fact that a private company with close ties to the administration is building an inferred database of immigration status is a

staggering transformation. For a platform built on dance trends, Even your unfinished thoughts aren't safe. As highlighted by the YouTube channel Top Music Attorney, the new terms include a massive intellectual property and AI grab. Unlike Meta or X, which offer at least an opt out for AI training, the new TikTok terms provide no such escape hatch. By clicking agree, you grant the platform a worldwide royalty free, sub licensable permanent license to use and remix your content.

Your content, including your image and voice, can be used to train Tik Tok's generative AI models. This doesn't just include the videos you've uploaded on the platform, it includes pre uploaded content, the private drafts and clips that you recorded but decided not to post. We were originally told that the risk was foreign access to our data.

The solution, it seems, was to build a domestic surveillance and asset capture machine that's more detailed, more biometric and, thanks to its private ownership, largely beyond the reach of public oversight. The 2026 takeover of TikTok completely inverted the roles in the American debate over social media censorship For years. The primary complaints came from

the right. Republican lawmakers and conservative influencers were upset about shadow banning and worried about collusion between the White House and social media companies. They viewed the recommendation algorithm as a political weapon used to bury unapproved narratives. But with the keys to TikTok now held by a consortium of the president's closest allies, that

script has been flipped. President Trump spent the morning of the January 22nd launch on Truth Social, hailing the new venture as a victory for Great American patriots and investors. He specifically thanked Chinese President Xi Jinping for a very dramatic, final, and beautiful conclusion to the negotiations. It was a remarkable moment of political theater. The man who originally declared the app a national security emergency was now it's most

enthusiastic salesman. During the earlier signing of the Saving TikTok executive order in September, Trump was asked if the new domestic algorithm would prioritise pro administration content. He replied. I always like MAGA related. If I could, I'd make it 100% MAGA related. It's actually a good question. But I would, yeah, if, if I could make it 100% MAGA, I would. But it's not going to work out that way. Unfortunately. No, Everyone's going to be treated fairly.

While his allies laughed that off as a joke, the comments signalled a clear awareness of the influence he had just helped consolidate. This role reversal has created a hall of mirrors in Washington. The same Republican lawmakers who once rallied against Big Tech collusion now praise its commitment to American values and national security. Meanwhile, the anxiety over shadow banning has migrated to

the left. Last week, California Governor Gavin Newsom announced a formal investigation into the joint venture following reports the content critical of the administration, specifically regarding labor strikes and immigration protests, was being systematically suppressed. The fear with TikTok used to be that a foreign adversary was pulling the strings. Now the fear is purely domestic.

The technical glitches and the blocking of terms like Epstein suggest that the thumb on the social media scale hasn't necessarily been removed. It's just a different thumb. We didn't eliminate the threat of algorithmic manipulation, we just ensured that the people holding the remote control are the ones who helped broker the deal. Reason magazine published A compelling case a few days ago that it's unlikely that TikTok has become a state controlled

propaganda machine. Their logic follows the rational business actor theory. TikTok is a for profit enterprise. The new investors paid $14 billion for it, and it would be commercial suicide to engage in open, obvious suppression of half of the country's political views. They argued that a competent super villain intent on brainwashing the masses would presumably tweak the algorithm slowly and subtly, slowly boiling the frog rather than alienating their users on day

one. From this perspective, the 0 view videos and block search terms were exactly what the company claimed. Technical growing pains from moving massive amounts of data onto Oracle servers. I hope that they're right and there is often a simple and innocent explanation for everything. It's easy to make the leap when you hear the TikTok users couldn't type the word Epstein into their direct messages that something's being done to suppress conversations about the

Epstein files. But I did some Googling and found that between 2008 and 2011, Oracle's chief financial officer was a man named Jeffrey Epstein. To be clear, this was a totally different Jeffrey Epstein, and he quite wisely asks people to call him Jeff and is bald, which

helps to avoid confusion. Now, it's quite possible that Larry Ellison had a very difficult working relationship with his former CFO, and maybe he spent the last 15 years trying to ensure that he never has to hear that name again. Now, I have no evidence that this is the case, but it is possible that Ellison is petty enough to block the names of former employees. Maybe he flies into a rage

whenever they're mentioned. On a side note, I bet that it's a nightmare for bald Jeff Epstein to book a massage. There's probably also a lot of high profile people who have a panic attack whenever they see an e-mail from him in their inbox. I'll tell you, that guy could have a lot of fun making political donations now. As good as Reason magazines rational business actor theory is, it's taken quite a beating in recent years.

If the new owners of TikTok just made a ham fisted day one adjustment to the algorithm, it wouldn't be the first time that a tech bro put his tongue a bit too firmly on the scales.

We've seen this movie before on Twitter, where the technical glitch excuse has been used to explain everything from Grok's bizarre obsession with white South African farmers to the period when the AI would only provide gushingly positive answers to questions about Elon Musk, at one point declaring him smarter than Albert Einstein, fitter than LeBron James, and a world champion at drinking piss, amongst other activities.

When Grok was retrained to be less woke last summer, it promptly began calling itself Mecca Hitler and churning out racist remarks. The the problem might be that when you try to reengineer a culture machine to suit a specific worldview over a weekend, you don't always get a subtle nudge. Sometimes you get a robotic dictator. It is entirely possible that the Minneapolis outages were just a technical glitch caused by a

winter storm. The great thing about the glitch defense, though, is that it's impossible to disprove from the outside. The public is forced to choose between believing in a highly specific technical failure or a highly coordinated political action. The national security label that was used to force the sale now acts as a permanent shield against transparency.

We're left with a platform that's been described as spyware in the past, that's now American owned and secure, yet somehow manages to fail in exactly the ways that benefit its new owners. The TikTok rescue makes one thing clear. Protecting the privacy of the American people was never the goal. If it were, the new owners wouldn't have doubled down on biometric tracking, precise GPS monitoring, and the harvesting of private drafts and keystroke logging.

The data isn't less stolen just because it's now being stored in a data center in Texas. Ultimately, the TikTok deal wasn't a victory for data privacy in the United States. It was instead a transfer of custody. We've traded the threat of a foreign adversary using an algorithm to influence our behavior for the threat of a domestic consortium doing the exact same thing. We were told the TikTok was a weapon of mass distraction that

had to be neutralized. Instead, it was captured, rebranded, and pointed back at the same 170 million users. There are reports that American users are deleting TikTok since the new terms of service came out, with deletions jumping nearly 150% in the five days after the deal. Well, this hasn't lead to a major loss of US users. The wave of uninstalls could be a sign of troubles to come for

the new US TikTok venture. Thanks for tuning into the podcast, and as always, a special thanks to my supporters on Patreon whose contributions make this whole thing happen. If you want to sign up on Patreon, I'll leave a link in the description. Have a great day and talk to you again soon. Bye.

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