CN TikTok Explicitly Bans Misgendering, Deadnaming, Misogyny, and Promotion of ‘Conversion Therapy’ - Has Douyin (Chinese Market TikTok) done the same?

Strengthening our policies to promote safety, security, and well-being on TikTok​

By Cormac Keenan, Head of Trust and Safety
Today we're announcing updates to our Community Guidelines to further support the well-being of our community and the integrity of our platform. Transparency with our community is important to us, and these updates clarify or expand upon the types of behavior and content we will remove from our platform or make ineligible for recommendation in the For You feed. We routinely strengthen our safeguards so that TikTok can continue to bring people together to create, connect, and enjoy community-powered entertainment long-term.
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Building a safe and secure entertainment platform
At TikTok, we believe people should be able to express themselves creatively and be entertained in a safe, secure, and welcoming environment. Our Community Guidelines support that by establishing a set of norms so that people understand what kinds of content to create on our platform and viewers know what to report to us. Our policies are designed to foster an experience that prioritizes safety, inclusion, and authenticity. They take into account emerging trends or threats observed across the internet and on our platform. We also listen to feedback from our community, our APAC Safety Advisory Council, and other experts in areas like digital safety and security, content moderation, health and well-being, and adolescent development.
Some of the main updates we're announcing today and implementing over the next few weeks include:
  • Strengthening our dangerous acts and challenges policy. We continue to enact the stricter approach we previously announced to help prevent such content - including suicide hoaxes - from spreading on our platform. This previously sat within our suicide and self-harm policies, but will now be highlighted in a separate policy category with more detail so it's even easier for our community to familiarize themselves with these guidelines.
  • Broadening our approach to eating disorders. While we already remove content that promotes eating disorders, we'll start to also remove the promotion of disordered eating. We're making this change, in consultation with eating disorders experts, researchers, and physicians, as we understand that people can struggle with unhealthy eating patterns and behavior without having an eating disorder diagnosis. Our aim is to acknowledge more symptoms, such as overexercise or short-term fasting, that are frequently under-recognized signs of a potential problem. This is an incredibly nuanced area that's difficult to consistently get right, and we're working to train our teams to remain alert to a broader scope of content.
  • Adding clarity on the types of hateful ideologies prohibited on our platform. This includes deadnaming, misgendering, or misogyny as well as content that supports or promotes conversion therapy programs. Though these ideologies have long been prohibited on TikTok, we've heard from creators and civil society organizations that it's important to be explicit in our Community Guidelines.
  • Expanding our policy to protect the security, integrity, availability, and reliability of our platform. This includes prohibiting unauthorized access to TikTok, as well as TikTok content, accounts, systems, or data, and prohibiting the use of TikTok to perpetrate criminal activity. In addition to educating our community on ways to spot, avoid, and report suspicious activity, we're opening state-of-the-art cyber incident monitoring and investigative response centers in Washington DC, Dublin, and Singapore this year. TikTok's Fusion Center operations enable follow-the-sun threat monitoring and intelligence gathering, as we continue working with industry-leading experts to test and enhance our defenses.
Additionally, our community can find more information about the content categories ineligible for recommendation into For You feeds. While the ability to discover new ideas, creators, and interests is part of what makes our platform unique, content in someone’s For You feed may come from a creator they haven’t chosen to follow or relate to an interest they haven’t previously engaged with. That’s why when we come across content that may not be appropriate for a general audience, which includes everyone from teens to great-great-grandparents, we do our best to remove it from our recommendation system.
Every member of our community will be prompted to read our updated guidelines when they open our app in the coming weeks.
Staying accountable to our community
The strength of a policy lies in its enforceability. Our Community Guidelines apply to everyone and all content on TikTok, and we strive to be consistent and equitable in our enforcement. We use a combination of technology and people to identify and remove violations of our Community Guidelines, and we will continue training our automated systems and safety teams to uphold our policies.
To hold ourselves accountable to our community, NGOs, and others, we release Community Guidelines Enforcement Reports quarterly. Our most recent report, published today, shows that over 91 million violative videos were removed during Q3 2021, which is around 1% of all videos uploaded. Of those videos, 95.1% were removed before a user reported it, 88.8% before the video received any views, and 93.9% within 24 hours of being posted. We continue to expand our system that detects and removes certain categories of violations at upload – including adult nudity and sexual activities, minor safety, and illegal activities and regulated goods. As a result, the volume of automated removals has increased, which improves the overall safety of our platform and enables our team to focus more time on reviewing contextual or nuanced content, such as hate speech, bullying and harassment, and misinformation.
We've made significant strides to improve our policies and enforcement, including our efficacy, speed, and consistency, though we recognize there's no finish line when it comes to keeping people safe. We're driven by our passion to help everyone have a good and enriching experience on TikTok.

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china is psychologically skullfucking this country and our leaders are withering old husks who don't know enough about social media's impact on the human psyche to do anything about it lmao. at that point i can't even be mad, any competitive superpower would do the same thing. you let the enemy teach your children, you deserve what's coming to you.
 
Wow, I guess the Left really has won the culture war.

With conservative opinions being pretty much outlawed on 99% of social media and 90% of the MSM the next generation will grow up pretty far left in viewpoint as that's all they're going to be exposed too. With the push towards progressive propaganda the Overtone window is going to go out the window!


Oh well, at least I got mine. I do feel sorry for the kids that will have to tread the dangerous, pedophile infested waters of a progressive dominated society.

Bring on the leftist dystopia! I'd like to see the end of Western Civilization before I croak, should make for good laughs.
The pendulum always swings back, though. Because kids will always want to rebel against their parents. The Boomers started all their shit to rebel against their strait-laced parents and because times of prosperity always turn people into degenerates (see the mouse utopia experiment or the Roman empire before the fall).

Looks like covid is going to decimate the economy and people will stop having time to worry about pronouns. Especially if governments do what they always do when the economy crashes: start a war.

So, kids today might be completely useless fuckers but your grandkids might turn out okay. I won't live long enough to see it, but hopefully, most of you will.
 
The pendulum always swings back, though.
There is no "pendulum".

Pendulum theory is a "trust the plan"-tier cope that not only presumes that a civilization as it's then known will even last long enough for any such rebound to even potentially happen, but that no other event in the passage of time would skew the trajectory of the "pendulum bob". The idea is completely unearned triumphalism concocted by people who've accomplished nothing and continue to do nothing (career conservatives) that makes the rather bold suggestion that a society that's being actively derailed will magically re-rail itself, and that it'll have the tools to accomplish that in the first place. A more apt name for the idea would be "Magic Conch Shell theory".

Societies change and shift with the passage of times-- only that much is certain. Children rebel against their parents? Well said-- but absent intervention, the progressivism of today is the conservatism of tomorrow.
 
There is no "pendulum".

Pendulum theory is a "trust the plan"-tier cope that not only presumes that a civilization as it's then known will even last long enough for any such rebound to even potentially happen, but that no other event in the passage of time would skew the trajectory of the "pendulum bob". The idea is completely unearned triumphalism concocted by people who've accomplished nothing and continue to do nothing (career conservatives) that makes the rather bold suggestion that a society that's being actively derailed will magically re-rail itself, and that it'll have the tools to accomplish that in the first place. A more apt name for the idea would be "Magic Conch Shell theory".

Societies change and shift with the passage of times-- only that much is certain. Children rebel against their parents? Well said-- but absent intervention, the progressivism of today is the conservatism of tomorrow.
I don't disagree that we are on a path to eventual destruction, but I do think there are course corrections along the way. We always see periods of time where degeneracy is followed by a more puritanical phase. As they say, history doesn't repeat -- but it does rhyme.

I don't think America will right itself, though. I think we will fall like all empires eventually do. But that failure usually spurs human beings to reject the policies that led to the downfall. At least until the next empire comes along and the people, in their hubris, think this time will be different and their empire will last forever. Then the process starts all over again.
 
Sometimes I seriously do feel like I'm the only sane zoomer who doesn't have TikTok. I will also say that seeing older adults who have the app is even more cringe.
 
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