Amazon Bans, Then Un Bans TikTok From Employee Mobile Devices
Amazon Bans, Then Un-Bans TikTok From Employee Mobile Devices 153w2b
The internal Amazon message told workers they could still access the TikTok using laptop Web browsers. 3as5q
By Agence -Presse | Updated: 11 July 2020 10:24 IST
Amazon has said the email was sent to some of its employees "in error" 373t6i
Highlights
Amazon said "no change" to policies with regard to TikTok
The concern appeared to be that TikTok app could access Amazon emails
TikTok withdrew from Hong Kong earlier this week
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Amazon on Friday said it mistakenly sent workers an email telling them to dump the TikTok mobile application from their cell phones because of security concerns.
The internal message told workers they could still access the popular video-snippet sharing platform using laptop web browsers, but would lose access to company email on smartphones that have TikTok.
"This morning's email to some of our employees was sent in error," an Amazon spokesperson said in reply to an AFP inquiry without going into detail.
"There is no change to our policies right now with regard to TikTok."
The concern expressed in the internal message appeared to be that the TikTok mobile app could access Amazon company email, according to a copy posted online.
" security is of the utmost importance to TikTok -– we are fully committed to respecting the privacy of our s," a spokeswoman for the company said in reply to an AFP inquiry.
She added that TikTok welcomed "a dialogue so we can address any issues they may have."
The Democratic National Committee is advising campaign staff to avoid using TikTok on personal devices and, if they do, to keep the app on a smartphone separate from that used for work, given the amount of data it can track, a DNC official told AFP.
TikTok this week withdrew from Hong Kong in an exit seen partly as an effort to shake off the "label of it being a company that is controlled by China and shares data with the Chinese government," Zhu Zhiqun, a political science professor at Bucknell University in the United States, told AFP.
US President Donald Trump said this week he was considering banning it as a way to punish China over the coronavirus pandemic.
Top US lawmakers have raised concerns over the potential for TikTok to leak data to the Chinese government.
India -- where TikTok is also wildly popular -- recently blocked the platform on national security grounds following a deadly border clash between its soldiers and Chinese forces.
TikTok staunchly denies snooping allegations.
"We have never provided data to the Chinese government, nor would we do so if asked," a spokesman said on Wednesday.
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