Privacy

TikTok ‘pauses’ privacy policy switch in Europe after regulatory scrutiny

Comment

TikTok logo illustrated on mobile phone held in a hand
Image Credits: TikTok

TikTok has agreed to pause a controversial privacy policy update in Europe, which had been due to happen tomorrow, and would have meant the platform stopped asking users for their consent to be tracked to receive targeted advertising, TechCrunch has learned.

The Irish Data Protection Commission (DPC), TikTok’s lead privacy regulator for the European Union’s General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR), said the “pause” follows “engagement” between the oversight office and the tech giant yesterday.

“Further to engagement with the DPC yesterday, TikTok has now agreed to pause the application of the changes to allow for the DPC to carry out its analysis,” a DPC spokesperson told TechCrunch.

TikTok has been contacted for comment.

Update: A company spokesperson has now sent us this statement:

While we engage on the questions from stakeholders about our proposed personalised advertising changes in Europe, we are pausing the introduction of that part of our privacy policy update.

We believe that personalised advertising provides the best in-app experience for our community and brings us in line with industry practices, and we look forward to engaging with stakeholders and addressing their concerns.

The development follows a formal warning to TikTok from Italy’s data protection watchdog yesterday, when the Italian regulator suggested the planned switch, away from asking users for their consent to run “personalized” ads to claiming it could process the data under a legal ground known as “legitimate interest” (which avoids the need to ask data subjects for consent), would breach the ePrivacy Directive — and, in its view, the GDPR too.

Privacy experts had also questioned the appropriateness of TikTok using a legitimate interest ground to run behavioral advertising.

Yet, as recently as yesterday, TikTok was still defending its plan.

Asked then about the Italian DPA’s formal warning, a TikTok spokesperson told us it was evaluating the notice — while simultaneously claiming to be “committed to respecting the privacy of our users, being transparent about our privacy practices, and operating in compliance with all relevant regulations“.

For legitimate interest to be a valid legal basis for processing personal data under EU law, a data processor must conduct a series of tests to assess, firstly, whether it has a legitimate purpose for carrying out the processing; and, secondly, that the processing is necessary for the purpose identified. But there is a third, balancing test — where it must consider the rights and freedoms of the individuals whose information would be involved.

The U.K.’s data protection watchdog, the ICO, has some cautionary guidance on the first two tests — warning data processors that:

You should be careful not to confuse processing that is necessary for your stated purpose with processing which is only necessary because of your chosen method of pursuing that purpose. In the context of legitimate interests, you may be able to argue that some non-essential features of your processing (such as profiling or marketing) are necessary for your purposes. However, this is only the case if you clearly identify the specific purpose behind those particular features, and don’t hide behind a vague business objective that could be achieved in another way.

But the balancing test is likely to be the biggest bar to TikTok’s attempt to use legitimate interests to run behavioral advertising as the test requires it to justify any impact on individuals — which can mean things like users’ ability to exercise their data protection rights and not lose control of their data or experience any social or economic disadvantage, per the ICO guidance.

The adtech infrastructural and algorithms which feed on the high velocity trading of personal data to run auctions for behavioral advertising have, meanwhile, been shown lacking adequate security to protect people’s information (as the GDPR requires); and been found acting as a conduit for myriad forms of discrimination, among other linked harms.

Such is the high bar set by the GDPR’s legitimate interest balancing test, that one EU DPA, the Dutch authority, has — per local press reports –taken the (exceptional position) that legitimate interests cannot be used for a commercial interest, period. Case law suggests the actual situation is more nuanced but trying to stick an entire behavioral advertising business model on an LI footing certainly merits very close attention from regulators.

Italy warns TikTok over privacy policy switch

After EU child safety complaints, TikTok tweaks ad disclosures but profiling concerns remain

More TechCrunch

WazirX, one of India’s largest cryptocurrency exchanges, has suspended all trading activities on its platform days after losing about $230 million, nearly half of its reserves, in a security breach.…

WazirX halts trading after $230 million ‘force majeure’ loss

Featured Article

From Yandex’s ashes comes Nebius, a ‘startup’ with plans to be a European AI compute leader

Subject to shareholder approval, Yandex N.V. is adopting the name of one of its few remaining assets, an AI cloud platform called Nebius AI which it birthed last year.

From Yandex’s ashes comes Nebius, a ‘startup’ with plans to be a European AI compute leader

Employees at Bethesda Game Studios — the Microsoft-owned game developer that produces the Elder Scrolls and Fallout franchises — are joining the Communication Workers of America. Quality assurance testers at…

Bethesda Game Studios employees form a ‘wall-to-wall’ union

This week saw one of the most widespread IT disruptions in recent years linked to a faulty software update from popular cybersecurity firm CrowdStrike. Businesses across the world reported IT…

CrowdStrike’s update fail causes global outages and travel chaos

Alphabet, the parent company of Google, is in advanced talks to acquire cybersecurity startup Wiz for $23 billion, the Wall Street Journal reported on Sunday. TechCrunch’s sources heard similar and…

Unpacking how Alphabet’s rumored Wiz acquisition could affect VC

Around 8.5 million devices — less than 1 percent Windows machines globally — were affected by the recent CrowdStrike outage, according to a Microsoft blog post by David Weston, the…

Microsoft says 8.5M Windows devices were affected by CrowdStrike outage

Featured Article

Some Black startup founders feel betrayed by Ben Horowitz’s support for Trump

Trump is an advocate for a number of policies that could be harmful to people of color.

Some Black startup founders feel betrayed by Ben Horowitz’s support for Trump

Featured Article

Strava’s next chapter: New CEO talks AI, inclusivity, and why ‘dark mode’ took so long

TechCrunch sat down with Strava’s new CEO in London for a wide-ranging interview, delving into what the company is prioritizing, and what we can expect in the future as the company embarks on its “next chapter.”

Strava’s next chapter: New CEO talks AI, inclusivity, and why ‘dark mode’ took so long

Featured Article

Lavish parties and moral dilemmas: 4 days with Silicon Valley’s MAGA elite at the RNC

All week at the RNC, I saw an event defined by Silicon Valley. But I also saw the tech elite experience flashes of discordance.

Lavish parties and moral dilemmas: 4 days with Silicon Valley’s MAGA elite at the RNC

Featured Article

Tracking the EV battery factory construction boom across North America

A wave of automakers and battery makers — foreign and domestic — have pledged to produce North American–made batteries before 2030.

Tracking the EV battery factory construction boom across North America

Featured Article

Faulty CrowdStrike update causes major global IT outage, taking out banks, airlines and businesses globally

Security giant CrowdStrike said the outage was not caused by a cyberattack, as businesses anticipate widespread disruption.

Faulty CrowdStrike update causes major global IT outage, taking out banks, airlines and businesses globally

CISA confirmed the CrowdStrike outage was not caused by a cyberattack, but urged caution as malicious hackers exploit the situation.

US cyber agency CISA says malicious hackers are ‘taking advantage’ of CrowdStrike outage

The global outage is a perfect reminder how much of the world relies on technological infrastructure.

These startups are trying to prevent another CrowdStrike-like outage, according to VCs

The CrowdStrike outage that hit early Friday morning and knocked out computers running Microsoft Windows has grounded flights globally. Major U.S. airlines including United Airlines, American Airlines and Delta Air…

CrowdStrike outage: How your plane, train and automobile travel may be affected

Prior to the ban, Trump’s team used his channel to broadcast some of his campaigns. With the ban now lifted, his channel can resume doing so.

Twitch reinstates Trump’s account ahead of the 2024 presidential election

This week, Google is in discussions to pay $23 billion for cloud security startup Wiz, SoftBank acquires Graphcore, and more.

M&A activity heats up with Wiz, Graphcore, etc.

CrowdStrike competes with a number of vendors, including SentinelOne and Palo Alto Networks but also Microsoft, Trellix, Trend Micro and Sophos, in the endpoint security market.

CrowdStrike’s rivals stand to benefit from its update fail debacle

The IT outage may have an unexpected effect on the climate: clearer skies and maybe lower temperatures this evening

CrowdStrike chaos leads to grounded aircraft — and maybe an unusual weather effect

There’s a man in Florida right now who wants to propose to his girlfriend while they’re on a beach vacation. He couldn’t get the engagement ring before he flew down…

The CrowdStrike outage is a plot point in a rom-com 

Here’s everything you need to know so far about the global outages caused by CrowdStrike’s buggy software update.

What we know about CrowdStrike’s update fail that’s causing global outages and travel chaos

This serves as an example for how easy it is to spread inaccurate information online during a time of immense global confusion and panic.

From the Sphere to false cyberattack claims, misinformation runs rampant amid CrowdStrike outage

Today is the final chance to save up to $800 on TechCrunch Disrupt 2024 tickets. Disrupt Deal Days event will end tonight at 11:59 p.m. PT. Don’t miss out on…

Last chance today: Secure major savings for TechCrunch Disrupt 2024!

Indian fintech Paytm’s struggles won’t seem to end. The company on Friday reported that its revenue declined by 36% and its loss more than doubled in the first quarter as…

Paytm loss widens and revenue shrinks as it grapples with regulatory clampdown

J. Michael Cline, the co-founder of Fandango and multiple other startups over his multi-decade career, died after falling from a Manhattan hotel, New York’s Deputy Commissioner of Public Information tells…

Fandango founder dies in fall from Manhattan skyscraper

Venture capital giant a16z fixed a security vulnerability in one of the firm’s websites after being warned by a security researcher.

Researcher finds flaw in a16z website that exposed some company data

Apple on Thursday announced its upcoming lineup of immersive video content for the Vision Pro. The list includes behind-the-scenes footage of the 2024 NBA All-Star Weekend, an immersive performance by…

Apple Vision Pro debuts immersive content featuring NBA players, The Weeknd and more

Biden centering Musk in his campaign is a notable escalation, considering he spent most of his presidency seemingly pretending the billionaire didn’t exist.

Elon Musk is now a villain in Joe Biden’s presidential campaign

Waymo would need a ground transportation permit to operate at SFO, which has yet to be approved.

Waymo wants to bring robotaxis to SFO, emails show

When Tade Oyerinde first set out to fundraise for his startup, Campus, a fully accredited online community college, it was incredibly difficult. VCs have backed for-profit education companies in the…

Why it made sense for an online community college to raise venture capital

Canadian private equity firm PartnerOne paid $28.2 million for HeadSpin, a mobile app testing startup whose founder was sentenced for fraud earlier this year, according to documents viewed by TechCrunch.…

PE firm PartnerOne paid $28M for HeadSpin, a fraction of its $1.1B valuation set by ICONIQ and Dell Technologies Capital