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China's Bytedance says TikTok ban causing $500,000 daily loss, risks jobs
TikTok
ban is resulting in losses of up to $500,000 a day and has put jobs at risk,
Bytedance said in a court filing.
India's
ban on popular Chinese video app TikTok is resulting in "financial
losses" of up to $500,000 a day for its developer, Beijing Bytedance
Technology Co, and has put more than 250 jobs at risk, the company said in a
court filing seen by Reuters.
TikTok allows users to create and share short
videos with special effects and is one of the world's most popular apps. It has
been downloaded by nearly 300 million users so far in India, out of more than 1
billion downloads globally, according to analytics firm Sensor Tower.
Earlier this month, an Indian state court ordered
the federal government to prohibit its downloads, saying the app was
encouraging pornography. Acting upon instructions from the federal IT ministry,
Apple Inc and Alphabet Inc's Google last week removed TikTok from their India
app stores.
The developments have dealt a blow to the India
growth plans of Bytedance, which is backed by Japan's SoftBank Group Corp and
by private equity. Bytedance, one of the world's most valuable startups
potentially worth around $75 billion, was considering a public listing in Hong
Kong this year, sources told Reuters in August.
The ban has also worried the social media
industry in India as it sees legal worries mounting if courts increasingly
regulate content on their platforms. In the filing made to the Supreme Court,
Bytedance urged the court to quash the ban and direct the federal IT ministry
to tell companies such as Google and Apple to make the app available again on
their platforms.
The court filing is not publicly available and
its contents have not been previously reported. Bytedance
pegged financial losses at $500,000 each day, which it said includes
destruction in the value of its investments and loss of commercial revenue. It
added the ban would result in its reputation and goodwill taking a hit with
both advertisers and investors.
"Banning has had adverse impact on the user
base of this app, losing close to 1 million new users per day ... It is
estimated that approximately six million requests for downloads could not be
effected since the ban came into effect," the company said in the
filing. A spokesman for TikTok and the federal IT
ministry did not respond to requests for comment.
The Supreme Court has so far not provided any
interim relief on repeated pleas by Bytedance and referred the case back to the
court in southern Tamil Nadu state, where the case will next be heard on
Wednesday.
Memes and music videos thrive on TikTok,
although some clips show youngsters, some scantily clad, lip-syncing and
dancing to popular tunes.
Its growing popularity has drawn criticism from
some Indian politicians and parents who say its content is inappropriate. The
Tamil Nadu court, which ruled against TikTok after an individual filed a public
interest litigation, has said the app could also expose children to sexual
predators.
The Supreme Court filing included a table in
which Bytedance compared TikTok to Facebook, Instagram and Twitter by listing
13 of its implemented safety features, including parental controls.
A "very minuscule" proportion of
TikTok's videos were considered inappropriate or obscene, the company has
said.
"The constitutionally guaranteed
fundamental rights of free speech and expression ... of numerous Indian
citizens have been severely impacted," the company said in its
latest filing.
Source: The Economic Times
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