The Democratic governor of California, Gavin Newsom, has announced an investigation into claims TikTok has censored content which is critical of the Trump administration.
A deal was concluded last Thursday to split off the US operation of the app – three days later thousands of American users began reporting problems including seeing “zero views” on new posts.
Many also reported being unable to see political posts, such as content criticising the shooting by federal agents of Alex Pretti in Minneapolis on Saturday.
TikTok has not commented on accusations this is related to last week’s deal, blaming user problems on a “major infrastructure issue” relating to a data centre power outage.
However, Newsom’s office says it has received confirmed reports of TikTok suppressing content critical of President Trump.
“Following TikTok’s sale to a Trump-aligned business group, our office has received reports – and independently confirmed instances – of suppressed content critical of President Trump,” wrote the California governor’s office on X on Monday.
It said Newsom would be “launching a review of this content” and probe whether the company had violated the state’s laws.
The BBC has asked TikTok’s new US parent company, TikTok USDS Joint Venture LLC, for a response.
Newsom declared earlier on Monday it was “time to investigate” TikTok over censorship concerns.
His post linked to another X user’s post containing a screenshot from TikTok, that appeared to show the video-sharing app flagging up a message they tried to send saying “Epstein”.
The same flag seemingly appeared for other US TikTok users when they tried to message others with the surname of convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, according to social media posts seen by BBC News.
Many users are speculating that this, combined with some political content not displaying in the app’s For You feed or in search, may be censorship by TikTok’s new US owners – with investors and directors some believe have ties to Trump.
Celebrities have also spoken out over similar concerns about the app.
Hacks actress Meg Stalter told Instagram followers on Sunday she had deleted her TikTok account because the app was “under new ownership and we are being completely censored and monitored”.
Similar views have been echoed across social media, with many US users questioning in posts whether the app is “cooked”.
Users of the video-sharing app in the US have been posting on social media about problems throughout the outage, which began on Sunday.
Platform outage monitor Downdetector told the BBC it had received 663,061 reports of issues from US users of TikTok between Saturday and Monday.
“Okay so is anyone else’s TikTok being extremely slow, keeps showing you old videos, doesn’t show you what you what you actually search, and doesn’t load certain stuff….,” one X user asked on Sunday.
Some users said they could not view creator monetisation tools on the app, with others noticing new videos they had uploaded to the platform did not have the same visibility as usual or were “stuck at zero views”.
TikTok’s US owner said on Monday users may notice “multiple bugs, slower load times or timed-out requests” as it it worked to resolve issues triggered by a power outage at one of its data centre partner Oracle’s sites.
“While the network has been recovered, the outage caused a cascading systems failure that we’ve been working to resolve together with our data centre partner.” it said.
The company also sought to reassure users their data and content engagement “were safe”.
As with the many other issues reportedly affecting the TikTok app and its sister app CapCut since Sunday, they appeared to be largely contained to the US.
As part of President Donald Trump’s deal allowing TikTok to continue operating in the US, Oracle will inspect and retrain a separate version of its algorithm for American users.
The cloud giant is one of three managing investors in TikTok USDS Joint Venture LLC, maintaining a 15% stake in the spun-off US entity.
By BBC News
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