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      TikTok Using DMCA to Take Down Reverse-Engineered Source Code

      Andy Maxwell · news.movim.eu / TorrentFreak · Sunday, 17 January, 2021 - 12:43 · 3 minutes

    TikTok After being launched in the Chinese market in 2016 as “Douyin”, social networking service TikTok has become one of the world’s recognizable app brands.

    New estimates published this month suggest that TikTok could have as many as a billion monthly users, with around 100 million of those coming from the United States. It’s safe to say the product is already a phenomenon and wildly popular, especially among younger people, but not everyone is happy with its status.

    Accusations of Privacy Breaches

    Labeled a threat by the Trump administration due to its Chinese connections, TikTok has constantly found itself accused of siphoning off user data for use overseas. According to analysts, however, the software is no more intrusive than Facebook and Instagram. Which, of course, is a pretty low bar by most standards.

    Nevertheless, many people simply do not trust TikTok, something which led to a coder known as ‘ augustgl ‘ reverse-engineering the company’s Android app and publishing the resulting source code on developer platform Github.

    Published to Github

    “This project is a bit different from my other projects. TikTok is a data collection engine disguised as a social media platform. It’s legitimate spyware, so I thought I would reverse engineer the Android application,” wrote ‘augustgl’ on his now-removed Github repo.

    The source reportedly published includes that dedicated to location tracking, phone calls, screenshots, WiFi networks, and facial recognition. None of these features appear to have sat particularly well with ‘augustgl’, who signed off with the message, “China, I’ll see you when you send the hitmen to my house.”

    While that did not happen, at least as far as we know, TikTok did become aware that reverse-engineered source was being made available online. Unsurprisingly, the social media company then used copyright law to have it taken down.

    DMCA Takedowns

    “I am legal counsel to TikTok Inc., owner of the copyright that is the subject matter of this notification, and am authorized to act on the owner’s behalf,” the notice begins.

    “The original copyrighted work is source code for the TikTok Android app. Github user augustgl appears to claim to have reverse engineered the app. He posted the code to the following GitHub repository: https://github.com/augustgl/tiktok_source .”

    At the same time, TikTok asked Github to help clean up all the repositories that had forked the code. In total, 19 other repositories operated by other coders were handed DMCA takedown notices, with Github complying by taking each one down.

    TikTok Source DMCA

    While TikTok may have believed it had cleaned up all instances of the reverse-engineered code, there was more work to be done. In a new notice filed this week, TikTok returned for a second sweep, targeting another five repositories that had forked the original, apparently after being notified by Github.

    “The original copyrighted work is source code for the TikTok Android app. Github user [redacted, but almost certainly a reference to ‘augustgl’] appears to claim to have reverse engineered the app. We submitted a DMCA notification to GitHub previously, resulting in a takedown. GitHub subsequently notified us that the user still had forks posted,” the DMCA notice reads.

    All of the offending repositories appear to have been removed following TikTok’s request but the big question is whether anything surprising or insightful came from the published code, particularly in respect of the privacy and security allegations that have followed the company around in recent times.

    TorrentFreak contacted ‘augustgl’ to discover what he’d found, if anything, but at the time of publishing he was yet to respond.

    From: TF , for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.

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      L’Italie juge que TikTok ne protège pas assez les données de ses utilisateurs

      Aurore Gayte · news.movim.eu / Numerama · Tuesday, 22 December, 2020 - 16:03

    L'application TikTok a encore une fois été épinglée pour manquement à ses obligations, dont la protection des données et de la vie privée des mineurs. Une enquête est également en cours au sein de l'Union Européenne. [Lire la suite]

    Voitures, vélos, scooters... : la mobilité de demain se lit sur Vroom ! https://www.numerama.com/vroom/vroom//

    L'article L’Italie juge que TikTok ne protège pas assez les données de ses utilisateurs est apparu en premier sur Numerama .

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      Bannissement de TikTok : l’ultimatum américain a expiré et rien ne s’est passé

      Julien Lausson · news.movim.eu / Numerama · Monday, 7 December, 2020 - 10:36

    TikTok

    Envisagé le 4 décembre si les négociations n'aboutissaient pas, le bannissement de TikTok aux USA n'a pas eu lieu. Les discussions pour transférer les actifs de l'application mobile à des intérêts américains continuent. [Lire la suite]

    Abonnez-vous à notre chaîne YouTube pour ne manquer aucune vidéo !

    L'article Bannissement de TikTok : l’ultimatum américain a expiré et rien ne s’est passé est apparu en premier sur Numerama .

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      Trump admin. delays TikTok ban it was already legally told to hold

      Kate Cox · news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica · Thursday, 12 November, 2020 - 22:45

    TikTok logo next to inverted US flag.

    Enlarge / TikTok's US fate is up in the air, but at least you can still download and patch it. (credit: SOPA Images | LightRocket | Getty Images )

    The Department of Commerce has put a stay on enforcing an executive order that would have forced popular short-form video app TikTok to suspend all US operations as of midnight tonight, a tacit admission that the proposed ban isn't actually all that important to the administration any longer.

    Commerce said the orders against TikTok are on hold "pending further legal developments" in multiple lawsuits, the Wall Street Journal reports.

    President Donald Trump earlier this year signed two executive orders relating to TikTok. The first , on August 7, declared the app to be a national emergency. A second ( PDF ), issued one week later, gave ByteDance, TikTok's parent company, 90 days to divest the app to a US owner.

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      L’administration Trump exige que tout le code de TikTok soit nettoyé et basé aux USA

      Julien Lausson · news.movim.eu / Numerama · Thursday, 1 October, 2020 - 09:11

    TikTok Chine

    Le deal entre TikTok d'un côté et Oracle et Walmart de l'autre n'est pas fait. Alors qu'une échéance est fixée au 12 novembre, l'administration Trump rappelle ses exigences, notamment sur le code de l'application mobile. [Lire la suite]

    Voitures, vélos, scooters... : la mobilité de demain se lit sur Vroom ! https://www.numerama.com/vroom/vroom//

    L'article L’administration Trump exige que tout le code de TikTok soit nettoyé et basé aux USA est apparu en premier sur Numerama .

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      Trump likely overstepped authority with TikTok ban, judge rules

      Kate Cox · news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica · Monday, 28 September, 2020 - 19:15

    TikTok logo next to inverted US flag.

    Enlarge / TikTok's US fate is up in the air, but at least you can still download and patch it. (credit: SOPA Images | LightRocket | Getty Images )

    President Donald Trump's attempt to ban TikTok from operating inside the United States probably exceeds the authority the president has to do such things, a federal judge has ruled.

    TikTok narrowly avoided being removed from app stores last night when Judge Carl Nichols of the US District Court for DC issued an injunction late yesterday requiring the government to pause on its ban. TikTok got its reprieve, but the terms of the order ( PDF ) were sealed until midday today.

    To meet the standard for an injunction, Nichols explained, TikTok basically needed to prove four things to his satisfaction. The first factor, however, is the most important: TikTok needed to prove its case is "likely to succeed on the merits." In plain English, that means: is it going to win its lawsuit against the administration? And the answer, Nichols determined, is probably yes, because the actions the administration took "likely exceed the lawful bounds" of the law under which those actions were taken.

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      L’administration Trump échoue à appliquer les premières sanctions contre TikTok

      Julien Lausson · news.movim.eu / Numerama · Monday, 28 September, 2020 - 08:01

    TikTok

    La justice américaine a bloqué in extremis le décret exigeant le bannissement de TikTok des plateformes de téléchargement. L'application n'est pour autant pas encore tirée d'affaire. [Lire la suite]

    Abonnez-vous à notre chaîne YouTube pour ne manquer aucune vidéo !

    L'article L’administration Trump échoue à appliquer les premières sanctions contre TikTok est apparu en premier sur Numerama .

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      Judge will rule by midnight tonight if TikTok can stay in app stores

      Kate Cox · news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica · Sunday, 27 September, 2020 - 15:46

    Judge will rule by midnight tonight if TikTok can stay in app stores

    Enlarge (credit: Getty Images)

    TikTok will be gone from app stores tomorrow morning unless a federal judge acts to block the Trump administration's ban on the app before midnight tonight.

    Judge Carl Nichols of the US District Court for DC said today that he will determine whether to grant or reject TikTok's request for an injunction on the ban before the deadline hits at the stroke of 12.

    In a hearing on Thursday, Nichols gave the administration until Friday afternoon either to delay or defend the ban. The administration chose to file a response defending the ban but did so under seal, so the filings are not available to the public.

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      Judge gives Trump admin. Friday deadline to delay or defend TikTok ban

      Kate Cox · news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica · Thursday, 24 September, 2020 - 20:19

    A stand of TikTok (Douyin) at The First International Artificial Products Expo Hangzhou on October 18, 2019, in Hangzhou, China.

    Enlarge / A stand of TikTok (Douyin) at The First International Artificial Products Expo Hangzhou on October 18, 2019, in Hangzhou, China. (credit: Long Wei | VCG | Getty Images )

    A federal judge today gave the Trump administration until Friday to either defend its planned ban of short-form-video app TikTok in court or hold off on it, adding one more wrinkle to the seemingly endless on-again, off-again saga.

    If the government doesn't voluntarily postpone the planned TikTok ban by 2:30pm (EDT) on Friday, then it will have to show up for a hearing on Sunday morning, where he will rule on TikTok's request for an injunction on the ban, Judge Carl Nichols of the US District Court for DC said today.

    Nichols said that the ban, if it takes effect, could prevent potentially hundreds of thousands of new users per day from signing up for TikTok. "I don't think [a ban] merely preserves the status quo," he said, according to The Wall Street Journal .

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