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Tiktok Deletes More than 2 Million Videos in Vietnam Within 3 Months

TikTok has just released its Community Standards Enforcement report, which mentions that the video-sharing platform deleted more than 2.4 million videos in Vietnam within the first 3 months of 2022. Why? Grown Tech Solution has the answer below.

Too many violating content

Of the more than 40,000 videos deleted every day, 92.5% are actively removed from the platform, 88.7% are deleted before getting the first view.

About 94% of cases are deleted within 24 hours of being posted to the platform. These are all videos that have been determined to have violated the Community Standards policy set by TikTok.

The infringing content is very diverse, including information, images that incite, hate, and violent extremism.

Another issue that is also “blacklisted” is nudity, sexual activity, and illegal behavior. There are also videos containing scary content, harassment, bullying issues, suicide …

TikTok also assessed that in the section of violating content related to the safety of minors, the largest percentage of deletions was videos containing nude images and sexual activities related to this group of subjects. Following after is physically or psychologically harmful content to young people.

TikTok emerged as a video-sharing social network aimed at young users and is successfully attracting visitors from a number of other platforms.

Many experts assert that TikTok’s algorithm that learns and suggests according to users’ habits is “extremely effective”, even to the point of being scary if someone cares about privacy issues.

However, the platform is also focusing and boosting the algorithm to detect and enforce measures to ensure the community standards have been set.

When a violation is detected, the recognition algorithm automatically reviews and deletes similar or related content, and takes steps to prevent similar content when someone starts uploading.

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Verdict

“Purifying content” is not only an issue for TikTok developers, but is also a painful story for many other internet information-sharing platforms such as Facebook, Instagram … especially YouTube.

Although these businesses are trying to control and tighten policies, “dirty content” is still rampant and successfully reaches users.

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