TikTok star who makes living off Chinese-owned app reveals why US must force sale: ‘I am terrified of what I’m seeing’

The House on Saturday voted to ban TikTok — and even some Americans who make bank on the Chinese-owned app believe its end can’t come soon enough, saying it’s become a cesspool of hate and misinformation.

Comedian and actor Zach Sage Fox, who earns his living in part by posting clips of his standup to over 1.1 million followers on TikTok, was sweating what the ban on the app could mean for his income in the hours after the Congressional vote to block the platform in the US or force its sale.

But as the company has faced accusations of promoting Hamas propaganda and turning younger Americans toward Islamic extremism following the Oct. 7 attacks on Israel, the social media influencer recognized the dangers of the massively popular video sharing platform poses.

Comedian and actor Zach Sage Fox, who posts clips of his standup on TikTok, said he recognizes the dangers of the massively popular video sharing platform poses. Stephen Yang

“I am terrified of what I am seeing” on TikTok, Fox told The Post.

“In the last few months, in regard to the Israel-Palestine conflict, for all the biggest sources of misinformation, TikTok is just a gold mine,” he said.

“It seems like there is something happening in the algorithm that is very much trying to soil the West.”

The bill, which would force the app owner, ByteDance, to divest within nine months, passed overwhelmingly, 360 to 58.

In March the House passed a similar TikTok bill, which moved through the chamber in a broad bipartisan majority. That effort, however, has been stalled in the Democratic Senate, where Majority Leader Chuck Schumer has so far refused to bring the measure to a vote.

Since it is part of the greater foreign aid package to Ukraine and Israel, the Senate will be forced to deal with the issue.

TikTok is used by an estimated 170 million Americans and has become absolutely omnipresent with teens and Gen Z — with a staggering 76% of Zoomers saying they use the app.

Nearly two-thirds of them admit to using it daily, according to a 2023 YPulse report.

The app has asserted an all-encompassing source of information young Americans, who can “find anything on wellness, fashion, food, politics, relatable ‘story times,’ and everything else under the sun,” the report noted.

Source: https://nypost.com/2024/04/20/business/tiktok-star-on-why-us-must-force-sale-of-chinese-owned-app/

Exit mobile version