NDP reactivates TikTok account despite foreign interference risk and security concerns - Action News
Home WebMail Wednesday, November 13, 2024, 06:32 AM | Calgary | -0.3°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Politics

NDP reactivates TikTok account despite foreign interference risk and security concerns

The federal NDP reactivated its TikTok account this spring after the controversial social media platform became the subject ofan ongoing national security review and it wasbanned from allgovernment-issuedphones.

CSIS briefing note released through inquiry says Chinese government could exploit TikTok to influence Canada

NDP MP Heather McPherson takes a selfie with NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh during the opening of the NDP Convention in Hamilton, Ont. on Friday, October 13, 2023.
NDP foreign affairs critic Heather McPherson takes a selfie with party leader Jagmeet Singh during a convention in Hamilton, Ont. in October 2023. (Peter Power/The Canadian Press)

The federal NDP reactivated its TikTok account this spring despite thepopular social media platform beingbanned from allgovernment-issuedphones.

The NDP says it has taken enough security measures to protect itself from TikTok, a platformthat Public Safety Canada warnsposes an unacceptable level of riskto the privacy and security of Canadians. Ottawa is in the midst of a national security review of TikTok.

Testifying before the public inquiry investigating foreign interference in Canada's democracy last Thursday, NDP national directorLucy Watson said she wasn't aware at the time that the NDP was back onTikTok.

"The very fact that I didn't know that we had reactivated our TikTok account is reflective of my non-use of TikTok," Watson told the inquiry.

Eight million Canadians, including three quarters ofCanadian voters under 25, are on TikTok, making it a powerfulplatform for engaging with younger voters.

Most parties and politicians stopped using the app after the federal governmentbanned it from all official government devicesin February 2023. The government said TikTok's data collection methods could lead to cyber attacks.

NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh was a prolific user of the app prior to the ban.

Watson told the inquiry the NDP consulted with cyber security experts before reactivating its party TikTok account.

The NDP installed the app on a phone that isn't used for any other purpose, and the phone is left in the same spot with all location features disabled, she testified.

"We've been assured that that will guard against the possibility of foreign interference," she said.

The federal Liberals said in March they had ordered a national security review of TikTok in September 2023.

A spokesperson for Innovation MinisterFranois-Philippe Champagne toldCBC News Wednesday the TikTok review is still underway, but would not provide a timeline for its completion.

A screen grab of the NDP's TikTok account, which its national director says was reactivated this spring. TikTok is banned on all government devices over security concerns that the app could put phones at risk of cyberattacks.
A screen image of the NDP's TikTok account, taken on September 25, 2024. (NDP/TikTok)

The inquiry heard earlier this month from NDP member of Parliament Jenny Kwan, herself a target of foreign interference by China. She said she doesn't know how effective the government'sTikTok ban can be,since it does not extend to personal devices.

"In her opinion, by engaging with the platform, Canadian politicians are providing TikTok with relevant data points and legitimizing a 'brainwashing machine' used to push PRC [People's Republic of China] narratives on a variety of subjects,"Kwan's inquiry witness statement says.

Top secret CSISnotedetails major concerns with TikTok

According to a top secretbriefing notedrafted by the Canadian Security Intelligence Service and made public through the inquiry, CSIS warned in December 2022 that TikTok couldbe exploited by the Chinese government to bolster its influence and power in Canada.

The app, which is owned by the Chinese-based company ByteDance, can gather sensitive user data, CSIS said in the briefing note.

"Despite assurances to the contrary, personal data on TikTok users is accessible to China," CSIS said.

The app collects a wide range of user information, including biometric data like facial geometry, iris scans, voice patterns and fingerprints. TikTokalso gathers information from a person's phone, including GPS location, browsing historyand technical specifics like thedevice'sserial number, CSIS said.

"While ByteDance claims that all TikTok user data is stored in the United States and Singapore not in China ByteDance's servers are all located in China," CSIS wrote.

CSIS also said TikTokcensoredtopics related to democratic values and failed to remove 90 per cent of disinformation ads about the 2022 U.S.midterm elections.

TikTok did not answer CBC News' request for comment.

Lawyers enter the hearing room as the Public Inquiry into Foreign Election Interference resumes in Ottawa, Monday, Sept. 16, 2024.
Lawyers enter the hearing room of the Public Inquiry into Foreign Election Interference. (Adrian Wyld/The Canadian Press)

"There's clearly some concerns around TikTok," Mike Crase, executive director of the Conservative Party, told the inquiry.

The Conservatives don't have an official TikTok account due to the security issues, but the party doesn't stop candidates from using it, Crasesaid.

"I haven't seen anything that says specifically, 'No TikTok,'but I don't believe any of our candidates have TikTok," he said.

The Liberal Party told CBC News it also does not have an officialTikTok account. A spokesperson would not answer questions about whether it allows Liberal staff, MPs andcandidates to use the app on their personal devices.

At least one Liberal MP is publicly onTikTok. NateErskine-Smith has an official TikTok account;he told CBC this springthe account is run bya staff memberin his office via hispersonalphone.

Top officials with Canada'scyber intelligence agency, the Communications Security Establishment, will testify Thursday at the public inquiry in Ottawa.CSIS officials are set to appear onFriday.