Is TikTok a Threat to Democracy?
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Is TikTok a Threat to Democracy?

The popular social-media app, owned by the Chinese company ByteDance and used by 170 million Americans, is raising national-security questions about data privacy and malign foreign influence. The Chinese Communist Party is deploying such digital technologies for surveillance, propaganda, and repression—and to strengthen their autocratic regime. The following Journal of Democracy essays explore the connections between social media, digital technology, and dictatorship.


Why TikTok Is a Threat to Democracy

The popular Chinese-owned app is enabling Beijing to collect data on people nearly everywhere. Not only can such platforms track people’s preferences and whereabouts, but they give the Chinese government control over a powerful tool for shaping people’s worldview.

Aynne Kokas


Digital Propaganda: The Power of Influencers

Swarms of “nano-influencers,” are rapidly reshaping social-media propaganda campaigns, upending political discourse in democracies around the world.

Samuel C. Woolley


The Future of Platform Power: Fixing the Business Model

To stop surveillance capitalism, take aim at the targeted advertising that fuels it. Nathalie Maréchal


The Future of Platform Power: Making Middleware Work

Bringing middleware from theory to practice will require addressing thorny questions about revenue, cost, feasibility, and privacy.

Daphne Keller


Making the Internet Safe for Democracy

The outsized power of large internet platforms to amplify or silence certain voices poses a grave threat to democracy. Finding a reliable way to dilute that power offers the best possible solution.

Francis Fukuyama


Social Media Disruption: Nigeria’s WhatsApp Politics

The encrypted messaging service WhatsApp has become an increasingly important tool for “fake news” in Nigeria, while weakening government control of information and broadening opportunities for political participation.

Nic Cheeseman, Jonathan Fisher, Idayat Hassan, and Jamie Hitchen


Social Media Disruption: Messaging Mistrust in Latin America

In Latin America, greater exposure to social media—and the digital misinformation that comes with it—seems to be bolstering prodemocratic attitudes even as it fuels public distrust in democratic institutions.

Noam Lupu, Mariana V. Ramírez Bustamante, and Elizabeth J. Zechmeister


Egyptian Youth’s Digital Dissent

The military-backed regime of President al-Sisi seems secure, but study of the Egyptian internet reveals that the regime has failed to win over the young.

Adel Iskandar


The Road to Digital Unfreedom: Three Painful Truths About Social Media

Not so long ago, the internet was being lauded as a force for greater?freedom and democracy. With the rise of intrusive and addictive social?media, however, a discomfiting reality has set in.

Ronald J. Deibert


From Liberation to Turmoil: Social Media and Democracy

Once hailed as a megaphone for marginalized voices and an enabler of free discourse?generally, social media now appear to have problematic consequences?in?both authoritarian and democratic regimes.??

Joshua A. Tucker, Yannis Theocharis, Margaret E. Roberts, and Pablo Barberá



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