Inside the rise of TikTok, the viral video-sharing app wildly popular with teens and loathed by the Trump administration

Updated

2020-08-07T21:20:00Z

donald trump tiktok

Tolga Akmen/AFP/Getty Images; Clancy Morgan/Business Insider
  • TikTok, the short-form video app, has become one of the most popular social platforms among Generation Z. It has more than 2.3 billion all-time downloads, and 100 million users in the US alone.
  • However, the future of TikTok's presence in the US is uncertain: The Trump administration is threatening to ban the app, citing national security risks over its ties to China through its parent company, ByteDance.
  • Trump says he'll ban the app if an American company doesn't buy TikTok's US operations by mid-September. He escalated his attack with Thursday night's executive order barring US companies from doing business with ByteDance.
  • Microsoft has emerged as a frontrunner in TikTok acquisition talks. The possible deal — in which Microsoft would take over TikTok operations in US, Canada, New Zealand, and Australia — is valued between $10 million and $30 million.
  • Here's the story of how TikTok got its start and grew into a wildly popular platform, and where the status of TikTok's future in the US stands.
  • Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.
  • Follow INSIDER on TikTok.

One of the most popular apps is a short-form video platform called TikTok.

In just a few years of its existence, TikTok has become a staple of internet culture and social interaction for Generation Z. The app has surpassed 2 billion all-time downloads, thanks to its flurry of short-form videos where users participate in viral challenges, lip sync and dance to music, show off comedic skits, and share their hot takes on society at large.

But TikTok's rise into the mainstream — especially in the US — has also led to increased scrutiny. TikTok is owned by the colossal Chinese tech company ByteDance, a connection that's raised concerns about how much access and influence the Chinese government has to user data and content moderation. To appease concerns, ByteDance recently appointed a new CEO for TikTok, Kevin Mayer, an American ex-Disney streaming executive who is now based out of TikTok's Los Angeles offices.

Nonetheless, the Trump administration has stepped up threats in recent month to ban TikTok in the US, where the app has more than 100 million users. Reports have emerged indicating ByteDance could sell TikTok's US operations to an American company to avoid a ban, and Microsoft has been revealed as the leading buyer.

Now, the pressure is on ByteDance to close a deal before September 15, the date Trump has said he'll ban TikTok on if a deal is not reached. These hints at action against the app in one of its biggest markets could mean trouble for TikTok's future and the millions of users loyal to its content.

Here's how TikTok rose to become a social network loved by teens and scrutinized by US authorities:

The app hit the No. 1 spot in the App Store in the summer of 2015, and never left the charts. From Musical.ly, a new generation of stars was created, including Jacob Sartorius.

Musical.ly star Jacob Sartorius.
Instagram/jacobsartorius

Source: Business Insider

Meanwhile, in September 2016, short-form video app Douyin launched in China. Short-form video creation was nothing new for China's market, but Douyin's popularity skyrocketed. Within a year, Douyin had 100 million users and 1 billion video views each day.

Douyin, the version of TikTok in China.
Bytedance

Source: WalktheChat

In September 2017, Douyin expanded outside of China to select international markets under a new name — TikTok. The platform quickly rose to the top of the charts in Thailand, Japan, and other Asian markets.

AFP/Getty

Source: KrAsia

As TikTok started to gain traction globally, Musical.ly was taking over the United States.

The Musical.ly team.
Musically

Source: Business Insider

In November 2017, Douyin's parent company, ByteDance, purchased Musical.ly in a deal valued at $1 billion. ByteDance first operated the two short-form video apps as two separate platforms: Musical.ly in the US, and TikTok in other foreign markets.

AP Photo/Jessica Hill

Source: Business Insider

Less than a year later, in August 2018, ByteDance announced it would shut down Musical.ly and merge it into TikTok. All Musical.ly profiles were automatically moved over to the TikTok platform.

TikTok/Business Insider

"Combining musical.ly and TikTok is a natural fit given the shared mission of both experiences — to create a community where everyone can be a creator," Musical.ly cofounder Zhu said at the time.

Source: Variety

TikTok's popularity has since skyrocketed in the US, where the app has an estimated 100 million users. TikTok has just under 1,500 employees in offices across the US, and has pledged to add 10,000 more jobs by 2023. TikTok's US operations are based in Los Angeles, and headed up by US general manager Vanessa Pappas.

US general manager Vanessa Pappas.
Jerod Harris/Getty Images

Source: Axios, ABC News

ByteDance is run by CEO Zhang Yiming, who founded the company in 2012. Zhang's name is relatively unknown outside of China, but the 36-year-old CEO comes from a background in software engineering and is worth an estimated $16.2 billion, according to Forbes.

Zhang Yiming.
VCG/VCG via Getty Images

Source: Bloomberg, Forbes

ByteDance's first product was a news aggregator app called Toutiao. Zhang wanted to create a news platform whose results were powered by artificial intelligence, separate from China's search engine Baidu.

An ad for ByteDance's news feed aggregator app Toutiao.
Reuters/Stringer

Source: Bloomberg

ByteDance is now worth more than $100 billion, making it the most valuable private company in the world. It's received investments from some of the biggest VC firms globally, including SoftBank, Sequoia Capital, and General Atlantic.

ByteDance founder & CEO Zhang Yiming.
Liang Zhen/VCG via Getty Images

Source: Bloomberg

Because of TikTok's music-centric set-up, the app has become a career launchpad outside of the traditional industry. Budding artists like Lil Nas X have seen their songs go viral for uses in dances and challenges on the app. "Old Town Road" was used for countless videos and memes on TikTok ahead of its ascent to the top of the Billboard charts.

Chris Pizzello/Invision/AP

Source: Complex

TikTok has also become the newest platform to turn regular users into viral sensations and successful influencers. The No. 1 star on all of TikTok is currently Charli D'Amelio, a 16-year-old who ascended to the top less than a year after joining the platform.

Charli D'Amelio
Charli D'Amelio/TikTok

Source: Business Insider


Do you work at TikTok? Got a tip about it? Contact this reporter via Signal at +1 (201) 312-4526 using a non-work phone, email at pleskin@businessinsider.com, or Twitter DM at @paigeleskin. (PR pitches by email only please.) You can also contact Business Insider securely via SecureDrop.

TikTok's popularity has skyrocketed not only in the US, but around the world. Following a popularity boost during the coronavirus pandemic, TikTok surpassed 2 billion downloads worldwide in April across both iOS and Android devices, according to app analytics firm Sensor Tower.

AFP/Getty

Source: Business Insider

But the rising popularity of TikTok has also come with some controversy, due to its ties to China via ByteDance. TikTok has found itself in the crosshairs of US lawmakers, who have raised national security and privacy concerns over ByteDance's ties to the Chinese government.

Chinese President Xi Jinping.
Damir Sagolj/Reuters

The US government started investigating the app in 2019 after pressure from lawmakers. Officials have raised concern about how TikTok handles and stores user data, leading to government entities and political parties to ban the app from their employees' phones.

Reuters/Dado Ruvic

The investigation is being led by the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States, a US Treasury group that has the power to approve and reject business dealings over national security risks. CFIUS's jurisdiction pertains to a review of ByteDance's 2017 acquisition of Musical.ly,

Source: Business Insider

TikTok has also faced allegations it censors content on the platform. The Guardian found TikTok had previously removed political content that would anger the Chinese government, brought on by the suspicious absence of videos of the Hong Kong pro-democracy protests in 2019.

A protester in Hong Kong, China.
Anthony Kwan/Getty Images

TikTok has denied it censors content on requests from any "foreign government," and has said that none of its moderators are based in China.

Source: The Guardian

Media outlets have also uncovered TikTok policies that had censored 'culturally problematic' content — including videos featuring vaping, so-called suggestive dancing, and social issues. TikTok was also found to have censored or limited the reach of videos from disabled, queer, and fat creators. It's still unclear what policies TikTok uses to moderate its content today.

TikTok/Business Insider

TikTok has said that it no longer adheres to these policies when monitoring content.

Source: Washington Post, Netzpolitik

Amid increasing scrutiny from the US, TikTok has tried to distance itself from its Chinese roots. On June 1, ByteDance appointed an ex-Disney executive Kevin Mayer as its global CEO, based in Los Angeles. The company also launched a content-advisory council to guide policy changes, and set up a transparency center at its LA offices.

TikTok CEO Kevin Mayer.
Reuters/Brendan McDermid

Zhu, the Musical.ly cofounder and former head of TikTok, now serves as ByteDance's VP of product and strategy.

Source: Business Insider

Despite accusations against TikTok of "spying" on users, it's unclear whether the app collects any more user data or poses a bigger security threat than other major tech companies based in the US, like Facebook or Google.

Facebook Ad Library

This accusation of spying, forwarded by the Trump administration, is based on research from March showing how apps are able to access content stored on the clipboard — the copy-and-paste feature — of users' iPhones and iPads. TikTok was only one of the dozens of the apps, including LinkedIn and Fox News, caught spying on iPhone clipboards, but that didn't stop the Trump campaign from turning the story into anti-TikTok ammunition.

Source: Business Insider

However, it's possible the Trump administration's reason for a ban could be a bit more personal. In June, swarms of TikTok teens and K-pop fans were credited with falsely inflating the expected attendance for a major Trump rally in Tulsa, Oklahoma.

Supporters wait for the start of a Trump campaign rally at the BOK Center in Tulsa, Oklahoma on June 20, 2020.
Win McNamee/Getty

Source: Business Insider

Since Trump first publicly threatened a TikTok ban in early July, American users and creators have started to panic about the app's disappearance. Other US tech companies, like Facebook, have capitalized on the chaos to try to lure TikTok's loyal following to their competing platforms.

Instagram Reels, Facebook's answer to TikTok.
Instagram; Paige Leskin/Business Insider

In a blog post shared in late July, TikTok CEO Kevin Mayer explicitly called out Facebook for its "copycat product" called Reels, a new TikTok-like format soon coming to Instagram users in the US.

Source: Business Insider

ByteDance executives and investors have been exploring alternatives to avoid TikTok's ban in the US — some options include ByteDance selling off TikTok US, or spinning out the US operations as an independent US company.

Reuters File Photo

Source: Business Insider, Reuters

Last week, reports emerged Trump was considering two different executive orders — one instructing ByteDance to "divest" its US operations, and another banning TikTok from the US.

Tolga Akmen/AFP/Getty Images

According to a 1988 law, Trump has the authority to block foreign business deals pertaining to US companies if he deems the deals are a national security threat. Trump has twice previously used this authority to block deals in which tech corporations from China and Singapore were poised to take over US-based companies.

However, it's unclear what power Trump has to completely ban an app in the US.

Source: Business Insider

Trump has given TikTok until September 15 to find a US buyer, or else he'll ban app. However, it remains unclear what authority the Trump administration has to ban TikTok.

US President Donald Trump attends meeting in the Oval Office on June 24, 2020.
Saul Loeb/AFP via Getty Images

Trump also said the US Treasury should receive payment as part of TikTok's sale to a US company.

Source: Business Insider

Loading Something is loading.

We are so sorry! We bumped into a system failure and couldn't take your email this time.

More: Features TikTok Musically Bytedance

Chevron icon It indicates an expandable section or menu, or sometimes previous / next navigation options.

Deal icon An icon in the shape of a lightning bolt.

For you