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ByteDance founder Zhang Yiming for the first time has emerged as China's richest person, according to a list compiled by Hurun Research Institute, leaving behind Nongfu Spring Chairperson Zhong Shanshan who has topped the rankings for three years. Midea founder He Xiangjian and CATL's CEO Zeng Yuqun took fifth and sixth places on the list. "The Hurun China Rich List has shrunk for an unprecedented third year running, as China's economy and stock markets had a difficult year," said Rupert Hoogewerf, Hurun report chairman and chief researcher. The current rich list predominantly comprises entrepreneurs from the technology, consumer electronics and new energy space, from what used to be dominated by real estate developers, Hoogewerf noted. "The stories of the individuals on the Hurun China Rich List tell the story of the Chinese economy," he said.
Persons: Zhang Yiming, Zhong Shanshan, Zhang, Zhong, ByteDance, Hurun, Ma Huateng, Colin Huang, Xiangjian, Zeng Yuqun, Rupert Hoogewerf, Hoogewerf, ByteDance's Zhang, Huang Organizations: Hurun Research Institute, Nongfu, Research Locations: Shanghai, China
ByteDance's publishing company, 8th Note Press, plans to release physical books. After the monumental success of "BookTok" — a community of bibliophiles on the platform that discusses books and shares what they are reading — TikTok's parent company, ByteDance, started publishing digital books through its publishing company, 8th Note Press, last year. 8th Note Press is now teaming up with Zando, an independent publishing company, to release a line of print novels to sell in retail stores starting in 2025. "This partnership marks an exciting new chapter for 8th Note Press," Jacob Bronstein, head of editorial and marketing, told Business Insider in a statement. Debut novelist Sanibel — who writes under a mononym — sold her book "To Have and Have More" to 8th Note Press last year.
Persons: , TikTok, Jacob Bronstein, we'll, Molly Stern, Colleen Hoover's, Taylor, Zando, Sanibel — Organizations: Press, Service, The New York Times, Times, Zando Locations: bibliophiles
The parent company of TikTok says it has dismissed an intern that it found to have "maliciously interfered" with its artificial intelligence technology effort. In a statement in Chinese released Monday, the parent company, ByteDance, said the intern in question had committed a "serious violation" against its commercial technology team's "research project." In particular, the intern's actions affected ByteDance's AI training program, the company said. In the AI world, companies attempt to program an AI application by "training" it on vast amounts of data to recognize patterns, understand context, and make decisions — in other words, "learn." It is not clear what aspect of the AI model the intern is accused of interfering with.
Persons: ByteDance, Donald Trump, Kamala Harris, Trump, Harris Organizations: NBC News, Facebook Locations: TikTok, China
Attorneys general from 14 states are suing TikTok over claims it harms children's mental health. One document shows how the company planned to influence Sen. Mitch McConnell. Now, internal TikTok documents included in the state lawsuits are shedding new light on how TikTok tried to influence Congress during its debate on a potential ban. One of those documents revealed that TikTok planned to use content from its users to sway lawmakers, including influential Sen. Mitch McConnell, who supported the TikTok ban. Advertisement"As is standard practice at other companies, we also monitor public sentiment on issues that relate to the company," TikTok said.
Persons: TikTok, Sen, Mitch McConnell, , McConnell Organizations: TikTok, Service, Purdue Pharma, Congress, United States, Lawmakers, Kentucky Public Radio, NPR, Kentucky Public Locations: United, Kentucky
TikTok wants to help creators sell their own custom products. Startups like Pietra help creators of all audience sizes break into product development by connecting them with manufacturers and opening avenues to test small-batch orders. TikTok creators can earn a commission on Shop sales they drive from their videos. Boosting sales on TikTok Shop has been a major focus at the company since the feature launched in the US in September 2023. AdvertisementDouyin, which, like TikTok, is owned by Chinese tech firm ByteDance, drives hundreds of billions in product sales annually.
Persons: TikTok, , Logan Paul, Emma Chamberlain, they've Organizations: Service, TikTok, Shop
The UAE has shown it can “guarantee the safety and the security” of chips “if and when they are being deployed and used here,” Peng Xiao, CEO of UAE AI firm G42, told CNBC at a conference in Dubai on Tuesday. “I cannot read the mind of the U.S. policymakers, but in many ways, I understand their position,” Xiao told CNBC. “At the same time from our side, we've shown from the UAE side how transparent we are and how we can guarantee the safety and the security of this technology,” he added. The United States has previously warned over G42's ties to China and its work with companies in Beijing, which Washington considers a possible security threat. In February, the group sold its stake in Chinese companies including Bytedance in a bid to reassure American partners.
Persons: ” Peng Xiao, Joe Biden, , ” Xiao, Kiril Evtimov, Evtimov Organizations: United, United Arab Emirates ’, CNBC, Nvidia, AMD, Bloomberg, , Washington, Bytedance Locations: United Arab, U.S, Washington, UAE, Dubai, China, United States, Beijing
Attorneys general in 14 different states filed lawsuits against TikTok last week. The suits mirror earlier ones against Big Tobacco and Purdue Pharma, legal experts told BI. The Sackler family, owners of Purdue Pharma, ultimately paid over $3 billion in settlements for misleading advertising related to their products. Purdue Pharma later filed for bankruptcy, but the Supreme Court struck down a $7 billion bankruptcy plan in June that would have given the Sackler's immunity from future civil suits. With the prospect of that federal ban looming next year, a slew of federal lawsuits helps shape public opinion and "pressure lawmakers to act," Rahmani said.
Persons: , Adam Wandt, John Jay, Wandt, It's, wouldn't, Rahmani, Sackler, TikTok Organizations: TikTok, Big Tobacco, Purdue Pharma, Service, John, John Jay School of Criminal, Big Tech, Meta, Google, NPR Locations: California, United States
Former President Donald Trump and Vice President Kamala Harris face off in the ABC presidential debate on Sept. 10, 2024. The previous Trump administration didn't pursue those types of consumer protections. In contrast, Democrats, including Harris, have historically supported EVs and incentives such as those under the Biden administration's signature Inflation Reduction Act. Meanwhile, Harris, if elected, can build on existing efforts of the Biden administration to deliver savings to more patients, they said. Trump also led multiple efforts to repeal the Affordable Care Act, including its expansion of Medicaid to low-income adults.
Persons: Donald Trump, Kamala Harris, he's, Harris, Joe Biden's, Trump, Pete Buttigieg, Jonathan Kletzel, didn't, — Leslie Josephs Banks Big, JPMorgan Chase, Biden, Tobin Marcus, it's, Sen, JD Vance, they're, Lindsey Johnson, Hugh Son, Pablo Di Si, EVs, Joseph Spak, Harris hasn't, Mike Wayland, Drugmakers, Trump hasn't, Mariana Socal, Annika Kim Constantino, David Zaslav, John Malone, Time Warner, Simon, Simon & Schuster, Marc DeBevoise, Jonathan Miller, Elon Musk's, Musk, I'm, MAGA, I'm Dark MAGA, , TikTok, — Lillian Rizzo, Alex Sherman, Michael Lynn, — Amelia Lucas Organizations: ABC, Getty, U.S, Trump, Treasury, Justice Department, Federal Trade Commission, Consumer Financial, Bureau, CNBC, The Biden Department of Transportation, Democratic, American Airlines, JetBlue Airways, Spirit Airlines, Industry, Boeing, JPMorgan, Securities and Exchange Commission, Currency, Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, Biden, Wolfe Research, Bank, Republican, Bankers, Democratic Party, Consumer Bankers Association, Republicans, Volkswagen Group of America, Automotive News, Environmental Protection Agency, UBS, Mike Wayland Health, Commonwealth Fund, Medicare, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Annika Kim Constantino Media, Paramount Global, Skydance, Warner Bros, Discovery, Allen & Co, Sun, Media, Disney, Fox Corp, Time, Simon &, Random, MGM, FCC, Integrated Media, Twitter, Capitol, White, Lawmakers, Meta's Facebook, Alex Sherman Restaurants, National Restaurant Association, National Labor Relations Board, Social Security, Washington Post, Cornell University Locations: United States, PwC, JetBlue's, U.S, China, Ohio, Michigan, California
Internal research accidentally revealed this week indicates TikTok knew its algorithm was harmful. Lawyers for children harmed by social media say the apps have long known they are hurting kids. According to NPR, TikTok's internal documents show officials at parent company ByteDance discussing internal studies that show the app can harm children. According to NPR, the unredacted internal documents show that TikTok touted its tools for limiting teens' screen time despite knowing from its own research that these features had "little impact." Matthew Bergman, a founding attorney of the Social Media Victims Law Center, which represents over 3,000 plaintiffs in cases of adolescents harmed by social media, told BI that the unsealed information is "certainly consistent with what we're seeing" across TikTok and other social media.
Persons: TikTok, , Adam Wandt, John Jay, Wandt, Jayne Conroy, Simmons Hanly Conroy, Conroy, it's, Matthew Bergman, Bergman Organizations: Service, Kentucky Public Radio, NPR, John, John Jay College of Criminal, Social Media, Law Center
Of the many allegations against TikTok brought by a group of attorneys general, one stands out for its focus on the company's abusive use of its virtual currency. That currency "substantially harms children," and the livestreaming feature "exploits them financially," according to the lawsuit. Through TikTok's system, children buy the virtual tokens — TikTok Coins — with real money, and the company gets 50% of the revenue from the purchases, the lawsuit says. The suit says that TikTok "extracts" a commission of up to 50% from these exchanges without having obtained the necessary license. "If you make it look pretty and joyful and kind of innocent looking … it makes it easier to manipulate the children," Robins said.
Persons: ByteDance, TikTok, Brian Schwalb, Gabriel Robins, Robins, Brooke Erin Duffy Organizations: U.S . House, District of Columbia, TikTok, CNBC, Social, University of Virginia, Federal, D.C, Cornell University's Locations: TikTok, Culver City , California
Fourteen attorneys general, led by officials in New York and California, filed lawsuits Tuesday accusing the social media platform TikTok of damaging young users’ mental health and collecting their data without consent. “Young people are struggling with their mental health because of addictive social media platforms like TikTok,” New York Attorney General Letitia James said in a statement. In recent years, a growing number of health professionals have sounded the alarm about the effects of excessive social media use on mental and physical health, particularly among children and teenagers. Earlier this year, the Senate Judiciary Committee grilled the CEOs of TikTok, Meta and X during a hearing about online child safety and youth mental health. But the service’s rise has been shadowed by concerns about mental health, as well as national security.
Persons: TikTok, “ Young, Letitia James, “ TikTok, ’ ”, We've, Vivek Murthy, Murthy, Jonathan Haidt’s “, Haidt, ” TikTok, ” James ’ Organizations: ” New York, The New York Times, Committee, Republican, Democratic Locations: New York, California, , America, China, Beijing, California , Illinois , Kentucky, Louisiana , Massachusetts , Mississippi , New Jersey , New York, North Carolina , Oregon, South Carolina , Vermont, Washington
States sue TikTok over app's effect on kids' mental health
  + stars: | 2024-10-08 | by ( Dan Mangan | ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: +5 min
Schwalb's suit alleges a slew of "profound" mental health risks are posed to teens and children by compulsive TikTok use, including depression, anxiety, sleep loss and body dysmorphia. "TikTok knows that its design features make its App more addictive and keep users engaged for longer," the suit in D.C. Superior Court alleges. The complaint also says that in 2019, the company introduced "two new dangerous features": a live-streaming feature called TikTok LIVE and a virtual currency system called TikTok "Coins." TikTok incentivizes users to go LIVE by promising these monetary rewards 'the more popular [their] content becomes.'" The suit says that TikTok "earns substantial revenue" from its Coins, charging commissions of up to 50% on each transaction.
Persons: ByteDance, Brian Schwalb, Schwalb, TikTok Organizations: U.S . House, District of Columbia, CNBC, Washington , D.C, NHL's Washington Capitals hockey, Schwalb, AGs, Senate Locations: TikTok, Culver City , California, New York, California, U.S, D.C, Los Angeles, Washington ,, United States, China, Beijing
download the app Email address Sign up By clicking “Sign Up”, you accept our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy . The high-profile startup announced the closing of a $6.6 billion funding round that valued it at $157 billion. And more exits could be coming since OpenAI is reportedly working on allowing its employees to sell their shares in the company . Win McNamee and Didem Mente/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images; Jenny Chang-Rodriguez/InsiderIt's important to remember OpenAI's eye-popping valuation is just that … a valuation. Which gets us back to $157 billion OpenAI.
Persons: , Elon Musk's, Josh Kushner's, Cathy Wood's, Chase, Here's, Mira Murati, Kevin Weil, Rob Price, OpenAI, Sam Altman, Win McNamee, Didem, Jenny Chang, Rodriguez, Brad Gerstner, Dan DeFrancesco, Hallam Bullock, Jordan Parker Erb, Milan Sehmbi, Amanda Yen Organizations: Business, Service, Elon, Elon Musk's SpaceX, Venture, Microsoft, Nvidia, Anadolu Agency, Getty, Big Tech Locations: Silicon Valley, New York, London
The company spent much of the event pushing TikTok Shop partners to test out live selling. But live selling was the clear focus of the event, five partners who attended told Business Insider. AdvertisementA second partner who attended the event described its content as "live, live, live." The invite list for the summit may have also played a role in focusing the discussion around live selling. Several attendees said the prospect of a ban wasn't brought up at the company's TikTok Shop partner summit.
Persons: TikTok, , Jake Bjorseth, Trndsttrs, what's, ByteDance, adQuadrant, Warren Jolly, you've, Jolly, it's, Bjorseth, influencers, TikTok's, wasn't Organizations: TikTok, Service, Culver City, Business, Shop, TikTok's, Douyin, BI, Amazon, Walmart Locations: China, Culver, livestream, TikTok's China, Asia, Shanghai, Hangzhou, North America, Europe
Vcg | Visual China Group | Getty ImagesFed up with China's employment situation, young people on the mainland are retreating to the countryside. China's youth unemployment rate in August hit a new record of 18.8%, the highest since the new system of record-keeping began in December. Young Chinese transplanting rice seedlings in a field. Vcg | Visual China Group | Getty ImagesBut China's young "retirees" have pushed back against criticism that they are too picky or have given up. Such accusations, while unfair, are understandable in Chinese societal culture and context, said Hang Seng Bank China's Wang.
Persons: Gen, Wenzi Dada, Chung Chi, Chung Chi Nien, That's, Chung, Dan Wang, Wang, Keyu Jin, Wenzi, Gen Z Organizations: Visual China, Getty, CNBC, Hong Kong Polytechnic University, Hang Seng Bank, London School of Economics, Hang Seng Locations: Chongqing, China, Guizhou, Wenzi, Yunnan, Sichuan —, Shanghai, Hang Seng Bank China
A leaked internal guidebook from MrBeast is being passed around the tech world. Tech workers and investors are digging into the YouTuber's views on hiring, managing, and more. Related storiesA hardcore founder who writes like a real personMrBeast's guidebook is the latest "hardcore" corporate document to go viral in the tech world. "Leaked internal emails and memos are religious texts for the tech world," Alder said. Donaldson's casual, unpretentious writing style was a big factor in helping it spread across the tech world, industry insiders told BI.
Persons: , He's, Jimmy Donaldson, Donaldson, Brian Chesky, Combinator's Paul Graham, Tom Alder, Alder, Jeff Bezos, ByteDance, Donaldson isn't, it's, John McCarus, Steve Jobs, MrBeast, Rachel Roberts Mattox, Mattox, Marc Cohen, Abhishek Sharma Organizations: Tech, Service, Hacker, Big Tech, YouTube, Unbundled, Google Locations: Silicon Valley
Read previewTikTok is shutting down its music-streaming app, TikTok Music, on November 28. AdvertisementIt's unclear how successful TikTok Music was at building a user base in the five countries where it launched. On Apple's app store, TikTok Music is the 28th most popular music-streaming app in Indonesia and the 71st most popular in Brazil. Why not send those TikTok music fans to a streaming app it owns? Going forward, the company will likely focus on its "Add To Music App" feature, which lets TikTok users add songs or pre-save tracks they hear on TikTok to other streaming services like Spotify, Amazon Music, and Apple Music.
Persons: , Ole Obermann, TikTok, ByteDance, SiriusXM, hasn't Organizations: Service, Business, TikTok, Universal Music Group, YouTube, Spotify, Amazon Music, Apple Music Locations: Indonesia, Brazil, Singapore, Australia, Mexico, India
London CNN —TikTok has removed accounts associated with two Russian media groups for trying to exercise what it called “covert influence” on the upcoming US presidential election, in violation of its guidelines. The covert influence campaign was aimed at the American public ahead of the presidential election, US officials said. Tenet Media boasts a slate of high-profile right-wing, pro-Trump commentators, including Tim Pool, Dave Rubin, Benny Johnson and several others. After the Justice Department announcement, RT responded with mocking statements that did not address the specifics of the US allegations. TikTok, for its part, has itself faced questions over whether or not the Chinese government can manipulate its algorithm to influence the American public.
Persons: London CNN — TikTok, Rossiya, Tim Pool, Dave Rubin, Benny Johnson, Joe Biden Organizations: London CNN, Novosti, Sputnik, Meta, CNN, US Justice Department, Tenet Media, Trump, Department Locations: United States
As things stand, Intel is the only US chip firm with plants, known as fabs, that are capable of making advanced semiconductors. TSMC is set to open a fab in Arizona next year, while reports suggest Sam Altman is seeking to raise funds to create chip manufacturing plants. Intel's customers in China include Alibaba and TikTok parent company ByteDance, which have been subject to scrutiny from the US government. "Intel's ties to key businesses in China are typical for a high-tech firm," he said. As Intel and the US consider plans to increase manufacturing capacity at home, the company's China ties will loom large in the global chip race.
Persons: , Joe Biden, Biden, Forrester's, Alvin Nguyen, HWA CHENG, Sam Altman, Pat Gelsinger, Gelsinger, Forrester's Nguyen, it's, Stacy Rasgon, Bernstein, Rasgon Organizations: Service, Intel, Business, Qualcomm, Street Journal, Bloomberg, China Intel, HWA, Getty, Nvidia, AMD, New York Times, The Times, South Korea's SK Hynix, Intel Capital, Financial, Financial Times, Yahoo Locations: chipmaking, Washington, Intel's Arizona, China, AFP, Taiwan, Arizona , New Mexico, Oregon, Arizona, Chengdu, Dalian, South, Beijing
TikTok has banned all political advertising on the app since 2019, but that hasn’t stopped advertisers from running what appear to be paid political messages on the platform. According to TikTok, the company does “not allow ads featuring political content across any of our monetization features, including paid ads, creators being paid to make branded political content, and other promotional tools on the platform.”TikTok stands apart among its big tech peers in banning political ads — Facebook, Instagram, X and Google all allow political advertisements. The continued presence of political ads on TikTok illustrates the difficulties in patrolling its own platform just weeks ahead of the 2024 presidential election and amid the court proceedings over its potential ban. The findings come as recent research shows that political ads on social media platforms are often filled with misinformation. There were no obvious signs of misinformation among the TikTok videos NBC reviewed.
Persons: TikTok, hasn’t, , Vincent Raynauld, , There’s, ActBlue, Tom Steyer, Jordan Chiles, Shelby Purdum, Republicans ’, Laura Edelson, Blake Chandlee, Edelson Organizations: NBC News, Facebook, Google, NBC, Emerson College, ActBlue, Democratic, Republicans, Social, Northeastern University, BBC, Commission, FEC Locations: U.S, Russia, China, Iran, United States, TikTok, NextGen America,
Read previewAmericans think Elon Musk's X is as trustworthy as the US government. EMARKETER, a market research company owned by Business Insider's parent company, shared the survey data on Friday. AdvertisementEven fewer — only 28% of respondents — however, trusted X, the same percentage that trusted the US government. Musk's post immediately drew backlash for promoting political violence, prompting him to delete it and defend himself, calling it a "joke." The US Secret Service told Bloomberg News it is "aware" of Musk's post and is investigating the matter.
Persons: , Elon Musk's, TikTok, Musk, Yoel Roth, Elon Musk, Slaven Vlasic, Donald Trump, Joe Biden, Kamala Harris haven't Organizations: Service, Big Tech, Business, Google, Netflix, Twitter, Bloomberg, European Jewish Association, Getty, Secret Service Locations: American, Israel, Gaza, Brazil
Read previewKate Jhaveri, TikTok's head of global marketing, is leaving the company this month as part of a leadership shake-up, according to an internal memo shared with staffers. "Together, we decided the best way to achieve this vision is to remove the head of global marketing role, and bring everyone within Global Brand & Comms under one leader." Its former VP of global communications, Hilary McQuaide, exited the company that same month, the executive posted on LinkedIn. Together, we decided the best way to achieve this vision is to remove the head of global marketing role, and bring everyone within Global Brand & Comms under one leader, aligning our work and goals toward one comprehensive vision. AdvertisementFinally, we are also making a change to our social media team to enable a more scalable model for Global Brand & Comms.
Persons: , Kate Jhaveri, Zenia Mucha, Mucha, Jhaveri, Zuber Mohammed, Hilary McQuaide, ByteDance, Kate, Dexter Fedor, Manish Gupta, Alistair Lennie, Zuber, Alastair Boyle, Jordan Guo, Carol Baracat, Helen Lawrence, Erin Fors Organizations: Service, Global, Business, Disney, NBA, LinkedIn, CSR, AMS, EMEA, Global Brand Locations: Beijing
A former Department of Justice attorney told Business Insider this week that the court seemed poised to rule against TikTok. AdvertisementMany TikTok creators appear unconcerned by the prospect of a ban. Others are fighting it: In May, a group of eight TikTok creators filed a lawsuit against the US government over the potential ban. TikTok users turn to the app for more than just entertainment. The current TikTok staffer told BI that they felt that advertisers were paying less attention to TikTok ban news as they've been busy gearing up for the holiday season.
Persons: , it's, ByteDance, Daniel Openshaw, haven't, TikToker Alex Ojeda, aren't, They're, Emarketer, they've, Kantar, Gonca Organizations: Service, DC, Department of Justice, TikTok, Business, US, Tech, Jovena, Clutch, Expand, Brands, Pew Research Center, . Business, YouTube, Meta, Amazon Locations: Jovena Natal, New York, California, TikTok
Users also “lacked any meaningful control over how personal information was used for AI-fueled systems” on the companies’ platforms, according to the report. The report includes staff recommendations calling for federal privacy legislation, as well as more efforts from companies to prioritize privacy in their data collection and recommendation systems. "Protecting users – especially children and teens – requires clear baseline protections that apply across the board," the FTC said in the report. The privacy of children and teens were not adequately protected on these social media platforms and streaming services, according to the report. However, children and teens are known to be on social media, and the FTC wrote that companies "should not ignore this reality."
Persons: Lina Khan, , Twitch, Kate Sheerin, Sheerin Organizations: Federal Trade Commission, Committee, Energy, Commerce, FTC, Amazon, Facebook, Meta, Twitter, YouTube, COPPA Locations: Canada
This has renewed focus on China's homegrown efforts to rival Nvidia and create semiconductors that can underpin the world's second-largest economy's own AI industry. Huawei then sells these chips as a part of servers that go into data centers to train AI models. Alibaba and BaiduAlibaba and Baidu both buy Nvidia chips but they are also designing their own semiconductors for AI processes. Inference is the process that follows the training of AI models, as it refers to the actual application of AI in the real world, such as a chatbot responding to user queries. Moore ThreadsMoore Threads, founded in 2020, is developing GPUs designed to train large AI models.
Persons: Paul Triolo, Albright Stonebridge, Baidu Alibaba, Wei Sun, Moore, KUAE, ByteDance Organizations: Istock, Getty, Nvidia, CNBC, Huawei Huawei, Huawei, Wall, Alibaba, Baidu, Counterpoint Research, Biren, Technologies, China Morning, Cambricon Technologies, U.S, Sequoia, GGV Locations: China, U.S, Beijing, Washington, Shenzhen, Biren's
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