Tag: TikTok

  • Nigerian TikToker jailed for impersonation

    Nigerian TikToker jailed for impersonation

    A Federal High Court sitting in Abuja, has sentenced Oluyide Mide to six months imprisonment for impersonating a person named Crystal on the social media platform TikTok and fraudulently obtaining 500 dollars.

    Justice Emeka Nwite handed down the verdict, following Mide’s guilty plea to a one-count charge of impersonation and fraud. Consequently, Nwite found Mide guilty as charged and convicted him

    He sentenced Mide to six months’ imprisonment with an option of a N200,000 fine. The judge had convicted and sentenced Mide after listening to both counsel.

    The prosection counsel, Maryam Ahmed, had told the court that the defendant committed the offence sometime in 2025 in Abuja, within the jurisdiction of the court.

    According to the charge, Mide fraudulently impersonated one Crystal via www.tiktok.com and in that assumed character, obtained the sum of 500 dollars from the victim through Opay Digital Services Ltd.

    “You thereby committed an offence contrary to Section 22 (2)(b) of the Cybercrime (Prohibition, Prevention, etc.) Act, 2015, as amended,” the charge stated.

    Prosecution counsel urged the court to convict and sentence the defendant accordingly.

    Mide’s counsel, Mr KUN Osemeha, pleaded for leniency, describing him as a first-time offender who had shown genuine remorse for his actions. He urged the court to temper justice with mercy and to grant the defendant an option of fine.

  • TikTok not a social media platform – Official

    TikTok not a social media platform – Official

    TikTok on Tuesday said the platform should not be seen as a social media network but rather as a content growth platform driven by high-quality content.

    TikTok is a short-form video platform where users create and share videos ranging from a few seconds to a few minutes.

    Keagile Makgoba, TikTok’s Head of Communications for Sub-Saharan Africa, made this known at a media workshop organised for journalists in Lagos.

    According to her, contrary to public speculation, TikTok’s algorithm relies on a content graph rather than a social graph, meaning that creativity—rather than social connections—is the key to gaining visibility on the platform.

    She added that it was the strength of individual content that drew users to TikTok, alongside the platform’s built-in tools that supported content discovery.

    According to her, STEM  feed is one of the ‘Tools for Discovery’ that makes learning, education  and science fun.

    ‘’People use entertainment  to educate young ones, 10 million STEM related videos  have been published globally and 96 per cent  of the time spent on ‘For You’ feed.

    “There has been 35 per cent increase  in growth of STEM  related content across the pkatform.

    ‘TikTok requires consistency  because it’s used as a search engine optimisation; so when posting content, descriptions  are important,” she said.

    According  to her, TikTok community  guidelines  and policies  are not created in vacuum, they are a global platform  with local approach.

    Makgoba said TikTok had adopted a comprehensive approach to content moderation by combining advanced moderation technology with a robust team of human moderators to ensure user safety.

    She also noted that in 2023, TikTok launched the Mental Health Education Fund to support organisations in creating authoritative, engaging, and uplifting mental health content.

    According to her, the fund has helped participating organisations achieve over 173 million impressions, gain more than 600,000 new followers, and drive over 200,000 website visits.

    “It has also contributed to the recruitment of 466 new volunteers, thanks to a combined $7.3 million in ad credit donations,” she added.

  • TikTok yanks off 3.6 million Nigerian videos over violations

    TikTok yanks off 3.6 million Nigerian videos over violations

    Video sharing platform, TikTok said it removed more than 3.6 million videos uploaded by Nigerian users in the first quarter of 2025 for violating its community guidelines, marking a 50 per cent surge from the 2.4 million videos taken down in the previous quarter.

    This was made known in the platform’s Q1 2025 Community Guidelines Enforcement Report, which highlights TikTok’s global efforts to build a safe, respectful, and authentic digital ecosystem.

    According to the company, the spike in enforcement reflects the platform’s strengthened detection systems and commitment to protecting its user community from harmful or misleading content.

    In Nigeria, the app recorded a proactive detection rate of 98.4 per cent, meaning the vast majority of flagged content was identified and removed before users reported it.

    Additionally, 92.1 per cent of the violative content was removed within 24 hours of being uploaded. The platform also banned 42,196 live rooms and interrupted 48,156 streams in Nigeria that were found to be in breach of TikTok’s content guidelines.

    Globally, TikTok said it removed more than 211 million videos in the first three months of the year, up from 153 million in Q4 2024. Of the total, over 184 million videos were taken down using automated detection systems, a testament to the growing reliance on AI for content moderation.

    The global proactive detection rate hit 99 per cent, demonstrating further improvements in identifying and removing harmful content swiftly and efficiently.

    Beyond video removals, the report also exposed the scale of fake engagement and spam on the platform.

    Between January and March 2025, TikTok removed approximately 44.7 million comments identified as spam or originating from fake accounts.

    It also deleted 4.3 billion fake likes, followers, and follow requests—content it found to have been generated through “automated or inauthentic mechanisms”.

    “We remain vigilant in our efforts to detect external threats and safeguard the platform from fake accounts and engagement,” TikTok said in the report.

    “These threats persistently probe and attack our systems, leading to occasional fluctuations in the reported metrics within these areas. Despite this, we are steadfast in our commitment to promptly identify and remove any accounts, content, or activities that seek to artificially boost popularity on our platform.”

    The company also took down 129 accounts across West Africa in March 2025 linked to coordinated covert influence operations, underscoring the regional implications of misinformation and digital manipulation.

    As TikTok LIVE continues to grow in popularity among creators in Nigeria, the company said it had updated its Live Monetisation Guidelines to make clear what types of content are eligible for earning potential.

    At the same time, enforcement of these guidelines remains a key priority, especially to ensure that real-time interactions do not become vehicles for abuse or misinformation.

    Despite the scale of enforcement actions, TikTok maintained that harmful content represents a very small fraction—less than 1 per cent—of total content uploaded to the platform globally.

    The company emphasised that the data reflects its ongoing efforts to uphold trust and safety, especially in fast-growing markets like Nigeria, where youth adoption of the platform continues to rise.

    With Nigeria among TikTok’s largest user bases in Africa, the report is expected to draw the attention of local regulators and digital rights advocates, particularly as discussions around content moderation, misinformation, and platform accountability intensify.

    TikTok, owned by Chinese technology firm ByteDance, has been under global scrutiny from governments and watchdogs over issues related to data privacy, content regulation, and influence operations. Its enforcement reports, published quarterly, are part of an ongoing transparency initiative designed to show the public how the platform addresses emerging digital threats.

  • Popular TikTok content creator remanded in prison

    Popular TikTok content creator remanded in prison

    The Chief Magistrate in Akure has ordered the remand of Emmanuel Ajibade, a TikTok content creator, at Olokuta Correctional Centre over alleged cyberbullying of a Federal Road Safety Corps (FRSC) official.

    The Chief Magistrate, Mrs Olateju Odenusi-Fadeyi, who gave the order on Thursday, said that Ajibade should be remanded till June 27, pending legal advice from the Director of Public Prosecutions (DPP).

    Odenusi-Fadeyi explained that the order was based on her ruling on the application of an affidavit submitted by the prosecution counsel, and counter affidavit submitted by the defendant counsel.

    “I have listened to the affidavit and counter affidavit of both the prosecution and the defence counsel.

    “I, hereby, order the remand of the defendant in Olokuta Correctional Centre, pending the legal advice from the DPP.

    “The case is, hereby, adjourned till June 27, 2025 for legal advice,”  She said.

    Ajibade was arraigned before the Chief Magistrate court on April 24 for allegedly cyberbullying an official of FRSC.

    Meanwhile, the police prosecutor, Insp Taiwo Oniyere, earlier told the court that Ajibade and others at large, committed the offence at the Higher Height Area, Orita Obele in Akure.

    Oniyere said Ajibade conspired together with intent to commit felony to wit cyberstalking, cyberbullying and defamation.

    According to him, the defendant spread falsehoods via checkers69 on TikTok to cause annoyance, inconvenience, danger, insults, and criminal defamation.

    “His actions also resulted in intimidation, enmity and hatred, ill will and needless anxiety for Ibitoye Samuel, an official of FRSC in the state,” the prosecutor said.

    He said that the offence was punishable under Section 27(b) and Section 24(b) of the Cyber Crime (Provision and Prevention) Act, 2015, Laws of the Federation of Nigeria.

    Oniyere prayed the court to remand the defendant in the correctional centre in accordance to Section 269 Sub-section 2( b) of the laws of the federation.

    However, the defendant’s counsels, Mr A. F. Awala and Mr O.I Tiwo prayed to file a counter affidavit to the application.

  • BREAKING: EFCC arrests popular Kaduna content creator

    BREAKING: EFCC arrests popular Kaduna content creator

    The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) has arrested a social media content creator, Muhammed Kabir Sa’ad for allegedly abusing Naira notes.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports the popular content creator was arrested by operatives of EFCC zonal directorate in Kaduna State.

    Sa’ad made a video of himself on his TikTok and Instagram account @youngcee0066, where he was seen throwing Naira notes on the floor and deliberately stepping on them and daring EFCC officers in Hausa Language to arrest him if they can.

    He was subsequently picked up in Tudun Wada area of Kaduna State, through surveillance and conveyed to the Kaduna Zonal Directorate of the Commission for interrogation.

    He would be charged to court upon the conclusion of his interrogation, the EFCC said.

  • Woman who posted photos of husband’s ‘side chick’ on TikTok, arraigned

    Woman who posted photos of husband’s ‘side chick’ on TikTok, arraigned

    Mojisola Benson, a civil servant, was on Monday, arraigned before an Ogudu Magistrate’s Court in Lagos State for  posting pictures of another woman on social media, claiming that she was dating her husband.

    Benson, who resides at Ifako in the Gbagada area of Lagos, pleaded not guilty in a one-count charge of breach of peace.

    The prosecutor, Inspector Sunday Bassey, told the court that the defendant posted pictures of the complainant, one Oyindamola Adejumola, on WhatsApp and TikTok on April 3 at Gbagada, Lagos.

    He alleged that the defendant conducted herself in a manner likely to cause a breach of the peace.

    Bassey said, “The complainant said that the defendant posted her picture on social media, alleging she was dating her husband, Babatunde Olumide. The said caption caused her distress.

    “She also sent messages to her grandfather and sister, telling them to warn the complainant to steer clear from her husband.

    “The complainant went to a financial institution around Ifako and a woman she didn’t even know was warning and insulting her to steer clear of people’s husbands. This caused her embarrassment,” the lawyer added.”

    The prosecutor said the offence contravened Section 168(d) of the Criminal Law of Lagos State, 2015.

    The presiding Magistrate, Mrs O. A. Daodu, granted the defendant bail in the sum of N30,000 with one surety in like sum.

    She subsequently adjourned the case until May 6 for mention.

  • US TikTok: “I don’t have plans to acquire it”, says Elon Musk

    US TikTok: “I don’t have plans to acquire it”, says Elon Musk

    The world’s richest man, Elin Musk and a top advisor to US President Donald Trump, has said he has no interest in acquiring social media platform TikTok’s operations in the United States, in comments released Saturday.

    “I’ve not put in a bid for TikTok and I don’t have any plans for what I would do if I had TikTok,” said Musk in comments made via video link at a German forum in late January that were released on the weekend.

    TikTok is facing down a US law that ordered the company broken off from its Chinese owner ByteDance or otherwise be banned in the United States over national security concerns regarding the data it gathers on users.

    In one of his first acts in office, Trump ordered a pause on enforcing the law that should have seen TikTok effectively made illegal in the country a day before he took office for a second term.

    Soon after, Trump said he would be open to Musk — the owner of social media platform X, Tesla and a slew of other companies — buying the platform.

    Musk, however, said he did not wish to acquire the company.

    “I don’t use TikTok personally, so, you know, I’m not that familiar with it,” he said. “I’m not chomping at the bit to acquire TikTok.”

    Musk bought social media giant Twitter, which he renamed X, for $44 billion in 2022, insisting he was doing so in order to safeguard “free speech.”

    Since his takeover, rights campaigners warn there has been a spike in hate speech and disinformation on the platform.

    Musk was one of Trump’s main financial backers in his presidential campaign, and is heading the US president’s budget-slashing initiatives.

    His so-called “Department of Government Efficiency” (DOGE) has targeted a range of federal government agencies and regulators, with the apparent intent of shutting them down and firing staff, especially those not in line with Trump’s political agenda.

    On Saturday, a US judge issued an emergency order blocking Musk’s government reform team from accessing personal and financial data for millions of Americans stored at the Treasury Department, court documents showed.

    In the comments at the forum in Germany, Musk also took aim at Diversity, Equity and Inclusion (DEI) initiatives, which are meant to support historically oppressed and disenfranchised communities.

    DEI is simply racism rebranded,” he said. “I’m against racism and sexism no matter who it’s directed against.”

    US officials have been racing to enact Trump’s war on DEI across the federal bureaucracy — dismantling training initiatives, scrapping grants and sidelining hundreds of workers.

    In Germany, Musk has voiced firm support for the far-right anti-immigration AfD party — a political taboo in a country whose Nazi past remains a sensitive subject.

  • Father kills U.S.-born teenage daughter over TikTok videos

    Father kills U.S.-born teenage daughter over TikTok videos

    Afather in Pakistan killed his teenage daughter after she uploaded what he considered to be inappropriate videos on the social media app TikTok, police said on Thursday.

    The man, said to be in his 50s, recently brought his family back from the U.S. to settle in the South-Western Pakistani city of Quetta, local police chief, Babar Baloch, said.

    The father, now in custody, confessed to having shot his daughter earlier this week after she refused to be dressing more modestly and stop uploading what the family considered to be “indecent” videos on TikTok, Baloch said.

    Police are treating the incident as a case of so-called honour killing.

    Around 1,000 women are killed in Pakistan by close relatives, fathers, brothers and sons on the pretext of saving family honour, according to the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan (HRCP).

    The killers in most cases escape punishment because of a controversial Islamic clause in laws that allows relatives of the victim to pardon the perpetrator, rights body Amnesty International said.

    Pakistan approved a law in 2016 to partially do away with the controversial clause, but that has not proved enough to stop the practice, according to the HRCP.

  • TikTok ban: Trump gives 75-day grace period

    TikTok ban: Trump gives 75-day grace period

    US President Donald Trump  has ordered a 75-day pause on enforcing a law that would effectively ban TikTok in the US, as he floated an idea of partnering with the app’s Chinese owner.

    The executive order delayed implementation of the ‘Protecting Americans from Foreign Adversary Controlled Applications Act, which took effect January 19 and would prohibit the distribution and updating of TikTok in the United States.

    Trump had promised to move fast to save TikTok from the law that was passed overwhelmingly by Congress and signed by president Joe Biden last year.

    While speaking to reporters from the White House, Trump  said he was seeking a 50-50 partnership between “the United States” and its Chinese owner ByteDance, though he did not provide details on how this could be achieved.

    The newly inaugurated Trump said as he signed the order, crediting the app for delivering him the youth vote in his election, according to abs-cbn. com.

    “I guess I have a warm spot for TikTok that I didn’t have originally. Essentially, with TikTok, I have the right to either sell it or close it.

    “We may have to get an approval from China too…but I’m sure they’ll approve it or that would be a hostile act” that could be reciprocated with tariffs”, he said.

    In his first stint in the White House, Trump had attempted to ban TikTok in the US on national security concerns.

    The TikTok ban law passed due to concerns that the Chinese government could exploit the app to spy on Americans or covertly influence US public opinion through data collection and content manipulation.

    TikTok stopped working for US. users late on Saturday before a law shutting it down on national security grounds took effect on Sunday.

    The US  Authorities had said that under Chinese parent company ByteDance, there was a risk of Americans’ data being misused.

    Trump then promised to issue an executive order as soon as he took office to delay the ban to allow time to “make a deal.”

    TikTok restored service in the United States on Sunday crediting Trump for making the reversal possible,  though the outgoing Biden administration had earlier said that it would not enforce any ban.

    Trump said he planned to set up a joint venture between US companies and ByteDance and that the company could end up being valued a trillion dollars thanks to his intervention.

    Under the order, the attorney general must issue guidance implementing the pause, and send letters to service providers confirming they won’t face liability for continuing to host or update TikTok during this period.

    This clarification was crucial for companies like Apple and Google, which would otherwise be required to remove TikTok from their app stores and block updates.

    They will face  penalties of up to $5,000 per user if the app is accessed, and even Oracle, which hosts TikTok’s US servers, is also legally obliged to enforce the ban.

    The 75-day pause is intended to give the new administration time to “pursue a resolution that protects national security while saving a platform used by 170 million Americans,” according to the order.

  • What I want from Chinese owners of TikTok – Trump

    What I want from Chinese owners of TikTok – Trump

    U.S. President-elect Donald Trump on Sunday told his supporters that he wants Chinese-owned short-form video app TikTok to be at least 50 per cent owned by U.S. investors.

    On the eve of his swearing-in, Trump told a rally in Washington that he would allow the app to continue operating in the U.S., “but let the United States of America own 50 per cent of TikTok.”

    “TikTok is worth nothing, zero without an approval,” to operate, Trump said. “If you do approve, they’re worth like a trillion dollars, they’re worth some crazy number.

    “I’m approving on behalf of the United States, so they’ll have a partner, the United States, and they’ll have a lot of bidders and the United States will do what we call a joint venture,” Trump added.

    The popular app blocked access for U.S.-based users for about 12 hours on Sunday.

    This was due to a new U.S. law mandating TikTok either be sold by its current Chinese owners, ByteDance, or else be banned in the country, was set to come into force.

    The app came back online after Trump, who is set to take office on Monday, said that he would issue an executive order reinstating the platform in the U.S.

    Relieved U.S. TikTok enthusiasts hope ‘magic’ returns as app is restored

    On Saturday night, for the first time in five years, millions of American TikTok users who logged on for a late-night scroll were met with an unwelcome notice that their beloved app had been banned and shut down.

    Their exile lasted less than 24 hours, ending when the Chinese-owned company restored service on Sunday after President-elect Donald Trump, who returns to power on Monday, said he would revive U.S. access.

    But the TikTok masses had already started contemplating life without the app that has captivated nearly half of all Americans.

    As users returned, some cringed at sappy goodbyes posted before the shutdown or thanked Trump on social media site X, while others wondered whether the TikTok world would ever be the same again.

    “We’re back but at what cost?” one user mused on the platform.

    Trump’s action to save TikTok, owned by ByteDance, represents a reversal from his first term in office.

    In 2020, he aimed to ban the short-video app over concerns the company could share Americans’ personal info with the Chinese government.

    More recently, Trump has said he has “a warm spot in my heart for TikTok,” crediting the app with helping him win over young voters in the 2024 election.

    TikTok stopped working for U.S. users late on Saturday before a law shutting it down on national security grounds took effect on Sunday.

    Trump said he would “extend the period of time before the law’s prohibitions take effect, so that we can make a deal to protect our national security.”

    “I would like the United States to have a 50% ownership position in a joint venture,” he wrote on his Truth Social platform.

    Though relieved, some users wonder if such a change to the company’s ownership structure would ultimately alter the TikTok experience.

    “I think back to when Elon bought Twitter and how dramatically it shifted overall sentiment and how people interacted on the app.

    “So that gives me a lot of concern,” said Kelly Sites, 38, referring to billionaire Elon Musk’s purchase of the social media site now known as X.

    “I don’t want the magic of the algorithm to change,” said Sites, a part-time content creator based in Kansas City, Kansas.

    The algorithms TikTok relies on for its operations are deemed core to the overall operations of ByteDance, which would make a sale of the app with algorithms highly unlikely, Reuters reported in April.

    While questions linger about the future of TikTok, some users – particularly those who earn a living from it – lament their trust in the government will never be the same.

    “I think that this is a very sad time in history,” said Richard “Chuck” Fasulo, 37, a mechanic and auto-influencer from Duchess County, New York.

    Fasulo told Reuters that the app helped him dig his way out of debt, more than double his income and take his family on vacation for the first time last summer.

    Confronting the specter of losing the business opportunities that the app provided him was not a pleasant experience.

    “I think that myself, like many others, have gained a lot of disdain for the U.S. government,” said Fasulo, who has about 400,000 followers.

    For others, however, relief is the important thing, no matter its source.

    “I would choose a political stunt over losing TikTok forever,” Charlotte Warren, 31, a dating and relationships content creator based in Austin, Texas, told Reuters.

    Without TikTok, she said she could lose up to 60,000 dollars in annual income, over 200,000 followers and was unsure if she would continue posting content to other platforms.

    “I just wanted my app back.”