TikTok accused of collecting personal data on thousands of Canadian children

Skye Jacobs

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Cutting corners: Canadian privacy regulators say TikTok has been collecting sensitive personal data from tens of thousands of children in the country, despite the app's rules prohibiting users under 13 – and under 14 in Quebec – from using the platform. A joint report released by the federal privacy commissioner, along with regulators in Quebec, British Columbia, and Alberta, found that TikTok's practices fell short of Canadian privacy law requirements and failed to obtain meaningful consent from users regarding how their information is collected, analyzed, and shared.

The review determined that TikTok's safeguards for keeping underage users off the platform were inadequate, leading to the collection of data from a large number of Canadian children. Regulators concluded that TikTok amassed information considered particularly sensitive, including biometric data such as facial and voice recognition details, as well as location information.

Depending on the content viewed, the platform may also have captured insights into areas such as health, political beliefs, gender identity, and sexual orientation.

Michael Harvey, British Columbia's information and privacy commissioner, said investigators were surprised by the depth of TikTok's profiling. He explained that the company combined biometric and location information to make "elaborate inferences about who the users were, about things like what their spending power was and use that, to then decide what content, including advertising, to feed back to them."

Harvey told CBC that this type of profiling is especially troubling given TikTok's reach among children and also raises questions about Canadian adults' awareness of the scale of data collection.

The report noted that during a demonstration of TikTok's advertising portal, officials observed the possibility for advertisers to target users based on transgender status. TikTok insisted that such targeting was not intended, but the company could not explain how the option appeared. Regulators also found that consent obtained when users accepted TikTok's terms and conditions was not valid, as it did not provide a meaningful understanding of how data is tracked, analyzed, and monetized.

While TikTok says it deletes around half a million underage Canadian accounts each year, the report noted that many minors likely remain undetected. Accounts that do not post content can often bypass the company's moderation efforts. Regulators found that even before underage accounts were detected and removed, TikTok had already collected detailed activity information from these users.

Law professor Michael Geist of the University of Ottawa said that strengthening age-verification mechanisms will be one of the company's most difficult tasks. "We all know that many kids are gonna be determined to get on some of these platforms," he said, emphasizing that stronger rules on data handling are just as important as detection tools. He added that parental oversight will continue to play an essential role.

Following the findings, TikTok agreed to implement stronger age-screening measures, provide clearer notifications about data use, and curb how advertisers target underage users. The company said it would "effectively stop" customized advertising to those under 18, with permitted targeting limited to general categories such as language and location.

In a statement released through spokesperson Danielle Morgan, TikTok pushed back on several elements of the report but said "we remain committed to maintaining strong transparency and privacy practices." Federal Privacy Commissioner Philippe Dufresne said his office intends to monitor TikTok's follow-through closely.

Beyond privacy-law compliance, the report also highlighted concerns that Canadian data collected on the platform could leave the country. ByteDance, TikTok's Beijing-based parent company, operates under Chinese laws requiring cooperation with state intelligence agencies. Dufresne said policy documents should be more forthcoming on this reality, explaining, "One of our specific recommendations was that the policy should make that more explicit, it should say this information can go to China and be accessed by the Chinese government."

National security officials in Canada have repeatedly warned about TikTok. Former Canadian Security Intelligence Service director David Vigneault told CBC in 2024 that "there is a very clear strategy on the part of the Government of China" to harness personal data and that the app is designed in a way that makes such access unavoidable.

Last year, Ottawa ordered ByteDance to wind down its Canadian subsidiary under the Investment Canada Act following a national security review. That decision requires the company's two Canadian offices to close but still allows consumers in Canada to use the app.

The decision has been criticized by Canadian content creators and artists, who say the absence of a Canadian team undermines their creative opportunities and reduces support for local cultural voices. Similar questions about TikTok's corporate structure remain active in the US, where a deal to sever ties between ByteDance and the app's US operations is still under negotiation.

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We had every chance to ban Tik Tok.

When we finally banned it, Trump unbanned it less than 2 hours later.

Whatever happens, You're responsible.
 
We had every chance to ban Tik Tok.

When we finally banned it, Trump unbanned it less than 2 hours later.

Whatever happens, You're responsible.

On a related topic, here in NYS, they FINALLY took cellphones in school seriously and banned them from school. Nevermind that this should have been done back in 2010, but the question you'd have to ask is after so many cases of cyberbullying, suicides, homicides, sexual crimes, and other deviants why did they choose to do it now?

Well the answer is very simple. In one of our High Schools, Hillcrest, a teacher was doxxed by students because she attended a pro Israel rally. They had her info all over Tik Tok to the point that they couldn't even control the spread. Now nevermind all the recorded fights being shared over IG, tik Tok and Snapchat - or the criminal acts - this was the straw that broke the camel's back.

So now, cellphones are banned. The students get scanned at the entrance and must give up their phones. They receive them at day's end. some students are willing to pay the nearby stores to hold their phones. $2 a day.

During the Bloomberg administration we had banned phones but the stores were making big money - untaxed- holding phones. The Bloomberg administration ended that allowing them back in schools without a fight.
 
The irony is that TikTok knows more about Canadian kids than their own parents, yet somehow still can’t tell when one of them is twelve using their platform.
 
TikTok has such a massive, shallow, ignorant, and profitably naive user base that it's the fattest fruit on the social media tree. Whoever owns it has direct marketing access to the most basic internet connected little minds on the planet. Turns out, they've been thinking of the children all along. Far too much.
 
How is this different from every other social media app? They all collect your data.
its not, its just another china fear mongering story.

META sold your info to China years ago and nobody batted an eye but you know, we are not talking about the Epstein files so its good for them.
 
Presumedly (yes, I intended -edly instead of -ably) China is taking advantage of the spate of free information on TT et al platforms, gathering and collecting data to early identify potential spies, those whom they can later manipulate, blackmail, extort, coerce to do their biddings.
Who are they, do they have any juicy secrets? skeletons in closets? family in China? heavily indebted or otherwise desperate for money? then lean on them later with coercive threats of myriad kinds.
 
The 1st comment said it best. What did we expect from the CCP? This is what it does.

Kids ought not to even have SMART PHONES. They will care more about 'likes' from people they have never even met, than about friends. What becomes of them, when they grow-up?

 
When they are grown up they will remain easily influenced by complete morons and believe everything they see on social media so deeply they wouldn't recognise truth and facts if it bit them on the backside.
 
When they are grown up they will remain easily influenced by complete morons and believe everything they see on social media so deeply they wouldn't recognise truth and facts if it bit them on the backside.
The boomers and adults are already there... The things I see people posting...
 
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