this post was submitted on 13 Sep 2023
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Im pretty sure the point was to never ban it outright, it was to remove tiktok from the managed networks, which it has done extremely well.
I don't think the IT teams were ever brought into that discussion, nor was security genuinely a concern. I think this was purely performance art.
There is genuine security concerns, notably from most major cybersecurity experts. It was an overreaction, but it definitely was founded in reality.
Was it? Which specific security concerns would this have addressed?
https://www.cisecurity.org/insights/blog/why-tiktok-is-the-latest-security-threat
https://dot.la/what-data-does-tiktok-collect-2657689460.html
It’s not too hard to find that they collect a ridiculous amount of data, even over the network.
Neither of those are about network security, but are about the ability to collect data on individuals or to influence campaigns.
THe bans on university networks do not stop any of that, as this article points out.
Additionally, the app can still collect data on the university networks. It just has to wait to send it until they connect to a different network (eg. cellular)
If this was such a security concern, top-tier universities would be blocking it. Not 3rd and 4th tier universities with nothing to steal. If the Chinese government wanted data from a US university, they'd send someone over as a student to join the research labs it cared about.
Additionally, from the same article you linked about why your response and the bans themselves don't make sense:
You sure like to "think" a lot about things for which you have no data.
You are incorrect.