Guernsey Press

EU probing TikTok over suspected meddling in Romania’s presidential election

Romania’s top court has cancelled the results of the first round of voting that resulted in an unknown far-right candidate becoming the front-runner.

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European Union regulators have said they are investigating whether TikTok breached the bloc’s digital rulebook by failing to deal with risks to Romania’s presidential election.

It comes after the ballot was thrown into turmoil over allegations of electoral violations and Russian meddling.

The European Commission is escalating its scrutiny of the video-sharing platform after Romania’s top court cancelled the results of the first round of voting that resulted in an unknown far-right candidate becoming the front-runner.

“Following serious indications that foreign actors interfered in the Romanian presidential elections by using TikTok, we are now thoroughly investigating whether TikTok has violated the Digital Services Act by failing to tackle such risks,” European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen said in a press release.

“It should be crystal clear that in the EU, all online platforms, including TikTok, must be held accountable.”

The Digital Services Act is a sweeping set of regulations intended to clean up social media platforms and protect users from illegal content. It ordered TikTok earlier this month to retain all information related to the election.

In the preliminary round of voting on November 24, Mr Georgescu was an outsider among the 13 candidates but ended up topping the polls. He was due to face a pro-EU reformist rival in a runoff before the court cancelled the results.

Calin Georgescu
Calin Georgescu (Andreea Alexandru/AP)

TikTok said it has “protected the integrity” of its platform over 150 elections around the world and is continuing to address these “industry-wide challenges”.

“TikTok has provided the European Commission with extensive information regarding these efforts, and we have transparently and publicly detailed our robust actions,” it said in a statement.

The commission said its investigation will focus on TikTok’s content recommendation systems, especially on risks related to “co-ordinated inauthentic manipulation or automated exploitation”.

It is also looking at TikTok’s policies on political advertisements and paid-for political content.

TikTok said it does not accept paid political ads and “proactively” removes content for violating policies on misinformation.

The investigation could result in TikTok making changes to fix any problems, or fines worth up to 6% of total global revenue.

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