Tag Archives: bytedance

Douyin Video Sharing App

Chinese farmer Ma Gongzuo’s assistant videos Ma Gongzuo as he tastes honey at his apiary in Songyang county in China’s Zhejiang province. Photo: Wang Zhao / AFP

Farmers turn to “Douyin”, a popular video-sharing app which paves the “road to riches” for some rural farmer entrepreneurs.

“Do you want a piece?” beekeeper Ma Gongzuo says, looking into the camera of a friend’s smartphone before biting into the “dripping” comb of amber-colored honey.

The clip goes out to his 737,000 followers on “Douyin”, the Chinese version of popular video-sharing app “TikTok” that has 400 million users in the country and has turned Ma into something of a celebrity.

Creating videos has become a popular “marketing” tactic for Chinese farmers: “the clips show increasingly discerning consumers the origins of the product and provide a window into rural life that captures audience imagination.”

For some, it has “helped” them find a way out of “poverty” which the ruling Communist party hopes to “eradicate” in 2020.

“Everyone said I was good for nothing when they saw I’d come back. They tell us that we can only get out of poverty if we study and get a job in a city,” the 31-year-old says of his return to his village after a failed attempt at running an online clothing business.

Today, Ma drives an expensive “car” and has already earned enough to buy “property” and help his parents and fellow villagers with their homes and businesses.

In 2015, Ma took on the family “honey-producing” business in the verdant hills of Zhejiang province, and thanks to “e-commerce” apps, managed to turn a yearly revenue of 1 million yuan (US$142,000).

But the sales began to “stagnate.” So in November 2018, with help from his friends in the village, he began posting videos about his “life on the farm.” They showed him opening up a hive surrounded by a swarm of bees, swimming bare-chested in a river, and chopping wood.

“I never advertise my products. I show my daily life, the landscapes of the countryside. That’s what interests people. Of course people suspect that I’m selling honey. But they decide to get in touch with me to say they want to buy some,” Ma says.

Like most transactions in China, where “hard cash” is less and less popular, the orders are paid through apps like “WeChat” or “AliPay.” Ma says he now sells between two and three million yuan ($285,000-$428,000) worth of honey each year, as well as dried sweet potato and brown sugar.

“When I was young we were poor,” he recalls, adding: “At school, I used to admire other kids who had pocket money, because I never had any.” Now he drives a BMW SUV worth 760,000 yuan (US$108,000) and has also invested in building a B&B.

“Using Douyin, that was the turning point,” he says. “Today I can buy my family what they need. I help the other villagers to sell their products too. All of the local economy benefits,” he explains.

In China, some 847 million access the internet via their smartphone, so online apps have played a vital role in Ma’s success. “It’s progress,” his father Ma Jianchun says happily. “We old people are overwhelmed. With the money, we’ve been able to renovate our house.”

China is home to the world’s largest market for live “video” broadcasting, according to US audit firm Deloitte. Getting in on the trend, Douyin’s parent company “ByteDance” says it has organized training for 26,000 farmers on how to master the art of making videos.

There are other similar platforms including “Kuaishou” and “Yizhibo.”

“Taobao”, the most popular e-commerce app in the country and owned by tech giant “Alibaba”, launched a project in 2019 showing farmers how to become live-streaming hosts in a bid to help them earn more.

The number of people living under the poverty line in rural China has reduced dramatically from 700 million in 1978 to 16.6 million in 2018, according to government figures. But the “depopulation” of the countryside continues, as many Chinese head to cities in search of better paid jobs.

“We want to be an example, to show young people that it is entirely possible to set up a business and earn money in rural areas,” explains university-educated Ma Gongzuo.”We hope that more will return, so that life and the economy can resume in the villages.”

With his newfound “fame”, Ma says he has already received many “proposals.” And not just from those interested in his “honey.”

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Clock is ticking on TikTok

For TikTok, the clock is ticking. Like Huawei, the trendy Chinese-owned “Gen X” app has been caught in the crossfire of the ongoing trade war between Beijing and Washington.

Earlier this week, media reports revealed that Zhang Yiming, the chief executive of parent company “Bytedance” had sent an internal memo calling for a “diversifying of growth.” Beefing up user data protection and honing its global image were other key priorities.

Yet, his comments came hours after Washington had zeroed in on “TikTok” which is famed for its zany multi-second videos and loved by Gen Z teenagers and quite a few Millennial’s.

“If your child uses TikTok, there’s a chance the Chinese Communist Party knows where they are, what they look like, what their voices sound like, and what they’re watching,” Josh Hawley, a Republican senator, said after he introduced a bill, entitled the National Security and Personal Data Protection Act, to limit the flow of sensitive information from US online users to China.

“That is a feature TikTok doesn’t advertise,” he added.

Calls for a US government study into “TikTok” and “Bytedance” have grown amid concerns that they could share “personal data” with the ruling Communist Party administration and intelligence agencies. Both allegations have been denied.

“Our data centers are located entirely outside of China, and none of our data is subject to Chinese law. We have also never been asked by the Chinese government to remove any content and we would not do so if asked. Period.” TikTok officials wrote in a statement.

Zhang Yiming, the founder of tech company Bytedance, which owns TikTok, has denied that the group is a national security threat. Photo: AFP

Still, the specter of “censorship and fears” about data privacy have become contentious issues as the trade conflict drags on into a second year.

In the past 18 months, Washington has accused China’s high-tech giant Huawei of spying and breaking US sanctions imposed on North Korea and Iran. The telecom and smartphone juggernaut has denied the accusations.

But as a “permafrost” descends on Sino-American relations, technology companies with direct links to the world’s second-largest economy appear to be on thin ice.

Last month, a letter to the director of national intelligence from Democrat Senate Minority Leader Charles E Schumer and Republican Tom Cotton captured the “chill wind” sweeping across Capitol Hill.

“With over 110 million downloads in the US alone, TikTok is a potential counterintelligence threat we cannot ignore,” they wrote.

“Given these concerns, we ask that the Intelligence Community conduct an assessment of the national security risks posed by it and other China-based content platforms operating in the US and brief the US Congress on these findings.”

With 500 million global users, the “TikTok” app has become an overnight sensation among teenagers around the world and, in particular, the US. Known as “Douyin” in China, the crazy video app is part of “Bytedance”, an entertainment and social media group, valued at up to US$75 billion.

A TikTok post by a young woman, pretending to give “eyelash” curling advice while actually condemning China’s “crackdown” on Muslims in Xinjiang, has gone viral on the Chinese-owned app, which has been accused of “censoring” anti-Beijing content.

The clip by US teen Feroza Aziz, who describes herself as “17 Just a Muslim,” had millions of views across several social media platforms.

But Aziz said she has been “blocked” for one month from posting on TikTok, a hugely popular video platform, after uploading Sunday’s clip slamming China. The claim was “disputed” by the app.

Since being launched in 2012, Zang’s brainchild has gradually muscled into the territory occupied by Alibaba, Tencent and Baidu, or the BAT grouping as they are fondly known.

“The US should carefully study the TikTok phenomenon and learn from it. TikTok has its own algorithm, but it pays close attention to abiding by laws and customs of the countries where it is carrying out business activities,” an editorial in state-run Global  Times stated.

“When in Rome, do as the Romans do – this is a universal rule for business activities. All US social media giants have the opportunity to enter the Chinese market if they follow the rules,” the tabloid, owned by the People’s Daily, the official newspaper of the Communist Party, added.

True, but within strict “censorship” constraints that make up the “Great China Firewall” it hems the in-country’s “online” community.

Tick tock, tick tock, TikToc.

Lawsuit: TikTok Sent User Data of Americans to China 
TikTok says sorry for removing viral Xinjiang clip
U.S. Teen Hides China Concentration Camp Message in TikTok
U.S. Army cadets told not to use TikTok in uniform
US teen’s TikTok video on Xinjiang goes viral

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