“What happens here is if we cooperate with them,we would hand over very sensitive personal and behavioural data to a company that is controlled by the communist party and by a totalitarian government that uses all the data to improve their face recognition techniques and to improve and change other things.
“It is,of course,a tool of espionage.... And I think that we should just have this kind of self-respect,and that is why I concretely think TikTok should be banned in every democracy. I just think that it is insane not to do that.”
Axel Springer is the publishing house behindBild - Germany’s most popular newspaper - andDie Welt,as well as online business publicationBusiness Insider and political websitePolitico.
Döpfner said:“We are in Germany,and in Europe,the only bigger publishing company that does not cooperate with TikTok. I cannot guarantee you how long we can continue that because we may be at a point where we simply cannot afford it because we lose too much air in young audiences.”
Döpfner’s stance contrasts with that of the BBC,which has posted hundreds of videos on the app where it has over 1.4 million followers. The state broadcaster has enthusiastically adopted the platform as younger viewers desert its news bulletins.
An Ofcom report earlier this year found that BBC One and BBC Two,until last year the most-watched news source among 12 to 15-year-olds,had fallen to fifth place. Instagram was the number one news source among “Gen Z”,followed closely by TikTok.