The Big Flaws in That Study Suggesting That China Manipulates TikTok Topics
The errors are so glaring that it's hard not to suspect an underlying agenda at work here.

The latest wave of fearmongering about TikTok involves a study purportedly showing that the app suppresses content unflattering to China. The study attracted a lot of coverage in the American media, with some declaring it all the more reason to ban the video-sharing app.
"Hopefully members of Congress will take a look at this report and maybe bring the authors to Washington to give testimony about their findings," wrote John Sexton at Hot Air. The study "suggests that the next generation will have had a significant portion of their news content spoon fed to them by a communist dictatorship," fretted Leon Wolf at Blaze Media. "TikTok suppression study is another reason to ban the app," declared a Washington Examiner editorial.
But there are serious flaws in the study design that undermine its conclusions and any panicky takeaways from them.
In the study, the Network Contagion Research Institute (NCRI) compared the use of specific hashtags on Instagram (owned by the U.S. company Meta) and on TikTok (owned by the Chinese company ByteDance). The analysis included hashtags related both to general subjects and to "China sensitive topics" such as Uyghurs, Tibet, and Tiananmen Square. "While ratios for non-sensitive topics (e.g., general political and pop-culture) generally followed user ratios (~2:1), ratios for topics sensitive to the Chinese Government were much higher (>10:1)," states the report, titled "A Tik-Tok-ing Timebomb: How TikTok's Global Platform Anomalies Align with the Chinese Communist Party's Geostrategic Objectives."
The study concludes that there is "a strong possibility that TikTok systematically promotes or demotes content on the basis of whether it is aligned with or opposed to the interests of the Chinese Government."
There are ample reasons to be skeptical of this conclusion. Paul Matzko pointed out some of these in a recent Cato Institute blog post, identifying "two remarkably basic errors that call into question the fundamental utility of the report."
The errors are so glaring that it's hard not to suspect an underlying agenda at work here.
Most notably, the researchers fail to account for differences in how long the two social networks in question have been around. Instagram launched nearly 7 years before TikTok's international launch (and nearly 6 years before TikTok existed at all) and introduced hashtags a few months thereafter (in January 2011). Yet the researchers' data collection process does not seem to account for the different launch dates, nor does their report even mention this disparity. (Reason reached out to the study authors last week to ask about this but has not received a response.)
The researchers also fail to account for the fact that Instagram and TikTok users are not identical. This leads them "to miss the potential for generational cohort effects," suggested Matzko. "In short, the median user of Instagram is older than the median user of TikTok. Compare the largest segment of users by age on each platform: 25% of TikTok users in the US are ages 10–19, while 27.4% of Instagram users are 25–34."
It's easy to imagine how differing launch dates and typical-user ages could lead to differences in content prevalence, with no nefarious meddling by the Chinese government or algorithmic fiddling by Bytedance needed.
Take, for instance, the finding that there were vastly more Instagram hashtags related to Tibet or the Dalai Lama than there were on TikTok (37.7 on Instagram for every one on TikTok). The NCRI reads this as evidence that TikTok hid posts related to these subjects. But Instagram had seven additional years to rack up posts related to Tibet. And those were years in which Western interest in Tibet was generally higher than in more recent years. ("A quick peek at Google trends data show that public discourse about Tibet in the US has been in a general decline throughout the 2000s and 2010s, albeit punctuated by exponential spikes…in April 2008 and December 2016," noted Matzko.) It's only natural that there would be many more Tibet-related posts on Instagram than on the more recently-launched TikTok.
Or take the finding that Instagram had many more Ukraine-supportive posts than TikTok did. For instance, there were 12 Instagram posts with the #StandWithUkraine hashtag for every one on TikTok, and 4.2 Instagram posts with the #SaveUkraine hashtag for every one #SaveUkraine TikTok post. Some of the difference might stem from the fact that Instagram was around in 2014—when Russia annexed Crimea from Ukraine—while TikTok was not. And even if we assume that most of the hashtags relate to the more recent conflict, we're still left with the fact that Instagram's users are older than TikTok's users. It wouldn't be surprising if 20- and 30-somethings are more likely to post about Ukraine than teens and tweens are.
It's not simply median user age that separates Instagram and TikTok. While all sorts of content can be found on either platform, they have each developed distinct cultures, protocols, etc., as well, and that makes cross-platform comparisons hazy.

It's also worth noting that while the Instagram to TikTok ratio for general pop culture and political hashtags was fairly low (a 2.2 to 1 ratio for 14 pop culture hashtags and a 2.6 ratio for 18 political hashtags), there was variation within these groups, particularly in politics. For instance, there were 19.4 #Potus posts, 3.8 #HarryStyles posts, 6.8 #ProLife posts, and 0.6 #Trump2024 posts on Instagram for every one on TikTok. So the idea that China-sensitive content is the only area with discrepancies is not correct.
A comparison of hashtags related to Kashmiri independence paints a particularly odd picture. The hashtags #StandWithKashmir, #WeStandWithKashmir, and #IStandWithKashmir are relatively scarce on Instagram but quite abundant on TikTok—to the tune of 370,407 on Instagram and 229,231,866 on TikTok in total. But a quick search shows that there are 8,816,839 Instagram posts with the hashtag #Kashmir alone. It's possible some of these posts are pro-Kashmiri independence and the two platforms just developed different popular tags.
It's also possible that something fishy is going on with the Kashmir posts. But even then it wouldn't necessarily follow that this involves nefarious moves by TikTok. Perhaps a pro-Kashmir entity—Chinese or otherwise—created a bot operation to spam TikTok with this hashtag. The hashtag's prevalence alone doesn't tell us that anyone at TikTok tried to amplify it.
And even if we accept thatChina was behind this (despite having no hard evidence for that), we're still left with zero information about what kind of accounts used the hashtag, what kind of reach they had, and whether their posts were seen by many users.
A hashtag being used millions of times could mean nothing if it's used by low-follower accounts on videos that get few views.
TikTok noted as much in a recent press release about Israel/Palestine content on the platform. "The number of videos associated with a hashtag, alone, do not provide sufficient context," it states. "For example, the hashtag #standwithIsrael may be associated with fewer videos than #freePalestine, but it has 68% more views per video in the US, which means more people are seeing the content."
Assuming that all those #IStandWithKashmir posts translates to significant views and impact is the same mistake people made with Russian bots after the 2016 election. People took the number of bots or posts as evidence of widespread impact, but relatively few people ever saw or interacted with their content.
These flaws in the NCRI study don't disprove the idea that TikTok suppresses China-sensitive content, of course. The relative scarcity of certain hashtags certainly could still be due to deliberate work. But this study is far from sufficient evidence for that claim. And it seems irresponsible for researchers—and reporters—to draw conclusions from this data without noting that Instagram has well over half a decade on TikTok, that some of the studied topics were more widely discussed before TikTok existed, and that there's a significant difference in the median user age of each platform.
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I sort of skimmed over all the study details-- and I don't really have a dog in this fight, but the first paragraph kind of struck me:
Give that we absolutely know, with 197% certainty that the tech companies suppressed and suppresses information critical of the Biden administration, do we really believe that Tik Tok is the one (1)! social media company whose algorithm is just neutrally pushing Most Viewed/Most Talked About/Most Shared videos as they purely drive by user interaction, a-la Youtube 2006-2009?
a) read something and decline to post comment.
b) don't read something and decline to comment.
*c) don't read something and comment anyway.*
Ugh. You are a barely functional, perpetually online deadbeat. Please someone revoke this person's internet access.
This comment has increased your social credit score by 10. Well done.
If the flaws in the study are so big why did it take a mind numbing long article that you need a degree in statistics to truly understand what this "Big Flaw" is? Seems to me anyone who can honestly say they read every word and fully understand the flaws in the study has way too much free time on their hands.
Just the title alone is worthy of criticism. Its a social media company. Doesn't matter which government or company owns it, its going to push some agenda. There are humans in control. Humans who have some bias at least.
Scott. Why are you responding to Diane just to comment about yourself?
Hey, when someone registers with Reason just to reply to me, that makes my day.
If this is a new signup, they came pre-muted for me.
But, uh, you probably look nice in that shirt you picked out this morning though.
Huh, I didn't recognize the name and unfortunately, as a personal policy, I don't mute anyone, no matter how tedious they are. If I don't want to interact with your comment, I either won't read it or read it and scroll on by.
Disclaimer: Reasons for not interacting with a comment may include, but not be limited to:
wall of text
annoying
not funny
too many factual errors to address
deserves a response but requires 3000 word response and don't have time
don't have time
time I don't have
boooring
funny, needs no comment
not funny, needs no comment
I've seen your previous comments, they've been weighed in the balance and found wanting
I initially opted for B but after reading your response I moved to C. Like you, I'm just looking for recognition. I mean bad attention is better than no attention #bartsimpson
How about d) Don't read something from REASON, and you can comment, because it is usually pretty easy to know what was said.
Logged in just to say: haha
Given that we know China was using automatic vacuums collect data on the layout of American homes, I'm skeptical that TikTok would not be used for more elegant data analysis.
It's crazy to think that Tik Tok doesn't manipulate its algorithm in some way, shape or form... and it's equally crazy to think that the study ENB details above DOESN'T have an agenda.
We know that Media Matters, for instance is a David Brock creation, and we know that Media Matters is a media organization designed to communicate with American government officials. And we know that Media Matters is specifically designed to get all the tech companies into line with a particular political agenda. Worrying that Tik Tok isn't designing its algorithm right is exactly the kind of thing that a David Brock would want to get corrected, and anti-China conservatives are exactly the dupes who would fall for this well-laid trap.
You're not wrong. Conservatives are easily manipulated with a good old jingoistic bit of nationalism. Sometimes I wonder which side is truly the brainwashed zombies. Try talking drug legalization with Conservatives. It's Iike Night of the Living Dead.
However I must say China is not our friend. But then neither are the basket of nations we send foreign aid to. We don't have a lot of friends in the world.
I understand the concepts behind trading with the Chinese but I disagree with having so much of our supply chain running through that one country. I would prefer to see different names on the cheep shit we buy. There are a lot of shitholes in the world, why not get our stuff from them instead of China?
I actually read enough of the criticisms to recognize that they were plainly straw men if not the standard celebratory parallax/backhanded acknowledgement.
The issues she raised is that Insta is older than TikTok and Insta-users are older and/or different than TikTok users. Both of which would make sense if the comparison and/or assertion in question had been absolute numbers or age-related, but it wasn't.
Rutgers University Miller Center: Insta mentions the word "kumquat" at a rate of 2:1 over TikTok. The word "Taiwan" gets mentioned 10:1. That seems an awful lot like it could be a pro-China bias on the part of TikTok.
Cato Center For The Mentally Handicapped: Nuh uh! Tiktok and Insta are two different platforms with two different audiences.
Everyone else: No shit, Sherlock.
Cato Center For The Mentally Handicapped: TikTok is newer so it wouldn't be talking about Tiannamen Square or Tibet as much!
Everyone: Right.
People should be free to use a time wasting branch of the CCP app. Taxpayers should be free from being coerced into paying for the food, shelter, clothing, education, and transportation of time wasting citizens.
But how will Scotterbee live without government handouts?
Let’s find out!
TikTok is bad because China. What else does anyone need to know?
What if the Bad favored the Perfect? What if Communist China favored THE Lord Donald Trump, and voting for Him? HOW MANY heads would explode?
Then we’d get 15 articles a day on why Tik Tok is *checks previous Reason articles about Twitter post Musk Takeover* “imploding" with instructions on how to go Vegan and Pivot to Mastodon.
I wonder if those who so vehemently oppose funding Ukraine would have the same objections if Trump was buddies with Zelenskyy instead of Putin. Or if the Bidens had ties to Russia instead of Ukraine.
Yesterday, EastAsia (Or Ukraine, fill in the blank) was our friend. Today, it is our sworn enema, and them formerly having been our friend NEVER happened!!! Newly approved Belief-Commands have come down from On High! Butt THEY, over THERE, are the COLLECTIVISTS, and are therefor the Evil Ones!
Pathetic drunk pussy spews more nonsensical TDS bullshit. Which is somewhat impressive, since he managed to drag himself out of a drunken stupor at the crack of noon to gibber in such a manner.
Probably didn’t bother to change his urine/feces filled pants first.
Trump IS friends with Zelenskyy.
Y'all based your first impeachment on that phone call where Trump and Zelenskyy were planning to look into that time Joe Biden openly extorted Ukraine.
You know, the one where Dear Leader's bragging about how he extorted the leaders of Ukraine to keep his son safe and his cut coming?
Trump did focus his attention on the dangerous tyrants around the world in order to find or create levers to influence their policies toward the US. His success with them was of course turned around and used against him. Fucking media.
ENB is a globalist cuck and China apologist.
Bitch still hasn’t brought me my sandwich.
Is there any way to read this other than a claim that social media companies don't use 'Al Gore rhythms' to tweak data and ads presented?
Yet another example of the common threads running through almost all of the Reason articles lately: “flawed studies,” and official scapegoating of “misinformation” for everyone else with a non-coincidental blind spot for their own direct and indirect censorship. Maybe they think no one will notice; or maybe they just don’t care. Hit and run has been a very successful tactic for them so far, although perhaps the cratering approval ratings and loss of the public’s faith and confidence in government institutions will eventually come back to bite them on their asses someday.
The latest stories used to be called "Hit and Run".
"...with a non-coincidental blind spot for their own direct and indirect censorship. Maybe they think no one will notice; or maybe they just don’t care. ..."
Who is the "they" here? Reason.com writers? Did "they" fail to invite you to their cocktail parties, orgies, or twat? Your writing isn't totally, or even very, or slightly, clear here!
WHO is Reason.com "censoring" here, and how are "they" censoring you, or someone else? Inquiring minds want to KNOW, dammit!
To say nothing of the Chicom agitprop.
Well, to be fair there are a shit ton of bad studies out there. It is low hanging fruit to write about them when you wake up with a white wine hangover and need to pump out several hundred words on something.
If Instagram and tick tock were hiding out together in a tunnel in Gaza and swept into the Mediterranean by Israeli water cannons my reaction would be Hey, what's for dinner? Not giving a shit is a beautiful thing.
I agree completely.
I don't think you need to show in a study that this CCP app is either acting like every other social media platform or is acting like the most cleanest platform ever. City, State and Federal governments have no power to regulate the internet, much less a specific app. End of line.
City, State and Federal governments have no power to regulate the internet, much less a specific app.
No legal power? No right? No recognized authority? Or... do you really mean "they're not doing it", because if it's the last option...
What are you asking? I said "no power" which implies they do not have enumerated powers granted by their constitutions to pass laws restricting access to a website or application on phones.
At best they can say their employees can't use the site on government owned computers or during work hours. Which is a good start. They need to add the rest of Social Media to that restriction. I don't want my tax dollars going to some federal accountant who spends half his day on social media.
Look, ENB, the Chinese government and everything under its control engage in massive violations of the NAP. That is why Americans should not do business with China and should not permit Chinese companies to do business in the US. That's the libertarian position.
You take some sort of b.s. neo-liberal position where somehow trading with hostile, communist, totalitarian, slave-holding regimes is perfectly OK.
It’s based on population or consumption. The U.S. is only five percent of global consumption. I’d guess EU is around five percent. Economic growth cannot continue to expand without access to high population markets. Thus, the border is open and nouveau neo liberalism is about the west having the highest population markets 1.5 billion North America and 1.5 EU/Britan? Although debt makes this subsidized consumption thing tricky to say the least.
Agreed. The CCP is totally evil. How many things in your house have "Made in China" on them? I try hard not to get Chinese crap but sometimes your options are "Made in China", "Made in China" or go without. Hell, you have to do a lot of work to find out where something being sold online is sourced. Almost all of it is Chinese.
What is it that religious text says, "Let he who is without sin cast the first stone."
TikTok bans Glenn Greenwald, no explanation. Greenwalds entire platform is critical of the military industrial complex, nation building, security state and taxpayer funding of the unelected bureaucrats contained within the agencies. If CCP was running TikTok, they would adore Greenwald, not ban him. Apparently it’s a Singapore run app that had a nice talking to on nouveau neo liberalism or Bidenomics print money/subsidize everything.
Greenwald is a Russian stooge. Obviously China doesn't want a propagandist for their competitor.
Ya, this is Reason’s version of “There is no cancel culture [on Tik Tok]”.
Again, I have no particular thoughts on the exactitutdalnessness of this particular study, but this whole thing feels a lot like:
It’s not happening Ok it’s happening but it’s not as bad as you say It’s happening and it’s the government’s first amendment right to ban stuff
We know we’ve been through all three a long, LONG time ago with the rest of the
platformsSilicon Valley, and Reason seems to be starting at step one with Tik Tok.What’s that thing the young people say? The definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over again and not caring if the results are the same?
Lol. American tech companies often cave to the Government (at least when it's run by Democrats) but a Chinese company stands up to China's totalitarian government?
Liz, bring back the Mike Laursen account.
Yeah, Liz, where's White Mike?
He was declared racist (for the obvious reason) and canceled.
All of the trolling troglodytes here spew udderly stupid insults all day, at the truly intelligent, well-informed, non-bigoted, and benevolent posters (such as Mike Laursen), or they "mute" them... And then they CRY, BITCH, AND MOAN for the lack of them!!!
It reminds me of the below old exchange, a favorite of mine...
https://reason.com/2022/12/07/in-defense-of-algorithms/?comments=true#comment-9824848
Brandybuck had some good comments a while ago…
My only criticism of social media algorithms is that it leads to bubbles. But that’s me, everyone else LIKES the bubbles. The complaints aren’t about bubbles, but that other bubbles exist. People don’t like that there isn’t a person in charge they can write to demanding their views be given priority. Conservatives are mad that progressives aren’t seeing their posts, and progressives are mad that conservatives aren’t being fed their lies.
Or you have conservatives angry that some progressive posts are making it through their bubble, but the algorithm sees that these folk like arguing back against the progressives. Or you have progressives angry that some conservative posts are making it through their bubble, but the algorithm sees that these folk like arguing back against the conservatives. But they are getting what they want. Stop responding to posts you don’t like. Stop forwarding their crap along. All that does is tell the algorithm that you like that stuff.
Revealed preferences. Angry people want stuff to be angry about, and the algorithm will accommodate them. They want to be validated that progressives are destroying the country, so they get fed validation. Ditto for those certain that conservatives are promoted fake news, they get fed the fake news that validates them.
The problem isn’t that there are algorithms designed to deliver personalized content, the problem is that people just haven’t learned to live with impartially personalized content. They spent their lives with curated content from people in news departments, or political leaders telling them how to think, or some other human being with a bias curating biased content just for them.
Note that I am NOT claiming that the algorithm is perfect. Not at all. I am merely claiming that it’s doing what it was ostensibly designed to do: deliver personalized content based on the user’s demonstrated preferences. I would tune it differently, but the idea that it was designed to be “progressive” or “conservative” is utter bullshit. The algorithm is agnostic.
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I for one, want to be the Catholic Pope, AND a famous porn star!
Bob Seger, He wants to live like a sailor at sea…
He wants his home and security
He wants to live like a sailor at sea
Beautiful loser, where you gonna fall?
You realize you just can’t have it all…
1. Dillinger
substitute prostitute for p0rn star and you can probably pull it off.
SQRLSY One:
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I agree with the folks who say the ChiComs are of course manipulating what trends on TikTok. Why wouldn't they, we are after all their adversaries. All major social media companies do it. TikTok is one that doesn't? Why?
You have to be a special kind of stupid to not see how TikTok is a CCP psyops tool.
I realize that "stupid" is highly likely given that people still hate Trump irrationally (Michelle Obama) and are stubbornly going to vote for Biden (GenZ).
I've got to hand it to the CCP, they've got broad public support for a tool that allows them to inject a mind virus into the American youth and then sit back and measure the results.
Unfortunately this is yet another example of we must become our enemies so that we can stop them from making us become like them. Banning a website or an application is something the
Chinese Communist Party does. It's not acceptable behavior for our government.
What we need is more liberty, not less. We need to be that example of liberty to the world, not a source of cruise missiles and drone strikes that seem to frequently miss their targets and fuck up a wedding. We need to export our culture of individual liberty and make people in these communist shitholes see there is a real difference.
I remember back when the Berlin Wall fell many people commented that it had less to do with what our politicians did and said but more to do with demand on the other side of the wall for Levi's and Victoria's Secret products. Same with the fall of the Soviet Union.
Our nation needs to return to its Conceived in Liberty roots and export that to China until the people of China get so fed up they actually overturn the mess they have.
Toller Beitrag! Es ist erfrischend zu sehen, wie kritisch und fundiert die Schwächen in der genannten Studie zu Chinas Einfluss auf TikTok-Themen aufgezeigt werden. Deine Analyse bringt wichtige Perspektiven in die Diskussion ein. Vielen Dank für diese aufschlussreiche Betrachtung! - https://picuki.io/de/