Tag: tiktok

  • Man kills wife for posting videos on TikTok

    Man kills wife for posting videos on TikTok

    A man allegedly murdered his wife in Karachi’s Landhi’s Sherpao Colony for uploading videos on social media app TikTok in spite of his objections.

    As per reports, the man, identified as Ishaq, killed his wife and mother-in-law over TikTok videos in Karachi on Sunday.

    Police said the man had asked his wife not to go out without his permission and post videos on TikTok.

    Read More: #TikTokGaga launched to boost aspiring singers in Pakistan

    The deceased identified as Ramsha used to make TikTok videos but her husband did not like it. Police said Ramsha was living at her parents’ house after fighting with her husband.

    Police have recorded the statements of the eyewitnesses and raids are being carried out to arrest the suspect. A case has also been registered against Ishaq.

  • VIDEO: American singer Jason Derulo makes Jalebi

    VIDEO: American singer Jason Derulo makes Jalebi

    American singer Jason Derulo recently posted a TikTok video where he can be seen making jalebi while his remix of the Bollywood song ‘Jalebi Baby‘ plays in the background. The video has over 600,000 likes and almost 12,000 shares.

    https://twitter.com/gurleennn/status/1407486558958067713?s=20

    Social media users praised the singer for making the perfect jalebis.

    https://twitter.com/snowberali/status/1407637521140494339?s=20

    Read More: UAE eatery launches world’s most expensive biryani with 23-karat gold

    https://twitter.com/shrnkr_/status/1407545193654521857?s=20

    Someone suggested that this is a very ‘cool way’ to promote his version of Jalebi Baby.

    While some people did not see this coming.

    https://twitter.com/notraveeoli/status/1407524250991353857?s=20

  • Tik Tok influencers jailed for human trafficking

    Tik Tok influencers jailed for human trafficking

    Tik Tok influencers in Cairo, Egypt were convicted of human trafficking by a Criminal court

    As per reports, Haneen Hossam, 20 was sentenced to 10 years in jail and a fine of 200,000 pounds while 22-year-old Mawada El Adhamwas was sentenced to six-year jail and fined 200,000 pounds.

    They were imprisoned for encouraging young women to record indecent videos and post footage on the video-sharing app in exchange for money.

    They were detained last year and later handed out a two year-sentence each for violating the values and principles of the Egyptian family and provoking debauchery.

    On January 12, their two-year-sentence was cancelled after they were acquitted of violating family morals. But a week later, the court upheld an appeal overturning jail sentences on charges of human trafficking.

    Hossam was arrested in April 2020 on charges of asking young women to share indecent videos on Tik Tok app, while El Adham was arrested in May 2020 after sharing indecent video clips on Instagram.

  • TikTok is being sued for misusing data of millions of children

    TikTok, which is owned by Chinese company ByteDan could face a damages claim worth billions of pounds (dollars) in London’s High Court over allegations that they have illegally harvested the private data of millions of European children, Reuters has reported.

    That case will be heard next week and affected children could receive thousands of pounds each if the claim is successful.

    “TikTok is a hugely popular social media platform that has helped children keep in touch with their friends during an incredibly difficult year. However, behind the fun songs, dance challenges and lip-sync trends lies something far more sinister,” Anne Longfield, the former Children’s Commissioner for England told BBC.

    Longfield alleged that every child that has used TikTok since May 25, 2018, may have had private personal information illegally collected by ByteDance through TikTok for the benefit of unknown third parties.

    “Parents and children have a right to know that private information, including phone numbers, physical location, and videos of their children are being illegally collected,” she added.

    Read more- 10-year-old girl dies trying TikTok’s ‘blackout challenge’

    A TikTok representative said privacy and safety were the company’s top priorities and that it had robust policies, processes and technologies in place to help protect all users, especially teenage users.

    “We believe the claims lack merit and intend to vigorously defend the action,” the representative said.

    Earlier this year in March TikTok was banned in Pakistan due to immoral content, but the ban was later lifted.

    The popular video-sharing app was banned for the first time in October last year. The Pakistan Telecommunication Authority (PTA) had blocked TikTok after the company “failed to fully comply” with its instructions for the “development of an effective mechanism for proactive moderation of unlawful online content”. Later, the ban was lifted when the TikTok management assured authorities that it will block all accounts repeatedly involved in spreading obscenity and immorality.

  • Woman travels from America to marry Pakistani TikToker

    Woman travels from America to marry Pakistani TikToker

    A 40-year-old woman from America flew seven seas to Pakistan after falling in love with a Pakistani TikToker.

    VIDEO: Tiktokers Zulqarnain, Kanwal Aftab tie the knot

    As per details, Daniel, a resident of Washington DC arrived in Pakistan after falling in love with 27-year-old TikToker Afshan Raaj who hails from Rawalpindi.

    Daniel accepted Islam and married Raaj. She also changed her name to Hafsa. The couple’s love story began when they started liking each other’s videos on TikTok.

    Talking to The Express Tribune, Raaj said that Hafsa liked and commented on his TikTok video a few months ago after which they began talking to each other. He said that he is very lucky as Hafsa converted to Islam to marry him, adding that he has a lot of respect for his wife as she left her native country and came all the way to Pakistan to marry him.

    On the other hand, Hafsa said that before making this decision, she did detailed research on Islam. Hafsa said that she added followers of different beliefs and religions in a Whatsapp group after which concluded that Islam is the religion for eternal peace and happiness in life and hereafter. She clarified that she took this step by her own will and was not pressurised by anybody to change her religious beliefs.

    Hafsa further said that she is very fond of Asian culture and is trying to learn Urdu. She said that based on her experience, she finds Pakistanis very hospitable.

  • Peshawar High Court orders immediate ban on TikTok

    Peshawar High Court orders immediate ban on TikTok

    The Peshawar High Court (PHC) has banned TikTok, a popular social media application commonly used by teenagers and influencers for video sharing, over immoral content.

    PHC Chief Justice (CJ) Qasier Rashid Khan said that the ban will not be lifted till the immoral content is removed.

    The Pakistan Telecommunication Authority (PTA) Director General (DG) told the court he contacted TikTok management to remove the objectionable content but didn’t receive any response. Justice Khan remarked that the app should remain blocked till authorities respond.

    Last year in September, a man approached Peshawar High court after the PTA and other institutions failed to take notice of the “Immoral and objectionable” content on the app.

    He said that “such activities are leading the country’s youth astray, adding that suicide cases are on the rise too.”

    Last year, Pakistan also blocked the app on October 9, 2020, when PTA issued final notice to the TikTok management.

    They were given considerable time to respond and develop an effective mechanism for proactive moderation of unlawful online content. TikTok has failed to fully comply with PTA’s instructions.

    Later on, the ban was lifted when the TikTok management had told the authority that it will block all accounts repeatedly involved in spreading obscenity and immorality.

    As per the orders of PHC, PTA has directed the service providers to immediately block access to TikTok.

  • Facebook launches TikTok-like app for rappers

    Facebook has launched a TikTok-like app called BARS for creating and sharing short rap videos.

    According to reports, Facebook’s BARS is specifically designed for making content in rapping style. Rappers can create and share their raps using professionally created beats via this app.

    The app also suggests rhymes from a rhyming dictionary to keep your flow going. There is also a ‘Challenge Mode’ in which users can select ‘freestyle’ along with auto-suggested word cues.

    “Audio production tools can be complicated, expensive and difficult to use. With BARS, you can select one of our professionally-created beats, write lyrics and record yourself dropping bars,” Facebook said in a statement.

    The videos can be up to 60 seconds long and can be saved or shared out on other social media platforms.

    BARS, which was built with a team of aspiring rappers, is available for download through Apple’s US App Store and is initially accessible for a small number of iOS users only.

  • People who use social media for news more susceptible to rumours: study

    People who use social media for news more susceptible to rumours: study

    The United States citizens who rely on social media as their main source of news are more likely to believe false or unproven stories about important topics such as politics and COVID-19, according to a survey.

    The Pew Research Centre report found that people who used social media platforms for news were less informed about major public matters and more susceptible to believing rumors and hoaxes.

    The report comes with social media platforms becoming a growing source of news amid struggles by traditional media to survive in the digital age.

    The Pew report found some 18 per cent of the participants of the survey got most of their political and election news through social media. But those people were less likely to rightly answer the fact-based questions about politics and current affairs than those relying on print, broadcast or news apps.

    Social media news consumers were more aware of specific false or unproven stories about COVID-19 and said they had seen more misinformation about the pandemic such as claims that Vitamin C could prevent infection, the survey found.

    On political news, social media users were less informed about facts such as the function of the state-by-state, Electoral College votes, which ultimately decide who wins the White House, or the unemployment rate.

    The report comes from a series on interviews with some 9,000 US adults from November 2019 through December 2020.

    A majority in the survey said they distrusted social media with Facebook the least trusted among the platforms.

    Among those using traditional media, the researchers also found that roughly a quarter of the US citizen on the political left and right consistently turned to “partisan” news sites, reinforcing their views.

    Pew found that roughly three in 10 Republicans relied on former president Donald Trump as a major source of news about the election and the coronavirus.

    These Republicans were more likely to think the COVID-19 pandemic had been overblown and more likely to see voter fraud as a significant threat to election integrity.

  • 10-year-old girl dies trying TikTok’s ‘blackout challenge’

    A 10-year-old girl has reportedly died after allegedly trying TikTok’s viral ‘Blackout Challenge” on TikTok. As per details, the girl was found dead in her washroom by her younger sister.

    Initial investigation has suggested that the girl named Antonella had placed a belt around her neck to prevent herself from breathing to try the challenge. However, she ended up killing herself. When she was later taken to a hospital in Palermo, Italy, the doctors declared her brain dead.

    “Blackout challenge” is also known as “pass out challenge” and “the fainting game”. In this challenge, individuals try to temporarily suffocate themselves in order to get a feeling of euphoria.

    The girl’s parents said that they had no idea Antonella was participating in this game.

    “We knew our daughter went on TikTok for dances and to look at videos, but could we imagine this atrocity?,” they said.

    Speaking to an international publican, a TikTok spokesperson said: “The safety of the TikTok community is our absolute priority, for this motive we do not allow any content that encourages, promotes or glorifies behavior that could be dangerous.”

    Italian authorities have also ordered the social media platform to block all accounts where the user’s age could not be verified.

    Meanwhile, a boy in Rawalpindi also lost his life trying to shoot a stunt in front of a train for a TikTok video.

    Actor, Adnan Siddiqui took to Twitter to express his sorrow over the incident.

    “No number of likes or social media followers is greater than your life. Entertainment doesn’t mean putting yourself in harms way,” he wrote.

    Adnan added, “Sad a young life was lost to foolishness. Others should heed this as a lesson and act wisely.”

  • Sarmad Qadeer’s ‘Ishq’ to feature TikTok star Alishba Anjum

    TikTok star Alishbah Anjum is all set to make her acting debut with a music video. Anjum, who has more than 10 million followers on TikTok, will make an appearance in Sarmad Qadeer’s song titled Ishq.

    The song has been written, composed and sung by Qadeer himself and the music video will be released under the banner of One Two Records.

    Earler, Alishba’s sister Jannat Mirza also debuted in Sarmad Qadeer’s Shayar. The song was a hit with15 million views so far.