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ByteDance's China head of content quality leaves amid stricter censorship requirements
ByteDance's China head of content quality leaves amid stricter censorship requirements

South China Morning Post

time9 hours ago

  • Business
  • South China Morning Post

ByteDance's China head of content quality leaves amid stricter censorship requirements

ByteDance has parted ways with a senior executive who oversaw content moderation and data labelling for its China-focused apps, according to sources and media reports, as the Beijing-based company advances content security amid Beijing's strict censorship requirements. Li Tong, who led the Content Quality and Data Service (CQC) team under Douyin Group, was no longer listed in ByteDance's internal employee system, according to people familiar with the matter. Douyin, one of ByteDance's core business units, operates several flagship products, including its namesake short-video platform – the Chinese version of TikTok – and the news aggregator Jinri Toutiao. Li also served as deputy editor-in-chief of Toutiao, according to Chinese media outlet The Paper, which first reported the personnel change on Friday. An employee, who asked not to be identified discussing internal matters, described Li as a 'very senior' employee who had been at ByteDance for many years. ByteDance did not immediately respond to a request for comment on Monday. Founded in 2017, the CQC team is responsible for overseeing content quality and user experience across more than 10 products. Past job descriptions for CQC described the team's role as necessary because 'some highly sensitive content cannot be spotted by machine'. In mainland China, platform operators are legally responsible for censoring content considered illegal.

How TikTok's Parent, ByteDance, Became an A.I. Powerhouse
How TikTok's Parent, ByteDance, Became an A.I. Powerhouse

New York Times

time11-04-2025

  • Business
  • New York Times

How TikTok's Parent, ByteDance, Became an A.I. Powerhouse

The Chinese internet giant ByteDance has made some of the world's most popular apps: TikTok and, in China, Douyin and Toutiao. In the United States, TikTok claims 170 million users. But in China, about 700 million use the domestic version, Douyin, and 300 million scroll the headlines on Toutiao, a news app. Every video that ByteDance's users watch or post gives the company another data point about how people use the internet. For years, ByteDance has applied that wealth of information to make its apps more appealing, improving its ability to recommend content to keep users hooked. ByteDance is also using the data as the linchpin of a growing business in artificial intelligence. The company has invested billions of dollars in the infrastructure needed to power A.I. systems, building vast data centers in China and Southeast Asia and buying up advanced semiconductors. ByteDance is also on an A.I. hiring spree. ByteDance is best known outside China for TikTok, an app so popular that at least 20 governments have adopted partial bans over concerns about its influence on national security and public opinion. Concern over how ByteDance uses data has driven lawmakers in Washington to try to force a sale of TikTok's U.S. operations. On Friday, President Trump extended a looming deadline by 75 days into mid-June. But in China all that data has helped ByteDance expand its business far beyond social media and gain an edge in the global race to build advanced A.I. technology. 'ByteDance has all this data, all the time, from millions of users,' said Wei Sun, a principal analyst in artificial intelligence at Counterpoint Research in Beijing. Officials in Beijing have pushed China's tech companies to pivot from entertainment apps to what the government sees as an existential goal: self-reliance in cutting-edge technologies that also have military applications, like semiconductors, supercomputers and artificial intelligence. ByteDance has embraced that mission. Last year, the company spent roughly $11 billion on infrastructure like data centers, networking equipment and computer chips, according to a report by Zheshang Securities, a Chinese financial firm. The Biden administration set up rules to try to keep Chinese companies from getting access to those kinds of chips, particularly ones made by Nvidia, the Silicon Valley giant. But ByteDance has found ways to get the computing power it needs to train its systems — in part by using data centers outside China and most likely, analysts say, by buying chips made by Chinese chipmakers like Huawei and Cambricon. While these Chinese-made chips cannot do everything the Nvidia chips can do, they work well enough to help companies like ByteDance provide A.I. services to people and businesses in China. Chinese tech companies have been 'encouraged to adopt local options' for buying chips, said Lian Jye Su, an analyst at Omdia, a market research firm. All this spending has helped ByteDance make one of the most popular artificial intelligence apps in China. Its chatbot, Doubao, gained 60 million users within its first three months on the market last year. It was China's most popular chatbot, beating rivals made by Baidu and Alibaba-backed Moonshot, until the start-up DeepSeek released its own this year. ByteDance showed how closely connected its app ecosystem is with its A.I. efforts when it recently started allowing some users to chat with Doubao inside the Douyin app. In 2021, ByteDance started Volcano Engine, a business that lets other companies pay to use the technologies that made TikTok, Douyin and Toutiao so addictive, like tools to analyze information and the algorithms that recommend videos. Some of these services were natural applications of the technology that ByteDance developed for Douyin and TikTok, like filters that can make people appear much older or superimpose sparkly hearts on their faces. ByteDance used its experience making these filters to help companies like Haier and Hisense develop movement-tracking technology for gesture-controlled home appliances like smart televisions. GAC Group, one of China's largest makers of electric vehicles, is using Volcano Engine to translate and manage data for cars sold outside China. And Mercedes-Benz said last year that it would use Volcano Engine in its in-car voice assistant and navigation system in China. ByteDance did not respond to a request for comment. Company job postings show that ByteDance is hiring for hundreds of A.I.-related roles. The company recently directed its engineering team to focus on a milestone that tech companies like OpenAI, Google and DeepSeek are also chasing — making an A.I. system that is as smart as or smarter than humans, often referred to as artificial general intelligence. While many Chinese companies have started A.I. projects, a much smaller number have the resources to invest in the personnel and computing power needed to advance the technology. Some experts expect that a research team somewhere in the world will make this kind of system within the next year or two.

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