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Article

2 Jul 2020

Author:
BBC (UK)

TikTok says it did not receive or store data from Apple iPhone clipboards despite security researchers' allegations

“TikTok 'didn't store' iPhone clipboard data”, 29 June 2020

Social media platform TikTok has told the BBC it did not receive or store any data from Apple iPhone clipboards.

In a developer trial of the latest update to the phone's operating system, iOS 14, users are notified whenever an app accesses the handset's clipboard.

TikTok was one of 53 apps that security researchers had previously flagged as regularly seeking clipboard access.

TikTok said it introduced the move to stop people spamming the platform by copying and pasting the same content.

The platform, owned by Chinese firm Bytedance, also said it disabled the feature via an automated app update…

It was never enabled on Android devices, it added…

The news had alarmed privacy campaigners.

"People ought to be aware that on mobile devices, in order to try and be helpful they can be doing things that are slightly unexpected," said Prof Alan Woodward, cyber-security expert at Surrey University.

"It's not ideal but in this case there is no evidence that it was sending the data anywhere other than the phone. There's no cause for alarm."…

In research published in March, Talal Haj Bakry and Tommy Mysk identified dozens of apps which they said accessed the clipboard.

Apple told them at the time that it did not believe there was an issue with the vulnerability - but its new iOS update now warns iPhone users when it happens.

The pair identified various news channels, games, and social media/messaging platforms which sought clipboard data.

They included Reuters, the New York Times, Russia Today, Fruit Ninja, Player Unknown's Battlegrounds, Plants vs Zombies, TikTok, Viber and Weibo…