TikTok’s privacy update mentions immigration status. Here’s why.
嗯,用户让我总结这篇文章,控制在100字以内,而且不需要用“文章内容总结”之类的开头。首先,我得仔细阅读文章,抓住主要内容。 文章主要讲的是TikTok在2026年更新隐私条款,强制用户接受,其中提到了收集用户的“公民身份或移民状态”信息。这引发了用户的不满和担忧,有人甚至威胁要删除账户。同时,TikTok美国业务被美国公司收购,进一步引发了对透明度的质疑。 不过,作者解释说这可能并没有那么可怕。TikTok并不是直接要求用户提供移民状态,而是指用户自己在视频、调查或AI互动中可能自愿分享的信息。这种变化主要是因为加州的新法律AB-947将移民状态列为敏感信息。 其他社交媒体公司如Meta并没有明确提到移民状态,但可能只是披露语言不同,并不代表实际收集的数据有差异。此外,TikTok还更新了位置跟踪政策,现在可能会收集精确的位置数据。 最后,作者指出社交媒体公司通常对数据收集和使用含糊其辞,用户有理由担心除非平台明确承诺不收集敏感数据或与政府机构共享。 总结一下:TikTok更新隐私政策引发争议,用户不满;政策变化主要因法律要求;其他公司情况类似;位置跟踪政策调整;整体隐私问题更深层次。 </think> TikTok在2026年更新隐私条款引发争议,用户被迫接受包含收集"公民身份或移民状态"信息的内容。尽管TikTok强调并非主动索取此类信息,并非恶意行为,而是受加州新法律影响披露潜在敏感信息的处理方式。然而用户的担忧仍未消除。 2026-1-30 11:48:41 Author: www.malwarebytes.com(查看原文) 阅读量:0 收藏

In 2026, could any five words be more chilling than “We’re changing our privacy terms?”

The timing could not have been worse for TikTok US when it sent millions of US users a mandatory privacy pop-up on January 22. The message forced users to accept updated terms if they wanted to keep using the app. Buried in that update was language about collecting “citizenship or immigration status.”

Specifically, TikTok said:

“Information You Provide may include sensitive personal information, as defined under applicable state privacy laws, such as information from users under the relevant age threshold, information you disclose in survey responses or in your user content about your racial or ethnic origin, national origin, religious beliefs, mental or physical health diagnosis, sexual life or sexual orientation, status as transgender or nonbinary, citizenship or immigration status, or financial information.”

The internet reacted badly. TikTok users took to social media, with some suggesting that TikTok was building a database of immigration status, and others pledging to delete their accounts. It didn’t help that TikTok’s US operation became a US-owned company on the same day, with Senator Ed Markey (D-Mass.) criticizing what he sees as a lack of transparency around the deal.

In this case, things are may be less sinister than you’d think. The language is not new—it first appeared around August 2024. And TikTok is not asking users to provide their immigration status directly.

Instead, the disclosure covers sensitive information that users might voluntarily share in videos, surveys, or interactions with AI features.

The change appears to be driven largely by California’s AB-947, signed in October 2023. The law added immigration status to the state’s definition of sensitive personal information, placing it under stricter protections. Companies are required to disclose how they process sensitive personal information, even if they do not actively seek it out.

Other social media companies, including Meta, do not explicitly mention immigration status in their privacy policies. According to TechCrunch, that difference likely reflects how specific their disclosure language is—not a meaningful difference in what data is actually collected.

One meaningful change in TikTok’s updated policy does concern location tracking. Previous versions stated that TikTok did not collect GPS data from US users. The new policy says it may collect precise location data, depending on user settings. Users can reportedly opt out of this tracking.

Read the whole board, not just one square

So, does this mean TikTok—or any social media company—deserves our trust? That’s a harder question.

There are still red flags. In April, TikTok quietly removed a commitment to notify users before sharing data with law enforcement. According to Forbes, the company has also declined to say whether it shares, or would share, user data with agencies such as the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) or Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE).

That uncertainty is the real issue. Social media companies are notorious for collecting vast amounts of user data, and for being vague about how it may be used later. Outrage over a particularly explicit disclosure is understandable, but the privacy problem runs much deeper than a single policy update from one company.

People have reason to worry unless platforms explicitly commit to not collecting or inferring sensitive data—and explicitly commit to not sharing it with government agencies. And even then, skepticism is healthy. These companies have a long history of changing policies quietly when it suits them.


We don’t just report on data privacy—we help you remove your personal information

Cybersecurity risks should never spread beyond a headline. With Malwarebytes Personal Data Remover, you can scan to find out which sites are exposing your personal information, and then delete that sensitive data from the internet.

About the author

Danny Bradbury has been a journalist specialising in technology since 1989 and a freelance writer since 1994. He covers a broad variety of technology issues for audiences ranging from consumers through to software developers and CIOs. He also ghostwrites articles for many C-suite business executives in the technology sector. He hails from the UK but now lives in Western Canada.


文章来源: https://www.malwarebytes.com/blog/news/2026/01/tiktoks-privacy-update-mentions-immigration-status-heres-why
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