Almost no one can imagine that in the American Internet circle, which has always been full of disputes and disagreements on various issues in the industry, TikTok, a powerful emerging global upstart, has frequently stood in the same camp to jointly resist and denounce the rapid development of this short video application.
It seems that just mentioning the name of this enterprise can step on the painful feet of American technology companies and provoke their sensitive nerves to the future Internet competition.
This one-sided denunciation of TikTok was even increasingly presented at the public industry conference.
At the recently concluded Code Conference of the American scientific and technological community, the Silicon Valley technology giants, mainstream scientific and technological media, as well as the elites in the scientific and technological academia, instead of focusing on discussing the emergence of black technology or seriously communicating the process of scientific and technological innovation, focused on TikTok and staged a "TikTok Criticism Conference".
In the "off topic" American Annual Coding Conference, Google CEO Sundar Pichai took the lead in attacking TikTok.
In an interview with a senior technology reporter, Sander Pichai first said that Google was facing the threat of emerging technology enterprises "emerging from nowhere", and then referred to TikTok.
"TikTok is developing too fast.
Three years ago, no one discussed it at all." Sandel Pichai believes that TikTok has grown into a strong competitor to Google's video platform YouTube.
In the interview at the coding conference the next day, Evan Spiegel, the CEO of the parent company of Snapchat, also joined in the criticism of TikTok.
Evan Spiegel pointed out that the success of TikTok depends entirely on its efforts to create miracles.
By spending "billions of dollars" to buy creators and users to seize market share, it was able to make this previously unknown product popular all over the world.
Evan Spiegel also added that for emerging start-ups, they cannot "buy" users like TikTok, and TikTok's growth is not a product of technological innovation.
In addition to the condemnation of technology giants, Minnesota Senator Amy Klouchar also criticized TikTok.
She once proposed an anti-monopoly bill in the Senate, focusing on combating the problem of false news on large social platforms.
At the coding conference, she said that when TikTok grew to a certain scale in the future, she would also include it in the key control objects of the bill.
Moreover, the most severe criticism of TikTok in the coding conference came from Mathias Dopfner, CEO of Axel Springer, a well-known media group.
He described TikTok as a "nail in the eye" of the media industry and called out

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