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TikTok's New Guidelines to Ban Anti-LGBTQ Speech

TikTok Announces New Guidelines to Protect LGBTQ+ Users

The TikTok logo is seen on an iPhone 11 Pro max in this photo illustration in Warsaw, Poland on September 29, 2020. The TikTok app will be banned from US app stores from Sunday unless president Donald Trump approves a last-minute deal between US tech firm Oracle and TikTok owner ByteDance. US authorities say the Chinese video sharing app threaten national security and could pass on user data to China. (Photo by Jaap Arriens/NurPhoto via Getty Images)

TikTok has announced a comprehensive update to its Community Guidelines in an effort to protect the LGBTQ+ community. While the short-form video app has been adamant about keeping its guidelines up to date and enforcing said policies, TikTok and other social media apps have faced much criticism about how seriously they take safety and inclusivity. Now, TikTok is making important and explicit changes to its policies to protect users from harassment and hate speech.

On Feb. 8, the company's Head of Trust and Safety published a blog post outlining TikTok's ban of misgendering, deadnaming, or misogyny, as well as any content that promotes "conversion therapy programs." In addition to clearly stating the "hateful ideologies prohibited" on TikTok, the new guidelines have also updated how TikTok will prevent dangerous challenges, how it will identify and remove the promotion of disordered eating, and how it will monitor threats on the platform. The app has recently allowed users to add pronouns to their profiles in order to "encourage respectful and inclusive dialogue" as well.

Following the announcement, GLAAD president and CEO praised these changes in a statement, saying that these actions "create an unsafe environment for LGBTQ people online and too often lead to real world harm." They added, "TikTok's move to expressly prohibit this harmful content in its Community Guidelines and to adopt recommendations made in GLAAD's 2021 Social Media Safety Index raises the standard for LGBTQ safety online and sends a message that other platforms which claim to prioritise LGBTQ safety should follow suit with substantive actions like these." It's reported that Twitter is the only other major platform that explicitly prohibits misgendering and deadnaming.

With a user base of over one billion monthly TikTokers, the app's move to ban hate speech and anti-LGBTQ+ ideologies is not just long overdue — it's essential to protect users' mental health and respect identities. For an application with such massive reach and power with its over-13 audience, upholding community guidelines should be the most important factor to ensure the platform is as much for education as it is for entertainment.

Image Source: Getty / NurPhoto
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