TikTok US Trust & Safety Head Exits Role as Pressure Mounts

One of TikTok’s senior-most officials in charge of ensuring user safety is leaving the company amid increasing pressure for the US government to ban the popular video-sharing app.

(Bloomberg) — One of TikTok’s senior-most officials in charge of ensuring user safety is leaving the company amid increasing pressure for the US government to ban the popular video-sharing app. 

Eric Han, who has led TikTok’s US trust and safety operations for years, will depart this month, a person briefed on the matter said. Han had been promoted to lead trust and safety at the company’s newly walled-off US data operations in December.

Han has been one of the most prominent officials in TikTok’s all-out effort to convince skeptical lawmakers and policy makers that the app is safe for US users and that it shouldn’t be banned. TikTok is facing a national security review in connection with its ownership by Chinese tech giant ByteDance Ltd., and multiple bills in Congress that could limit access to the app.

In December, TikTok combined its global trust and safety team with its US-based trust and safety group, which Han had led from Los Angeles. Former employees who worked closely with Han say he was frustrated when he wasn’t offered the role of leading the combined team and instead given a promotion he didn’t want: head of trust and safety for the new US Data Security team.

This team was created specifically to appease US national security concerns. While Han’s role was prestigious on paper, he eventually compared it to being given a “poison chalice” — a job that sounds good at first, but that would leave him susceptible to being a scapegoat.

Han refuted the description of the circumstances through a TikTok spokesperson, who declined to comment further. The Verge previously reported on Han’s intent to exit.

In March, TikTok CEO Shou Chew appeared before Congress in what became a contentious event, fielding questions about potential influence from China, dangerous content on the platform and how user data is protected.

The company has struggled to hire seasoned, public-facing executives willing to be the front-people between anti-China politicians and TikTok, people familiar with the matter have told Bloomberg.

(Updates with Han’s response in sixth paragraph)

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