Join GLAAD and take action for acceptance.

    2024 Social Media Safety Index

    TikTok

    TikTok receives a score of 67, a 10-point increase from its 2023 scoreIn the 2024 SMSI Platform Scorecard, TikTok receives a score of 67, a 10-point increase from its 2023 score. The company has made several notable improvements to its policies. For instance, in its revised “TikTok’s Anti-Discrimination Ad Policy,” the company explicitly prohibits advertisers from wrongfully targeting or excluding users from seeing ads based on their sexual orientation or gender identity. The company has also improved its transparency regarding LGBTQ users’ control over their own information. On a recently launched portal that contains policy disclosures and resources for LGBTQ users, the company provides that it does not collect users’ sexual orientation information. Moreover, TikTok discloses on this page that users who share information related to their sexual orientation and/or gender identity can delete this information. Of the scored platforms, TikTok is one of only two with a policy expressly prohibiting both targeted misgendering and deadnaming. It also continues to be the only company that does not require user self-reporting of a potential community guidelines violation in this area, and also employs technologies, human review, and/or reporting from other users to detect violations to the policy.

    However, the company’s policies fail to adequately protect LGBTQ users in other key areas. The company discloses only limited information regarding the proactive steps it takes to address wrongful demonetization and removal of LGBTQ creators and content from ad services on the platform. TikTok also does not disclose any data showing how many pieces of content and accounts related to LGBTQ issues have been wrongfully demonetized or removed from ad services. While the company makes a public commitment to diversifying its workforce, it does not publish any data on its LGBTQ workforce.

    Key Recommendations:

    • Give LGBTQ users greater control over the content they see: LGBTQ users should have more options to control the content they see, and recommendation of content based on their sexual orientation and gender identity should be off by default.
    • Be more transparent about the wrongful demonetization and removal of LGBTQ TikTokers: The company should publish comprehensive data on the wrongful demonetization and removal of LGBTQ creators and their content from ad services.
    • Track and disclose progress towards meeting employment diversity goals: The company should publish annual data showing its progress towards reaching diversity and inclusion goals, and disclose the number of LGBTQ employees across different teams.

    More Publications from GLAAD

    Transgender Day of Remembrance, which honors the memory of those murdered because of anti-transgender prejudice, is recognized annually on November 20. GLAAD encourages journalists to mark the occasion with stories about the pervasive problem of crimes against transgender people, as well as the diversity and resilience of the community in the face of harassment and violence.

    Read More

    Every year, the South Asian community comes together to celebrate Diwali, a massively popular worldwide event that has a rich complexity in belief and meaning. Also known as the “Festival of Lights,” it signals the New Year while for others, it represents a time for reflection and renewal.

    Read More

    On the morning of June 28, 1969, a group of patrons at the Stonewall Inn – a New York city bar that was a frequent target of police raids because it catered to the lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) community – fought back against police brutality and harassment. Their uprising set in motion a wave of activism among LGBT people that put the issue of LGBT civil rights on the American political map. This resource kit will help journalists cover the 40th anniversary of this momentous event in the history LGBT rights.

    Read More

    stay tuned!