HomeTop StoriesChina's second-richest man demands an apology from ByteDance founder over online attacks

China’s second-richest man demands an apology from ByteDance founder over online attacks

China’s second-richest man surprisingly demanded on Wednesday that the country’s richest man, founder of ByteDance, apologize for the perceived role TikTok’s Chinese sibling Douyin has played in “spreading rumors and disinformation.”

Zhong Shanshan, 69 – founder and chairman of China’s largest packaged beverage company Nongfu Spring and the country’s second-richest person, according to Hurun’s latest rankings – lashed out at 41-year-old Zhang Yiming for allowing misinformation to spread spread on ByteDance’s social media platforms and caused damage. Zhong’s reputation.

ByteDance declined to comment Thursday.

Do you have questions about the biggest topics and trends from around the world? Get the answers with SCMP Knowledge, our new platform of curated content with explainers, FAQs, analyzes and infographics, brought to you by our award-winning team.

Zhong’s comments, part of a public speech in southeastern China’s Jiangxi province, were widely reported by Chinese media. The billionaire entrepreneur and the company he runs were targeted by online nationalist trolls earlier this year due to the perceived Japanese style of the packaging, leading to a boycott by angry consumers.

See also  LAPD searches for man accused of carjacking three women in one day

Zhang Yiming, founder of ByteDance. Photo: Chinatopix via AP alt=Zhang Yiming, founder of ByteDance. Photo: Chinatopix via AP>

The series of attack campaigns sparked a debate over the responsibility of the Chinese government, opinion leaders, the public and social media in stoking nationalist passions, but Zhong is the first businessman to openly point the finger at online platforms.

Specifically, he named Douyin, China’s most popular short video app, and Toutiao, ByteDance’s news feed tool, as the culprits.

“I request Toutiao and Douyin not to use the so-called safe harbor principle to evade their responsibility,” Zhong was quoted by local media. “Please delete immediately that hurts me and slanders me.”

He added that Zhang, “the de facto administrator of ByteDance,” should “follow the rules of business courtesy.” Zhang has retreated from the public eye after stepping down as CEO of ByteDance and relinquishing his board seat in 2021, but is believed to continue to wield significant power behind the scenes.

See also  Pennsylvania Task Force 1 returns from 23-day Hurricane Helene rescue mission

Nongfu Spring bottled water sold in a supermarket in Hong Kong. Photo: Jelly Tse alt=Nongfu Spring bottled water sold in a supermarket in Hong Kong. Photo: Jelly Tse>

Zhong said that if left unchecked, internet platforms cause more harm than any other entity. He called on authorities to “come out and give us justice” and asked ByteDance to make its content recommendation algorithm public.

- Advertisement -
RELATED ARTICLES

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Most Popular

Recent Comments