ByteDance will reportedly lay off more than two-thirds of India-based staffers following the country’s decision to make its TikTok ban permanent.
“It is deeply regretful that after supporting our 2000+ employees in India for more than half a year, we have no choice but to scale back the size of our workforce,” a TikTok spokesperson told TechCrunch.
Only “critical” members of the staff will remain, a person familiar with the matter told the outlet.
India first banned TikTok and nearly 60 other Chinese apps in June 2020, calling them a “threat to sovereignty and integrity” and citing cybersecurity concerns similar to those expressed
by American lawmakers who supported Donald Trump’s apparently abandoned attempt to eradicate TikTok from the U.S. (The newly installed Biden administration does not seem inclined to restart proceedings.)The ban was upheld last week, reportedly because India believes ByteDance and other app parents have not done enough to address security issues. Lawmakers indicated they were open to continuing conversations with the companies, but Indian media reported that, at least for now, the ban is considered permanent.
TikTok had around 200 million monthly active Indian users when it was barred. For comparison, it currently has around 100 million monthly users in the U.S.
In an internal memo obtained by TechCrunch, TikTok CEO Vanessa Pappas and VP of global business Blake Chandlee told employees that the company “initially hoped that this situation would be short-lived, and that we would be able to resolve this quickly.”
“For the last several months, our management team has worked tirelessly to avoid having to separate anyone from the company,” they added. “However, we simply cannot responsibly stay fully staffed while our apps remain un-operational.”
According to TechCrunch’s source, TikTok’s India team was told to work on developing other, non-banned ByteDance apps (like collaboration platform Lark) while the ban was in place.
Pappas and Chandlee indicated that TikTok doesn’t intend to give up: “While we don’t know when we will make a comeback in India, we are confident in our resilience, and desire to do so in times to come,” they said.
It's been about two months since Twitch went dark in South Korea, and some compelling alternatives have…
Mark Rober is teaching his fans about "all the tools and tricks" that inform his YouTube videos.…
Gen Z venture capitalist Marshall Sandman is giving his friends a ride in his new…
What moral obligations do creators have when they work with questionable brands? The #1 video…
Dimension 20, Dropout's Dungeons & Dragons show, is coming to Madison Square Garden for a…
Last week, Watcher--the content studio founded in 2019 by former Buzzfeed-ers Ryan Bergara, Steven Lim,…