The main EU governing institutions on Thursday banned their staff from installing TikTok on devices used for work amid concerns over data protection, in a move that provoked an angry response from the company.
TikTok, whose parent company ByteDance is Chinese, has faced increasing Western scrutiny in recent months over fears about how much access Beijing has to user data.
The ban affects staff at the European Commission and European Council, which represents member states, but the European Parliament has not yet taken a similar decision.
The new rules mean staff cannot use the video-sharing app on work devices and personal devices, such as phones, that have official EU email and communication apps installed.
The Commission said its employees must remove the app as soon as possible and should do so by March 15.
EU spokeswoman Sonya Gospodinova said the corporate management board of the Commission, the EU's executive arm, had made the decision for security reasons.
"The measure aims to protect the Commission against cybersecurity threats and actions which may be exploited for cyberattacks against the corporate environment of the commission," she said.
European Council spokesman Barend Leyts told AFP it "will be uninstalling the application on corporate devices and requesting staff to uninstall it from personal mobile devices that have access to corporate services".
A spokesperson for TikTok said "we believe this suspension is misguided and based on fundamental misconceptions".
EU industry commissioner Thierry Breton pointed to the cybersecurity risks he said had informed the Commission's decision.
"As an institution, the European Commission has, from the beginning of the mandate, a very strong focus on cybersecurity, protecting our
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