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** Road disorder needs proper implementation of law ** 56 hurt in clashes among AL, BNP and cops in Natore, Khulna, Rajshahi ** Bangladesh serves as a model for rest of world: US Asst Secy Noyes ** People crowd the shop of a Trading Corporation of Bangladesh dealer for essential commodities at subsidised prices in Dhaka's Lalbagh on Saturday amid high prices of daily necessities in the market. Agency photo ** Broiler chicken goes up selling at Tk230 a kg, egg price decreases ** Metro rail: Shewrapara, Uttara South stations now open to public ** 35 bodies found inside well after collapse at Indian temple ** Free journalist Shams, repeal DSA: TIB ** Prothom Alo journalist Shams denied bail, sent to jail ** Philippines ferry fire leaves 31 dead, at least 7 missing ** Workers of a readymade garment factory stage a demonstration and barricade the road at Uttara's Jashim Uddin road in the capital on Wednesday demanding payment of their dues. ** Landslide in Cox's Bazar leaves 3 Rohingyas dead ** Liberation war veteran Nur-E-Alam Siddiqui passes away ** Shakib takes five as Bangladesh beat Ireland by 77 runs to seal T20 series ** UNOs’ role as CEO in Upazila Parishads illegal, unconstitutional: HC ** Former MP Nur E Alam Siddique passes away ** Myanmar junta dissolves Suu Kyi's party, much of opposition ** 13 Bangladeshis reported dead in KSA road crash ** 39 dead in fire at Mexico migrant center near US border ** 20 Hajj pilgrims killed in Saudi Arabia accident ** Jasmine’s death in RAB custody not acceptable ** HC wants autopsy report, list of RAB men who grilled Jasmine ** Dhaka commuters face heavy traffic congestion on first working day of Ramzan ** High-rise building catches fire in capital's Katabon ** At Tk 150 per dozen in Dhaka markets, eggs not an affordable protein source any more **

New Zealand lawmakers banned from TikTok amid data use fears

18 March 2023
New Zealand lawmakers banned from TikTok amid data use fears


AP :
New Zealand lawmakers and other workers inside the nation's Parliament will be banned from having the TikTok app on their government phones, officials said Friday.
The ban, which takes effect at the end of the month, follows similar moves in many other countries.
However, New Zealand's ban will apply only to about 500 people in the parliamentary complex, not to all government workers like bans in the U.S. and Britain. Other New Zealand agencies could decide later to impose their own bans.
Global concern about the app comes after warnings by the FBI and other agencies that TikTok's Chinese parent company ByteDance could share TikTok user data - such as browsing history, location and biometric identifiers - with China's authoritarian government.
New Zealand Prime Minister Chris Hipkins said he didn't have TikTok on his phone.
"I'm not that hip and trendy," he told reporters.
The New Zealand move came on the advice of government cybersecurity experts, said Parliamentary Service Chief Executive Rafael Gonzalez-Montero.
He said the app would be removed from all devices with access to the parliamentary network, although officials could make special arrangements for anybody who needed TikTok to perform their democratic duties.
"This decision has been made based on our own experts' analysis and following discussion with our colleagues across government and internationally," Gonzalez-Montero said in a statement. "Based on this information, the service has determined that the risks are not acceptable in the current New Zealand parliamentary environment."
Hipkins said cybersecurity advice came from New Zealand's intelligence agency, the Government Communications Security Bureau. He said New Zealand didn't take a blanket approach to all government workers, and it would be up to each department or agency to make cybersecurity decisions.

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