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Judi Lynn

(160,527 posts)
Thu Feb 6, 2020, 03:51 AM Feb 2020

TIKTOK LIVESTREAMED A USER'S SUICIDE -- THEN GOT ITS PR STRATEGY IN PLACE BEFORE CALLING THE POLICE


Paulo Victor Ribeiro
February 5 2020, 11:01 p.m.
LEIA EM PORTUGUÊS

JOÃO FILMED THE last livestream of his life on a summer afternoon a year ago. He was 19 and living in Curitiba, the capital of the state of Paraná in southern Brazil. The day before, João issued an ominous warning to his fans that he had been planning a special performance.

Their eyes glued to the screens of their cellphones, some 280 people watched the young vlogger kill himself live on TikTok, last year’s fourth-most downloaded app in the world. It was 3:23 p.m. on February 21, 2019. The video, with 497 comments and 15 complaints, remained live for more than an hour and a half, simply showing João’s body. (The Intercept is using a pseudonym for João to protect his family’s privacy.)

Officials at TikTok, which has seen a meteoric rise among a sea of phone apps, only became aware of the suicide at 5 p.m. The company immediately began putting a public relations strategy in place to ensure that what had occurred never made headlines.

Between 5 p.m. and 7:56 p.m., TikTok’s Brazil office began to take steps to minimize the impact any potential story would have in the press. The company waited nearly three hours after learning about the suicide before reaching out to the police. Instead of alerting authorities immediately, the company prepared a press statement — that it never released of its own volition — taking no responsibility for failures of the moderation mechanisms that left the livestream online for more than an hour. Officials inside TikTok issued internal orders to ensure that the story did not go “viral” and said its local office should monitor TikTok and other social media platforms to see if the story surfaced publicly.

Details of the moves were revealed to The Intercept Brasil by a former employee of the Brazilian offices of ByteDance, TikTok’s parent company, who asked to remain anonymous for fear of retaliation. The source also provided The Intercept with an internal document that detailed the company’s management of the crisis, including a granular timeline of what happened. The account of the events below is drawn from the company memo and interviews with the source.

More:
https://theintercept.com/2020/02/06/tiktok-suicide-brazil/
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TIKTOK LIVESTREAMED A USER'S SUICIDE -- THEN GOT ITS PR STRATEGY IN PLACE BEFORE CALLING THE POLICE (Original Post) Judi Lynn Feb 2020 OP
Pretty par for the course when it comes to social media companies... RockRaven Feb 2020 #1
Suicide Deaths Are Often 'Contagious.' This May Help Explain Why safeinOhio Feb 2020 #2

RockRaven

(14,966 posts)
1. Pretty par for the course when it comes to social media companies...
Thu Feb 6, 2020, 04:21 AM
Feb 2020

Totally amoral, PR/bottom line driven. If their personhood was human, we'd call them sociopathic. Instead we must reserve that label for the human executives/employees.

safeinOhio

(32,675 posts)
2. Suicide Deaths Are Often 'Contagious.' This May Help Explain Why
Thu Feb 6, 2020, 05:05 AM
Feb 2020
https://time.com/5572394/suicide-contagion-study/

In the wake of any high-profile suicide, public health experts steel themselves for the aftershock. Suicide contagion, the phenomenon by which exposure to one suicide death can trigger suicidal behavior in others, is well-documented but poorly understood.
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