TikTok faces app deletions, censorship claims and
glitches in days after its ownership change
[January 28, 2026] By
BARBARA ORTUTAY
Censorship claims, technical problems and a report of a surge in app
deletions are just some of the challenges TikTok is facing as it adjusts
to a new ownership structure in the United States that was finalized
last week.
The company said Monday it was experiencing a “major infrastructure
issue triggered by a power outage” at one of its U.S. data center
partner sites. The outage led to bugs such as creators temporarily
seeing zero views on their videos even if people had looked at them, as
well as slow load times and timeout requests when posting videos.
On Tuesday, TikTok said it had made significant progress restoring
services though users could still see glitches while using the popular
video sharing app.
At the same time, users were raising concerns that the company is
“censoring” videos, including ones critical of President Donald Trump,
ICE or mentions of Jeffrey Epstein. The complaints were enough for
California Gov. Gavin Newsom to announce on X Monday that he is
launching a review into whether TikTok is violating state law by
censoring Trump-critical content.

Jamie Favazza, a spokesperson for TikTok's new U.S. joint venture, said
it is inaccurate to say that the problems users have been encountering
are “anything but the technical issues we’ve transparently confirmed.”
Still, the technical problems combined with the ties that some of the
new owners have to Trump bristled some U.S. users just enough to delete
the app. Market intelligence firm Sensor Tower said Tuesday that daily
average app uninstalls grew 130% from Jan. 22 to Jan. 26 compared with
the previous 30 days. However, daily average users still increased by 2%
in the same period, which Sensor Tower says suggests the uninstalls had
little effect on overall usage. And while TikTok lagged YouTube and
Instagram in U.S. user growth, people spent more time on the platform
than its rivals.
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The icon for the TikTok video sharing app is seen on a smartphone in
Marple Township, Pa., Feb. 28, 2023. (AP Photo/Matt Slocum, File)
 Minda Smiley, a social media analyst
at research firm Emarketer, noted that ownership change did just
happen and that TikTok is going through a lot of
infrastructure-related shifts, which can lead to technical issues.
But if there are still problems with certain videos not uploading,
or the censorship claims persist, TikTok could see bigger issues
down the line.
“Optics and perceptions are really important in situations like
this, so I would stay like regardless of what’s actually happening,
if people do feel as if content is being suppressed or content is
difficult to upload or is being moderated or whatever it might be,
that’s enough reason for a lot of users to flee or to stop using
TikTok or to say they’re going to stop using TikTok,” she said.
That being said, “what users say and do is often different,” she
added. After all, it was only a year ago that TikTok users were
flocking to RedNote, a Chinese social media app, to protest a
potential TikTok ban. The protest didn't last and RedNote doesn't
see much discussion in the U.S. these days.
“Still, I think my point still stands that if this continues and
people do feel as if the algorithm is changing, the content is
changing, it certainly presents a challenge for TikTok,” Smiley
added.
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