TikTok Works to Address Hoaxes, Dangerous Challenges The survey found that 31% of teens had taken part in an online challenge of some kind.

By Emily Rella

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

KIRILL KUDRYAVTSEV | Getty Images

TikTok is moving to more aggressively combat the spread of dangerous challenges and hoaxes after commissioning a survey of over 10,000 teens, parents and teachers in a handful of countries.

The survey found that 31% of teens had taken part in an online challenge of some kind.

Typically, challenges are harmless, but some -- like the milk crate challenges from earlier this year, in which participants stacked and attempted to scale unstable crates -- do carry risks.

About 3% of respondents said that a challenge they'd recently seen online was "very dangerous," but 0.3% said they had taken part in such a challenge.

Related: The TikTok signal that went viral and saved a woman from being kidnapped

Further, 31% of teens reported feeling "a negative impact" from hoaxes related to self-harm and suicide, but 37% of adults said they found it hard to discuss those hoaxes without drawing further attention to them.

"Suicide and self-harm hoaxes attempt to make people believe something frightening that isn't true. Hoaxes like these often have similar characteristics, and in previous cases, false warnings have circulated suggesting that children were being encouraged to take part in "games' which resulted in self-harm. Once planted, these hoaxes largely spread through warning messages encouraging others to alert as many people as possible to avoid perceived negative consequences. While the forward sharing of such warnings might seem harmless, the research found that 31 percent of teens exposed to these hoaxes had experienced a negative impact. Of those, 63 percent said the negative impact was on their mental health due to the nature of the content," said a release from the video-sharing app.

TikTok will take action to address the findings from the survey, the company said, including removing "alarmist warnings" from self-harm hoax videos. Those "could cause harm by treating the self-harm hoax as real."

The app will also implement new technology that alerts its safety teams to sudden increases in violating content linked to hashtags and dangerous behavior.

TikTok also developed a Safety Center resource dedicated to challenges and hoaxes to provide advice and information to parents and caregivers.

Emily Rella

Senior News Writer

Emily Rella is a Senior News Writer at Entrepreneur.com. Previously, she was an editor at Verizon Media. Her coverage spans features, business, lifestyle, tech, entertainment, and lifestyle. She is a 2015 graduate of Boston College and a Ridgefield, CT native. Find her on Twitter at @EmilyKRella.

Want to be an Entrepreneur Leadership Network contributor? Apply now to join.

Business News

The CEO of the World's Most Valuable Company Says This Would Be His College Major in 2025

Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang graduated with a Bachelor's degree in electrical engineering from Oregon State University in 1984, but he would change that major if he were in college today.

Side Hustle

I Took My Side Hustle Full-Time and Made $222,000 Last Year. Here's How — and Why Sometimes I Work Just 10 Hours a Week.

Carter Osborne launched his side business in 2017 to help with his tuition payments for graduate school.

Buying / Investing in Business

Meet the Person Who Invented Plastic that Dissolves in Water

"Big Plastic" might hate it, but it's an opportunity for investors in the $1.3T plastics industry.

Business News

President Donald Trump Signs the GENIUS Act to Make the U.S. the 'Crypto Capital of the World'

The landmark cryptocurrency legislation was signed into law by President Trump on Friday.

Business News

Amazon Ring Staff Reportedly Must Prove That They Use AI To Get Promoted

Ring founder Jamie Siminoff is back at Amazon as a VP, leading the tech giant's home security camera division.