TikTok app on smartphone iPhone 13 Pro screen
TikTok faces large-scale content removal after major falling out with Universal Music Group. Credit: 123rf

TikTok turned against its former cooperation partner Universal Music Group (UMG) overnight after the world’s largest music copyright owner threatened to remove all of the music it owns from the video-sharing platform, which lambasted UMG’s “self-serving actions” and characterized them as putting their interests above those of artists, songwriters, and fans. 

Why it matters: The dispute would reportedly also affect TikTok sibling Douyin, potentially causing both platforms to have to remove Universal songs from the huge number of videos using them as background music. The falling out with UMG may also lead to a similar response from other music companies. 

Details: The collapse of the deal would likely remove the pop songs that myriad TikTok videos use as background music, affecting tracks by Universal artists including Taylor Swift and Billie Eilish, as well as Chinese language singers Stefanie Sun and Eason Chan.

  • In an open letter, Universal said the success of TikTok has been largely rooted in the music created by “our artists and songwriters,” but revenue from the Chinese-owned company only accounts for about 1% of Universal’s income, which the letter claimed was a poor rate of compensation.
  • According to media outlet Caixin, the three-year authorization contract between both sides signed in February 2021 was also applied to TikTok sister app Douyin in China, meaning Douyin users are no longer allowed to create videos using copyright-protected music from UMG starting from Thursday, unless the two parties reach a new deal addressing Universal’s concerns over higher pay for artists, AI creation, and user protection.
  • In response, TikTok claimed Universal’s statement formed a “false narrative and rhetoric,” and blamed the music firm for leaving a platform that had served as a “free promotional and discovery vehicle for their talent.”

Context: This is not the first dispute involving a major tech platform and Universal-signed artists. In 2014, Taylor Swift decided to remove her entire discography from Spotify due to issues around royalty payments, with her boycott of the streaming service lasting three years.

Cheyenne Dong is a tech reporter now based in Shanghai. She covers e-commerce and retail, AI, and blockchain. Connect with her via e-mail: cheyenne.dong[a]technode.com.