Skip to main content

Report: ByteDance is developing a TikTok-branded smartphone

The humble smartphone has come a long way over the past decade or so, but there’s definitely room for a shakeup. And a shakeup may be on the way — that’s right, ByteDance, the parent company of TikTok, is getting into the smartphone game.

ByteDance has announced that it’s working on a new phone in partnership with Smartisan Technology, a Chinese device maker, according to a report from Reuters. Smartisan had reportedly been planning on developing a smartphone even before it inked the deal with ByteDance, and the phone has apparently been in development for several months now.

Recommended Videos

Of course, it remains to be seen exactly what a ByteDance-branded smartphone would look like. A spokesperson has confirmed that it will be an official “TikTok phone,” but it’s not known exactly what that means. Will the device offer better camera tech for interacting on TikTok? Will it run Android? Only time will tell. Even among smaller Chinese smartphone manufacturers, Smartisan is a relatively small company — especially compared to the likes of Huawei, Xiaomi, and OnePlus.

TikTok isn’t the first social media company to launch its own smartphone. The HTC First was launched with Facebook’s Home OS, which was an Android skin that ultimately failed to catch on.

Still, despite these previous failures, we can’t really write ByteDance off just yet. TikTok has grown at a huge rate over the past five years, to the point of now being the fourth-largest social media network, behind Facebook, YouTube, and Instagram. In other words, TikTok even beats out the likes of Twitter when it comes to active users, according to some reports.

There are a ton of details we have yet to find out about the upcoming smartphone, including the specs and design of the upcoming device. It’s unlikely that the company will position the phone as a flagship-tier device considering the fact that it would have to compete with the likes of Samsung and Apple, but at the same time it will have to be powerful enough to be worth buying. We are likely to learn more about the phone in the near future.

Christian de Looper
Christian’s interest in technology began as a child in Australia, when he stumbled upon a computer at a garage sale that he…
TikTok should be expelled from app stores, senator says
TikTok icon illustration.

The wildly popular TikTok app continues to come under pressure from U.S. lawmakers.

Many are concerned that ByteDance, the Beijing-based company behind the app, has close ties with the Chinese government, and that laws in China mean it could be required to hand over user data to the government to assist in intelligence gathering.

Read more
Forget TikTok — it’s time to ban Twitter
Phil Nickinson's empty Twitter feed.

There are few sane headlines of late when it comes to social media. And if there are, they're probably about Facebook, which is just a sign of how weird things have gotten.

With the headline for this story, we manage to squeeze in both TikTok and Twitter. The platforms, to refer to them in the industry parlance, couldn't be more different, though we won't insult you as to try to describe them here. (If you really do need help, ask your kids. Don't have kids? Find one. They'll know TikTok. Need an explainer on Twitter? Ask a journalist, or your nearest bot farm.)

Read more
Is TikTok leaking drafts? Let’s take a closer look at this rumor
The TikTok app on a smartphone's screen. The smartphone is sitting on a white table.

Not every social media post is ready for prime time. Sometimes you write a post or film a video and decide that it's better to not publish it. That's fine. That's what the Drafts folder is for. That folder is built to hold your works-in-progress, mistakes, and other too-goofy-for-public-consumption posts and videos. The Drafts folder is probably one that you take for granted, but what if that folder (via a particularly viral-prone social media platform) were to have its content leaked and published for the world to see? Scary, isn't it?

That's the fear that's behind a certain, now years-long TikTok rumor going around. But is it true? Is TikTok leaking its users' drafts? In this guide, we're taking a closer look at this rumor and fact-checking it.
The rumor
As far as we can tell, the whole "TikTok leaks drafts" rumor dates back to at least the summer of 2020. It's not a rumor that really made mainstream news headlines, but it did get some coverage with lesser-known websites, and it does have a tendency to resurface repeatedly. The last time it resurfaced was in August 2022. Here's what we know about it:

Read more