Did you know The App That Dances Now Debates: TikTok’s New Feature Isn't for Entertainment
TikTok has begun experimenting with a feature called "footnotes"
designed to let users add extra context to videos they see. The early
version is being introduced in the United States and is currently
limited to accounts that meet certain rules set by the company. This new
addition aims to improve the way information spreads by letting people
play a role in shaping what others understand.
Only accounts
that have been active for more than six months, belong to users over the
age of eighteen, and have not broken any recent platform rules can take
part. Those who qualify may apply directly, while others will be
invited based on their activity. Once accepted, contributors will be
able to attach notes to videos and also vote on how useful others’ notes
appear. These votes decide whether any extra information becomes
visible to everyone.
The system has been built to encourage
different opinions to reach some level of agreement. Instead of simply
labeling posts, it works by letting users rate each other’s input. Notes
that enough people find useful become visible, while others remain
hidden. The idea relies on shared judgment rather than strict decisions
made by the platform alone.
This approach resembles a method
used elsewhere where community members explain or challenge the meaning
behind public content. The structure depends on open contribution, basic
eligibility rules, and a focus on notes that more than one side can
agree on. In both cases, the system avoids pushing only one side of a
topic and instead lets competing views work together to decide what
stays up.
Other social platforms have also started moving in a
similar direction. One recently removed outside fact-checking programs
and chose to build a system that works with user input alone. These
shifts show a change in how major platforms want to handle false or
unclear posts. Rather than facing pressure over how they check facts,
they now give that power to their users.
TikTok has said it will keep collecting feedback from everyone involved. The tool remains under testing, and no final version has been confirmed. For now, it serves as one example of how platforms may try to shift their role in shaping what users believe.
Image: TikTok
