By Our Correspondent
ISLAMABAD : TikTok has removed more than 22.5 million videos in Pakistan during the first quarter of 2026 as part of its efforts to strengthen online safety and enforce its Community Guidelines, according to the platform’s latest transparency report.
The Community Guidelines Enforcement Report, covering the period from January to March 2026, outlines TikTok’s global content moderation efforts and highlights its continued investment in automated technologies to detect and remove harmful material before it reaches users.
According to the report, TikTok removed 22,535,523 videos uploaded from Pakistan for violating its Community Guidelines. The removed content accounted for approximately 0.8 percent of all videos published on the platform in the country during the reporting period.
The company said its automated moderation systems identified and removed 99.6 percent of the violating content before users reported it, demonstrating the increasing role of artificial intelligence and machine learning in content moderation.
TikTok also reported that 95.5 percent of the violating videos in Pakistan were removed within 24 hours of being uploaded, reducing the likelihood of harmful content reaching large audiences.
Following additional reviews, 690,557 videos that had initially been removed were restored after moderators determined they did not violate the platform’s policies.
Globally, TikTok removed more than 184 million videos during the first three months of 2026, representing roughly 0.5 percent of all uploaded content.
The report stated that over 178 million videos were detected through automated systems, while approximately 8.8 million videos were later reinstated after further human review.
Worldwide, the platform maintained a proactive removal rate of 99.3 percent, with 94.4 percent of policy-violating content taken down within one day of being uploaded.
As part of broader efforts to protect platform integrity, TikTok also removed more than 86 million fake accounts during the reporting period.
In addition, the company deleted over 25 million accounts suspected of belonging to users under the age of 13, reflecting its continued enforcement of minimum age requirements for platform access.
The report provides insights into the types of content most frequently removed during the quarter.
According to TikTok, approximately 18.6 percent of removed videos contained mature or sensitive themes that violated platform standards.
Another 16.5 percent involved dangerous activities or risky challenges that could pose safety concerns for users, particularly younger audiences.
Content involving body exposure and sexually suggestive behaviour accounted for nearly 12.9 percent of all removed videos.
The report also noted that 12.6 percent of removed content violated policies related to safety, harassment and respectful interactions between users.
Artificial intelligence-generated and digitally manipulated content represented 2.1 percent of the total videos removed during the reporting period.
Technology experts say social media platforms increasingly rely on automated moderation systems as the volume of uploaded content continues to grow worldwide.
While artificial intelligence enables faster identification of harmful material, platforms continue combining automated detection with human review to improve accuracy and reduce incorrect removals.
Digital policy specialists note that transparency reports have become an important tool for measuring how technology companies enforce community standards while balancing user safety and freedom of expression.
Regular publication of enforcement statistics also allows regulators, researchers and users to better understand how online platforms address harmful content, misinformation and abusive behaviour.
TikTok said the quarterly report reflects its ongoing commitment to transparency and accountability by providing detailed information about content moderation practices and enforcement actions across global markets.
The company added that users can access further information regarding Community Guidelines, safety features, reporting tools and transparency initiatives through its Transparency Centre, which is available in multiple languages, including Urdu and English.
The latest figures demonstrate the growing scale of digital content moderation as online platforms continue strengthening efforts to create safer environments while responding to evolving challenges posed by harmful and misleading content.

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