TikTok choking video incites suicide: Italian police

Pallbearers carry the casket during the funeral ceremony for a 10-year-old girl who died while participating in a so-called "blackout" challenge while using TikTok social network, in Palermo, Italy, onJan. 26, 2021. (Alberto Lobianco/LaPresse via AP)
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Updated 29 January 2021
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TikTok choking video incites suicide: Italian police

  • In a video challenge a woman and a man both wrapped their faces with transparent adhesive tape, so that they could not breathe
  • Italian police say a 10-year-old girl from Palermo who participated in the “choking game” died as a result

ROME: Italian police on Thursday accused a Sicilian woman of “inciting suicide” for an asphyxiation video she posted on TikTok, a week after a child accidentally died in a so-called blackout challenge.
Police said the video, posted without restrictions on the social media platform by the 48-year-old Sicilian “influencer,” was “extremely dangerous” and able to be viewed by everyone, including children.
The video depicts a challenge between the woman and a man “in which both wrapped their faces, including nostrils and mouth, with transparent adhesive tape, so that they could not breathe,” police said in a statement, adding that the video had been taken down.
Italian investigators have been probing TikTok, a video-sharing network owned by Chinese company ByteDance, since the death last week of a 10-year-old girl who allegedly participated in such a “choking game,” in which restricted oxygen to the brain induces a high.
Italy’s privacy watchdog temporarily blocked TikTok access for users whose age could not be proved definitively.
Police on Thursday did not specify whether the video in question had been viewed by the girl, but noted that it and similar ones “could be emulated by minors.”
The woman who posted the video had published numerous other similar challenges, “which allowed her to gain popularity and the attention of 731,000 followers of different ages.”
Viewers were allowed to accept the challenge, police said, citing one post in which a user wrote “if you say hi to me I swear I’ll jump out the window.”
Prosecutors authorized a search of the woman’s computer and social network accounts.
According to TikTok’s terms and conditions, users must be at least 13 years old.
Italy’s data regulators said Wednesday they were also looking into how minors accessed Facebook and Instagram.
The watchdog filed a legal case in December against TikTok alleging a “lack of attention to the protection of minors,” criticizing the ease with which very young children could sign up.

 


UAE outlines approach to AI governance amid regulation debate at World Economic Forum

Updated 22 January 2026
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UAE outlines approach to AI governance amid regulation debate at World Economic Forum

  • Minister of State Maryam Al-Hammadi highlights importance of a robust regulatory framework to complement implementation of AI technology
  • Other experts in panel discussion say regulators should address problems as they arise, rather than trying to solve problems that do not yet exist

DUBAI: The UAE has made changes to 90 percent of its laws in the past four years, Maryam Al-Hammadi, minister of state and the secretary-general of the Emirati Cabinet, told the World Economic Forum in Davos on Wednesday.

Speaking during a panel discussion titled “Regulating at the Speed of Code,” she highlighted the importance of having a robust regulatory framework in place to complement the implementation of artificial intelligence technology in the public and private sectors.

The process of this updating and repealing of laws has driven the UAE’s efforts to develop an AI model that can assist in the drafting of legislation, along with collecting feedback from stakeholders on proposed laws and suggesting improvements, she said.

Although AI might be more agile at shaping regulation, “there are some principles that we put in the model that we are developing that we cannot compromise,” Al-Hammadi added. These include rules for human accountability, transparency, privacy and data protection, along with constitutional safeguards and a thorough understanding of the law.

At this stage, “we believe AI can advise but still (the) human is in command,” she said.

Authorities in the UAE are aiming to develop, within a two-year timeline, a shareable model to help other nations learn and benefit from its experiences, Al-Hammadi added.

Argentina’s minister of deregulation and state transformation, Federico Sturzenegger, warned against overregulation at the cost of innovation.

Politicians often react to a “salient event” by overreacting, he said, describing most regulators as “very imaginative of all the terrible things that will happen to people if they’re free.”

He said that “we have to take more risk,” and regulators should wait to address problems as they arise rather than trying to create solutions for problems that do not yet exist.

This sentiment was echoed by Joel Kaplan, Meta’s chief global affairs officer, who said “imaginative policymakers” often focus more on risks and potential harms than on the economic and growth benefits of innovation.

He pointed to Europe as an example of this, arguing that an excessive focus on “all the possible harms” of new technologies has, over time, reduced competitiveness and risks leaving the region behind in what he described as a “new technological revolution.”