TikTok’s American users woke up to a peculiar problem this week: attempts to send direct messages containing the word “Epstein” often trigger an automatic block, with the app claiming the content might violate community guidelines.
This comes right on the heels of the platform’s $14 billion sale to a U.S.-led consortium, including Oracle under Larry Ellison, to dodge a potential nationwide ban over ties to its Chinese parent company, ByteDance. The deal, finalized just days ago, was meant to address national security worries, but instead, it’s ushered in a wave of technical headaches and user complaints.
Reports flooded social media on Monday, with thousands noting that typing “Epstein” in DMs sometimes results in the message failing to send, accompanied by a prompt stating it’s “to protect our community.”
TikTok insists this isn’t policy. “We don’t have rules against sharing the name ‘Epstein’ in direct messages and are investigating why some users are experiencing issues,” a spokesman for TikTok’s U.S. operation told NPR. The block isn’t universal—some accounts sail through without issue, while others hit a wall, fueling speculation about what’s really going on behind the scenes.
Oracle, now a key player in TikTok’s infrastructure, pinned the broader disruptions on a winter storm that knocked out power at a data center over the weekend. Spokesman Michael Egbert explained that the outage led to widespread glitches, including videos stuck at zero views, lagging feeds, and delayed functions.
“The companies are working quickly to restore service and stabilize the app,” he said. DownDetector logged spikes in outage reports from over 200 million U.S. users, turning what should have been a smooth transition into a messy rollout.
But the “Epstein” snag stands out amid other censorship claims. Users have accused the platform of suppressing content about a recent ICE shooting in Minneapolis, where agents used less-than-lethal rounds during a memorial for Alex Pretti, injuring an American Indian woman.
Videos on political unrest there reportedly garner far fewer views, and attempts to discuss “ICE” or anti-administration topics face similar hurdles. The hashtag #TikTokCensorship exploded on X, with posts linking the issues to the new ownership. One X user shared screenshots of zero-view videos, sarcastically noting, “Yeah… sure. Totally normal.”
Larry Ellison, Oracle’s co-founder and a known supporter of President Trump, heads the group that now controls TikTok’s U.S. arm, alongside investors like Silver Lake and Abu Dhabi’s Mubadala. The sale was greenlit by the administration to strip away Chinese influence, but critics wonder if the shift has introduced new biases.
President Trump’s past social ties to Jeffrey Epstein—documented in flight logs and photos from the 1990s and early 2000s—have resurfaced in discussions, though Trump cut off Epstein after his 2008 conviction and banned him from Mar-a-Lago. Their friendship soured well before Epstein’s 2019 arrest and suspicious death in custody, which many still question as more than suicide.
California Governor Gavin Newsom jumped in, announcing a state inquiry into whether TikTok is stifling free speech, potentially violating laws. Public figures like Billie Eilish have echoed the concerns, accusing the app of blocking anti-Trump videos. TikTok maintains that content moderation hasn’t changed, but the timing raises eyebrows—especially with updated privacy terms now allowing precise location tracking, a move that’s standard for apps like Instagram but still unnerves privacy advocates.
Whispers online suggest something deeper: why would a simple glitch target “Epstein,” a name tied to a web of elite scandals involving politicians, billionaires, and unexplained cover-ups? Epstein’s client list, partially unsealed in recent years, hints at powerful figures dodging scrutiny, and blocking discussions could conveniently mute fresh revelations.
As one X thread put it, “Is your TikTok FYP lying to you? New reports suggest massive censorship on topics like the Epstein files.” In an era where truth often battles shadows, this feels like another layer in the ongoing fight to expose hidden influences.
TikTok’s assurances ring hollow for many, as the app’s algorithm remains opaque under new leadership. If the goal was to Americanize the platform and protect users from foreign meddling, these early stumbles do the opposite, eroding trust. Restoring full functionality—and transparency—will be key, lest users flee to alternatives that value open dialogue.
In the end, incidents like this remind us that technology giants wield immense power over what we say and see. Whether glitch or something more sinister, the “Epstein” block demands answers before it fades into the digital ether.










