TikTok said Monday night that it would pull its social video platform out of the Google and Apple app stores in Hong Kong amid a restrictive new law that went into effect last week.
TikTok’s move comes as many large tech companies say they are still evaluating how to respond to the Hong Kong law.
“In light of recent events, we’ve decided to stop operations of the TikTok app in Hong Kong,” a spokesperson told Axios on Monday night.
Observers have said the new law forces companies doing business in Hong Kong to provide user data to the Chinese government as well as to comply with censorship requests.
The move comes as TikTok parent ByteDance has looked to more clearly separate TikTok, which operates outside of China, from a similar app used within mainland China.
The company has said that TikTok has not shared data with the Chinese government nor would it, a position that would be difficult if not impossible to maintain under the new law.
TikTok said last September it had 150,000 users in Hong Kong. While that number has probably since increased, it remains a small market and an unprofitable one, according to the company.