Not removed by users. Not edited or appealed. Deleted, by a moderation system that, by its own account, caught nearly nine out of ten of them before a single person had watched even one second of the content.
Between January and June 2025, TikTok took down 7,464,081 videos in Nigeria for violating its Community Guidelines, 3,683,655 in the first quarter and 3,780,426 in the second, representing more than 41,000 removals every single day.

The scale is arresting on its own terms. But it is what the numbers reveal when placed inside TikTok’s broader global transparency data that makes them truly significant, because Nigeria’s story turns out to be both unique and universal.
What Nigeria’s Numbers Actually Show
The volume of Nigerian content removed tells one story. The mechanics behind those removals tell a more complicated one.

In the first quarter of 2025, 88.2 per cent of all removed Nigerian videos had zero views. By the second quarter, that figure had edged up to 88.3 per cent, meaning nearly nine in ten harmful videos were deleted before a single Nigerian user saw them.
That is a system working, at least at the level of detection speed. But beneath the headline efficiency numbers, specific categories of harmful content were slipping through at rates that should concern regulators, advertisers, and users alike.
Content involving fraud and scams carried a pre-view removal rate of just 44.4 per cent in Q1 2025, meaning more than half of scam videos were seen by Nigerian users before being flagged and removed. AI-generated or edited media designed to deceive fared little better, with a pre-view catch rate of only 46.6 per cent. In a country where digital financial fraud is already a significant and well-documented public harm, those numbers represent a meaningful gap between platform capability and platform responsibility.
Scam content also took longer to action once detected, with a 24-hour removal rate of just 61.8 per cent in Q1, far below the 90 to 99 per cent range seen in other content categories.
Beyond individual videos, TikTok took action in March 2025 against 129 accounts in West Africa linked to covert influence operations, a data point that places Nigeria squarely inside the global conversation about how short-form video platforms are being used to manipulate political environments, not just to share dance challenges.
The Government Engagement Gap
Here is where Nigeria’s story becomes most analytically interesting, and most uncomfortable.
Despite the sheer volume of content enforcement affecting Nigerian users, Nigeria does not appear among the leading nations in TikTok’s Government Removal Requests data for H1 2025.
Of the 89 countries that submitted content and account removal requests to TikTok during the period, Malaysia led with 5,141 requests, while Romania followed with approximately 3,432.
Nigeria, one of TikTok’s most active African markets and a country with documented exposure to platform-enabled fraud and political manipulation, is not in that leading group.
The gap between the scale of enforcement affecting Nigerian users and the degree of formal Nigerian government engagement with TikTok’s regulatory mechanisms is not merely a bureaucratic footnote.
It is a signal about regulatory capacity, digital diplomacy, and the degree to which African governments are actively leveraging tools that other states are deploying far more aggressively.
While Nigerians generate and consume content at a pace that puts the country among TikTok’s significant African markets, the formal relationship between Nigerian regulatory institutions and the platform’s governance architecture remains underdeveloped relative to what the volume of activity, and the documented harms, would warrant.
The Global Picture: Governments Learning to Fight Back
Pull back further, and what TikTok’s H1 2025 data reveals is something more significant than any single country’s removal numbers: a structured, accelerating global contest between governments and platforms over who ultimately controls the information environment experienced by citizens.
Malaysia’s position at the top of the removal request table is not accidental. In the first half of 2024, Malaysian authorities had already led globally with 2,606 removal requests.
The H1 2025 figure of 5,141 represents a near-doubling in twelve months, the output of a government that has deliberately invested in understanding and using platform governance mechanisms as an instrument of national information policy.
Romania’s emergence as the second-highest requester tells a different but equally instructive story. Following the annulment of Romania’s presidential election in December 2024, in which TikTok was specifically named in concerns about foreign-linked influence operations affecting voter sentiment, TikTok built out extra precautions for the country’s subsequent electoral processes and saw a significant increase in enforcement activity.
The surge in Romanian government requests in H1 2025 is the direct downstream consequence of a political crisis in which a social media platform found itself at the centre of a constitutional emergency.
Taken together, Malaysia and Romania represent two distinct models of intensifying government engagement with TikTok: one driven by ongoing domestic content governance priorities, the other triggered by acute democratic threat. Both models are spreading.
The China Silence
In a dataset documenting government requests from 89 countries, one absence stands out with particular sharpness.
China, whose ByteDance subsidiary owns TikTok, submitted no removal requests during the H1 2025 reporting period, consistent with prior transparency cycles.
The absence draws consistent attention from digital rights researchers, who note that the formal request mechanism available to other governments is structurally redundant for Chinese authorities.
The regulatory architecture within which ByteDance operates domestically makes the kind of arm’s-length content negotiation that other governments must conduct through TikTok’s transparency portal an unnecessary formality.
It is a detail that speaks volumes about the asymmetric nature of the global platform governance contest, and about why the question of who ultimately controls TikTok’s content decisions remains unresolved despite years of regulatory scrutiny from Washington to Brussels.
The Deeper Question
What TikTok’s H1 2025 data ultimately documents, from the 41,000 daily Nigerian removals to Malaysia’s 5,141 government requests to Romania’s election-driven enforcement surge, is the slow, uneven, and still-contested formalisation of a new kind of sovereignty: the power to determine what information citizens in any given territory are permitted to access on the world’s most-watched video platform.
Some states are exercising that power aggressively and systematically. Others, Nigeria among them, are only beginning to understand that the mechanism exists, let alone how to use it.
The race, by TikTok’s own data, is already well underway. The question for Nigeria, and for Africa more broadly, is whether the continent’s regulators will arrive at the table before the rules are already written.
[TikTok publishes Government Removal Requests data biannually through its Transparency Center. The full H1 2025 dataset is available here].






