JAMAICA - Reggae-dancehall artiste Tifa has highlighted once more ill intent with her online content that is impacting her career.
The artiste, who has landed yet another trending single called Can’t Cancel Me, is facing challenges on her TikTok platform. “I’ve always said that my posts have been flagged and shadow banned and sometimes I don’t even talk about it because I come across as paranoid. But this is obvious with my current song’s audio being removed and muted as unauthorised content. There is nothing wrong with the content, but people hide behind fake pages and make an effort to report everything I post,” Tifa commented.
Just last week one of her posts using one minute of the Can’t Cancel Me single was removed and more than 5,000 videos using the audio muted on TikTok. This occurred two days later after Tifa highlighted that only one post had been muted but the second was still visible - that post was also reported. The song itself is still authorised on TikTok but the viral clips that have thousands of remixes seem targeted she said.
Tifa has since contacted the relevant representatives from the social media platforms and they are conducting an in-depth investigation to determine the circumstance with a view for more action will be taken. “I’m definitely being targeted because of simple jealousy; they recognise I’ve gotten another hit song and they are trying hard to derail it, but it won’t work. They have even tried to hack my WhatsApp and IG, but this is just showing me how threatened they feel by my success. Evil will never prevail, though, and as the song says:” God a my Boss, so them can’t cancel me,” Tifa added.
The artiste is super upbeat with the success of the Can’t Cancel Me single thus far and is seeing greater things in the works. Can’t Cancel Me has already been added to I Heart Radio play lists in the United States and has now been added for rotation on New York’s premier urban station Hot 97. The single is produced by Digital One Productions and is recorded as part of the Santa Jamaica Riddim project. (Jamaica Observer)