The study was funded by the UK Seafood Innovation Fund and Schmidt Marine Technology Partners.
"I thought 'no matter how long it takes, I'm going to get this person closed down'."We decided it was not worth getting a solicitor, but thankfully TikTok began investigating and took down the profile."
The couple said they wanted to warn other creators about not having high privacy on their YouTube videos.They have now set up their own TikTok account to try to reach the younger audience who were enjoying their content.TikTok is being sued by the parents of four British teenagers who believe their children died after taking part in viral trends that circulated on the video-sharing platform in 2022.
The lawsuit claims Isaac Kenevan, Archie Battersbee, Julian "Jools" Sweeney and Maia Walsh died while attempting the so-called "blackout challenge".The US-based Social Media Victims Law Center filed the wrongful death lawsuit against TikTok and its parent company ByteDance on behalf of the children's parents on Thursday.
Searches for videos or hashtags related to the challenge on TikTok are blocked.
According to the firm, this block has been in place since 2020."If someone on social media, or an online marketplace, is selling a pet online, ask to view the animal in person or via a video call before paying any money."
She added: "Protect your money and do not pay a deposit or a holding fee without seeing if the animal is genuine first."It is a route which has operated for more than 100 years, but for the UK's longest direct train service linking Aberdeen and Penzance it is finally the end of the line.
The connection - first established back in 1921 - is 775 miles (1,247km) long.However, the packed train from the north east of Scotland on Friday morning was the last to run the route, and arrived in Cornwall more than 13 hours later at 21:40. Operator CrossCountry said the decision to end the service was aimed at a "more efficient timetable".