Political shifts and legal hurdles have delayed TikTok's removal, with Biden reportedly kicking the issue to Trump.
TikTok, the short-form video app known for dance challenges, viral trends and an algorithm said to know users better than they knew themselves, died in the U.S. Sunday. First launched in the United ...
Washington — The Supreme Court on Friday upheld a new law that would lead to a ban of the social media platform TikTok, ...
The law gives TikTok until January 19th to divest from ByteDance. The Supreme Court ruled that the law that could oust TikTok from the US unless Chinese parent company ByteDance sells it is ...
The app had more than 170 million monthly users in the U.S. The black-out is the result of a law forcing the service offline ...
The U.S. Supreme Court officially upheld the law to ban the TikTok social media app on Friday.
ByteDance has not publicly indicated any willingness to sell its TikTok stake. TikTok has told employees that they will still have jobs regardless of the Supreme Court ruling. In the event of an ...
The Supreme Court seemed likely to uphold a new law that could force TikTok to shut down in the U.S., with conservative and liberal justices alike expressing skepticism about the legal challenge.
In an unsigned opinion, the Court sided with the national security concerns about TikTok rather than the First Amendment ...
TikTok reportedly will shut down the app in the U.S. unless the Supreme Court halts a law banning the app unless ByteDance divests its stake.
Even if ByteDance were willing ... who represents Silicon Valley, submitted a joint brief with the Supreme Court arguing the national security law passed last year violates Americans' free ...