The Supreme Court appeared ready to uphold a law that will ban TikTok in the U.S. if its Chinese owners don't sell the widly popular platform.
The Supreme Court is weighing if TikTok can be banned in the U.S. in a case pitting national security against free speech.
President-elect Donald Trump has urged the Supreme Court to halt the Jan. 19 TikTok ban if parent company ByteDance fails to ...
The law came in response to allegations that the app, used by 62% of young adults and used daily ... which is part of Project Liberty founder Frank McCourt's vision for "a more equitable web ...
U.S. Surgeon General Dr. Vivek Murthy, who is closing out his tenure of two terms, offered a "Parting Prescription for ...
Uruguay’s former guerilla-turned-president, Jose Mujica, announced on Thursday that the cancer in his esophagus had spread to ...
Eight people, two dogs and a cat found refuge in George Stroumboulopoulos's Los Angeles home as wildfires raged through parts ...
The US told the Supreme Court during oral arguments over the TikTok ban that the Chinese government has previously used data ...
The law came in response to allegations that the app, used by 62% of young adults and used daily by 58% of teenagers ... The venture to buy TikTok, which is part of Project Liberty founder Frank ...
With a TikTok ban looming, local creators and consumers fear they could lose their voices and their communities.
US billionaire businessman Frank McCourt is crafting a fundamental overhaul of TikTok’s business model as part of a plan to bid for the Chinese-owned short-form video app, he told Reuters.