Congressional leaders who championed the TikTok bill last year in the U.S. now want to delay the ban on the popular app from going into effect.
Massachusetts Sen. Ed Markey is calling on President Joe Biden to delay a ban on TikTok that could go into effect in the coming days.
"In the brief, Senators Markey and Paul and Representative Khanna argued that the TikTok ban lacks evidence and directly conflicts with the First Amendment, undermining the rights of over 170 million Americans who use the platform," the press release said.
As President Joe Biden prepares to leave office, the future of TikTok in the United States is uncertain. What do you think should happen to the app?
With a ban on TikTok set to go into effect on Sunday, Jan. 19, one Massachusetts senator is co-sponsoring a bill to extend the ban's deadline.
With just hours to go before it is set to shut down, many senators and representatives are still posting on the app they claim is too dangerous for the rest of us to use.
Wave CEO Alan Barrett said quantum computing is "real." Americans who love TikTok have decided that moving to an actual Chinese-owned app is better than going back to Meta. The irony of it is delicious.
Following a unanimous decision by the Supreme Court on Friday, which upheld a proposed ban on TikTok, the ban on the app could now take effect as soon as Sunday.A federal appeals court panel unanimously upheld a law on Dec.
A ban set for Sunday for a popular social media app TIK TOK has content creators sounding off after the Supreme Court’s unanimous decision to uphold a law that forces the app owners to sever ties with its Chinese parent company or be blocked in the U.
With the TikTok ban set to hit the U.S. on Sunday, some government officials are working to avert it. Here's the latest.
The Supreme Court upheld a US law that bans TikTok on Jan. 19 unless it is sold to an owner not controlled by a foreign adversary, a ruling that creates new uncertainty for a social-media app used by 170 million Americans.