In July 2020, then-President Donald Trump told reporters he would ban TikTok. The next month, he signed an executive order ...
The law—which prohibits U.S. app stores from hosting TikTok unless Chinese parent company ByteDance divests from it—is ...
REPORT Happy Friday! If you’re planning to attend the inauguration Monday, don’t pull a William Henry Harrison by not ...
The US Supreme Court on Friday unanimously upheld a law banning TikTok, but it remains unclear whether the wildly popular app ...
The President-elect will decide the ultimate fate of the social media app set to be banned in the U.S. the day before his ...
Shou Chew will join tech moguls like Mark Zuckerberg and Elon Musk at President-elect Donald J. Trump’s inauguration as the ...
It is unclear if Mr. Trump, who has previously said he will spare the social media platform, will or can stop the ban.
The decision came a week after the justices heard a First Amendment challenge to a law aimed at the wildly popular short-form ...
Shutting down the popular app is audacious. It’s also a sign that officials really believe the alternative is unacceptable.
The Supreme Court upheld a law today that could ban the wildly popular social media app TikTok in the U.S. starting on Sunday ...
After a decisive loss at the Supreme Court, the app is set to be blocked in the U.S. starting Sunday, ending its streak of ...
The company is one of the app’s leading server providers, managing the data centers where billions of 40-second videos are ...