TikTok is dead, long live TikTok. The social media app announced it would be returning to the United States mere hours after ...
I was having a conversation with my Stanford colleague Diego Zambrano, and this perspective on the TikTok case emerged. I'm not positive it's a sound perspective; but I thought I'd pass it along ...
“Congress shall make no law … abridging the freedom of speech or of the press …” — First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution ...
Even as the Supreme Court upheld Congress' mandate that TikTok's Chinese owner sell the platform or shut it down, the First ...
There are limits to the First Amendment, under established ... effectively ban the video-based social media app TikTok in the United States as of January 19, they will be asked to carve out ...
Shuttering the platform, they say, would violate their First Amendment rights ... Proponents of the law say TikTok, which has more than 170 million users in the United States, could be pressured ...
The U.S. Supreme Court upheld on Friday a law banning TikTok in the United States on national security grounds if its Chinese parent company ByteDance does not sell the short-video app by Sunday, as ...
Kentucky Senator Rand Paul ripped the Supreme Court on Friday after it unanimously upheld a federal law requiring TikTok's parent company to sell its United States operations by January 19 or face ...
On Friday, the Supreme Court delivered a sweeping, unanimous broadside against the First Amendment ... ban on TikTok, the fourth most popular social media network in the United States.
The case pits the First Amendment's right to free ... Congress restricted only foreign adversary control: TikTok may continue operating in the United States and presenting the same content from ...
The U.S. Supreme Court heard arguments last week on TikTok’s request for a delay in the ban, arguing that it violates the U.S. Constitution’s First ... a ban in the United States.