We're days away from a TikTok ban in the US unless the Supreme Court rules that it violates the First Amendment. Here's why it's happening and how to listen to Friday's oral arguments.
Billions in advertising flows through TikTok, which could be banned in the U.S. as soon as Jan. 19. Brands and creators are racing to prepare.
TikTok has just ten days until it faces a possible ban in the US. If the Supreme Court declines to halt the law before January 19th, and TikTok isn’t spun off from its Chinese parent company ByteDance, companies like Apple and Google will be forced to stop maintaining the app in their app stores or letting it push updates.
TikTok will appear before the US Supreme Court on Friday in a last-ditch effort to overturn a ban, in a case testing the limits of national security and free speech. The popular social media platform is challenging a law passed last year ordering the firm to be split from its Chinese owner or be blocked from the US by 19 January.
The fate of TikTok now rests in the hands of the US Supreme Court. If a law banning the social video app this month is upheld, it won’t disappear from your phone—but it will get messy fast.
I was worried about the TikTok ban in the US because my daughter is a heavy user. During a trip to India, where the app is banned, she learned something.
Florida mom Alyssa Miller shared a heartbreaking interaction with her 5-year-old daughter — and received support from around the world.
The US Supreme Court on Friday will hear TikTok's appeal of a law that would force its Chinese owner to sell the video-sharing platform or shut it down in the United States.
At a showroom appointment in Paris a couple of weeks later, Browne explained that the season started with the plastic that people used to cover their furniture with in the ’50s and ’60s. “I like developing fabrics that are both technical and classic,
TikTok's future is hanging in the balance. Creators who benefit financially from the app speak out about how losing the app could impact their wallets.