The federal law banning TikTok has revealed a major schism among American tech companies: Some are willing to flout the law — and some, including Apple and Google, are not.
Phones with TikTok are being listed for eye-watering sums as the social media platform remains absent from app stores.
There were 36 hours of mad frenzy as TikTok executives and lawyers sought and failed to get a last-minute reprieve from Biden — and then landed one from Trump.
After briefly going dark in the U.S., TikTok is back online following an executive order. That’s not good for young users, says NYU psychologist Jonathan Haidt.
Douyin is subject to different regulations, including the Chinese Communist Party's censorship rules.TikTok and Douyin are both owned by ByteDance but operate independently, with TikTok's CEO based in Singapore.
A new study shows which states are the most TikTok-obsessed amid uncertainty about the social media platform’s future in the U.S.
The app’s availability in the U.S. has been thrown into jeopardy over data privacy and national security concerns.
Like tens of thousands of content creators who make their living through social media, local creators are in jeopardy of losing their most successful platform if the U.S. government follows through on its ban of the app.
TikTok has gone dark in the U.S., the result of a federal law that bans the popular social media app for millions of Americans.
People are selling old phones with TikTok installed for as much as $50,000, and the boom is growing, as Google and Apple have removed the app from their online stores.
The experience evoked echoes of its sister venue, Bicester Village, nestled in Oxfordshire, UK: family-friendly yet undeniably luxurious.
The law gives authority for a 90-day extension for the app’s Chinese owner ByteDance to complete a divestiture “as long as a viable deal is on the table, Rep. Mike Waltz said.