If the Supreme Court lets stand the law that would ban TikTok, Trump could buy the company a little more time. Or he could ...
A group of street vendors using the power of social media have rallied a community to help those affected by destruction of ...
TikTok did not immediately respond to ABC News' request for comment. No matter the extent of potential service interruptions, ...
According to new research from University of California San Francisco, teen TikTok users are bypassing the age policies and ...
The Supreme Court seems likely to uphold a law that would ban TikTok in the United States beginning Jan. 19 unless the ...
The court's endorsement of this law could enable statutes targeting other companies on similar grounds, the lawyer for TikTok ...
The Supreme Court appeared to favor the government's national security claims over TikTok's 1st Amendment argument.
As a court decision looms, some of the TikTok's roughly 170 million users in the United States are starting to wonder: Where is everyone going instead?
There are a lot of lingering questions about how the ban would work in practice because there’s no precedent for the US government blocking such a major social media platform. But some things are ...
The justices are hearing arguments to decide whether the Chinese-owned app must shut down by Jan. 19 ...
The inherent special sauce for TikTok is this algorithm,” said social media expert Ashleigh Shay. “Which ByteDance has gone ...