Speculations of a permanent TikTok ban aren't speculation anymore for the app's 170 million American users. The United States ...
In an unsigned opinion, the Court sided with the national security concerns about TikTok rather than the First Amendment ...
T he fate of TikTok in the United States will soon be in the hands of the Supreme Court, as the Justices hear oral arguments ...
TikTok, ByteDance and several users of the app sued to halt the ban, arguing it would suppress free speech for the millions ...
The Supreme Court has officially announced their ruling in regard to TikTok: They are upholding the law that effectively bans TikTok in the United States this weekend. Here's what the ruling means for ...
The Supreme Court on Friday was divided over the constitutionality of a federal law that would require social-media giant TikTok to shut down in the United States unless its Chinese parent company can ...
The Supreme Court has decided to uphold the law that will ban TikTok on Jan. 19 if its parent company ByteDance continues to ...
free speech and national security collide at the Supreme Court on Friday in arguments over the fate of TikTok, a wildly popular digital platform that roughly half the people in the United States ...
The law mandates that TikTok be banned in the United States on Jan. 19, unless Chinese company ByteDance divests itself of ownership. Attorneys for TikTok had challenged the law's constitutionality.
TikTok reportedly will shut down the app in the U.S. unless the Supreme Court halts a law banning the app unless ByteDance divests its stake.