TikTok faces new April 5 deadline for U.S. ban: Which is why we’re seeing the TV commercials again
After an original deadline of Jan. 19, TikTok faces the possibility of banishment in the United States again on April 5.
After an original deadline of Jan. 19, TikTok faces the possibility of banishment in the United States again on April 5.
TikTok was gone for 14 hours. That’s just about the length of a nonstop flight from Hawaii to New York, or a teenager’s Saturday night sleep. Why has it dominated the internet and everyone’s conversations for days?
After approximately 12 hours of darkness in the U.S., TikTok returned Sunday, and parent company ByteDance credited Donald Trump for its return after he promised an executive order to stall the American ban on the social media app.
TikTok ended its hours-long political stunt on Sunday, with the Chinese company’s owner, ByteDance, making itself available to U.S. users again, after voluntarily taking the app down late Saturday night.
Soon-to-be-President Trump is publicly mulling blocking the TikTok ban that the Supreme Court he packed with MAGAs just said can go into effect. Another Trump-o-phyte who didn’t get the message from the Dear Leader: Jason Miyares.
TikTok will shut down operations of its social media platform in the United States on Sunday in compliance with a federal ban.
U.S. Sen. Mark R. Warner, Vice Chairman of the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence, of Virginia spoke out Friday on the TikTok court case.
On one side of the ban TikTok debate, we have 21 Republican state attorneys general, including Virginia AG Jason Miyares.
After losing a bid to strike an American law to ban use its social media platform, TikTok faces a January 19, 2025 deadline.
A 22-state coalition of attorneys general is urging a Tennessee court to require TikTok to preserve and produce relevant evidence.
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