Chinese-owned TikTok in court this week to fight for the app’s future in the U.S.
While most people in the United States look to the TikTok app for recipes, beauty tips or other fun videos, the platform is potentially dangerous.
While most people in the United States look to the TikTok app for recipes, beauty tips or other fun videos, the platform is potentially dangerous.
A 21-state coalition of attorneys general urge the U.S. Court of Appeals for DC to uphold the divest-or-ban TikTok legislation.
ByteDance is taking American lawmakers to court in a federal lawsuit against United States legislation to ban TikTok if it is not sold.
One of the pressures college kids face is wanting their time on campus to feel like it meant something, which gets us to the ongoing TikTok moments regarding Israel and Gaza.
In response to legislation banning TikTok if ByteDance does not sell the social media app, the parent company said it will not sell.
Virginia Sen. Mark R. Warner celebrated more than a year later a step forward in the United States standing up to TikTok.
Last weekend, the U.S. House voted to ban TikTok if parent company ByteDance does not sell it to an approved buyer.
Ukraine funding, the proposed TikTok ban, it all runs together, if you listen to U.S. Sen. Mark Warner, D-Va., the chair of the Senate Intelligence Committee.
The Chinese-owned TikTok has been under attack throughout the last two U.S. administrations, on the argument that data collection of American users would threaten national security.
American lawmakers and authorities continue to respond to the potential ban of social media app TikTok as the Senate considers legislation.
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