President Trump issued an executive order on Monday aimed at stalling the TikTok ban in the hopes of working out a way to save the app going forward. Opinion: Ban TikTok. National security outweighs free speech concerns.
A TikTok ban briefly came into effect this past weekend in the U.S., but service came back the next day. What exactly happened?
President Donald Trump on Wednesday batted down the national security concerns surrounding TikTok, saying, “Is it that important for China to be spying on young people? On young kids watching crazy videos?
Coco Gauff said she hopes TikTok "comes back" in the U.S. after the federal ban of the popular app took effect Saturday.
Under the deal being negotiated by the White House, TikTok’s China-based owner, ByteDance, would retain a stake in the company, but data collection and software updates would be overseen by Oracle, which already provides the foundation of TikTok’s Web infrastructure, one of the sources told Reuters.
The app went dark nationwide on Saturday night, but the company indicated it was in the process of restoring the service after assurances from President-elect Donald J. Trump.
After several attempts, finally came the moment when ByteDance's platform, TikTok disappears from the United States after a legal battle.
Trump popped in to the plane’s press cabin while flying from Las Vegas to Florida, where he was staying at his Doral golf club through Monday evening, though he insisted he’d be too busy to hit the links.
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.
Polymarket is under scrutiny from its users after the contentious resolution of a market predicting whether TikTok would be banned.
Original: TikTok is now officially banned and unavailable in the United States, ensuring it can no longer be used by those who have the app downloaded. TikTok is one of the biggest platforms on ...