The US Supreme Court on Friday will hear TikTok's appeal of a law that would force its Chinese owner to sell the video-sharing platform or shut it down in the United States.
TikTok will be ending its operation in the United States in only ten days barring a last-second move from the Supreme Court.
While Friday's U.S. Supreme Court hearing on a potential TikTok ban has more to do with national security concerns than anything else, the app's addictive features can't be separated from the story.
ByteDance, TikTok’s parent company, said it will start the shutdown process if the Supreme Court doesn’t step in.
The Supreme Court on Friday will hear oral arguments in the case involving the future of TikTok in the U.S., which could ban ...
The secret of one Granite State Tik Tok star to two million followers and counting!
Court to hear arguments Friday on law forcing TikTok sale by Chinese parent company that takes effect in Jan. 19.
TikTok and China-based ByteDance, as well as content creators and users, argue the law is a dramatic violation of the Constitution’s free speech guarantee.
With Donald Trump on its side, the Chinese-controlled company behind the popular app claims the First Amendment protects it ...
The Chinese-owned app is battling for survival as a deadline looms over its fate.
It makes a mockery of the so-called ethics rules that they put in place, but that there's no mechanism to enforce.
TikTok said it will shut down by Jan. 19—the proposed date of the social media app's U.S. ban—if the Supreme Court does not intervene.