The U.S. Supreme Court officially upheld the law to ban the TikTok social media app on Friday.
TikTok informed a federal district judge that it will not appeal a Third Circuit ruling that determined the company’s ...
TikTok, ByteDance and several users of the app sued to halt the ban, arguing it would suppress free speech for the millions ...
The app had more than 170 million monthly users in the U.S. The black-out is the result of a law forcing the service offline ...
Political shifts and legal hurdles have delayed TikTok's removal, with Biden reportedly kicking the issue to Trump.
In an unsigned opinion, the Court sided with the national security concerns about TikTok rather than the First Amendment ...
Find updates from the TikTok Supreme Court arguments here. Washington — The Supreme Court is set to hear arguments Friday morning on whether to overturn or delay a law that could lead to a ban ...
Update: Supreme Court upholds law that could ban TikTok in the U.S. Read more. The start of the weekend marks two days until the social media platform TikTok could be banned in the United States.
The Supreme Court’s remarkably speedy decision Friday to allow a controversial ban on TikTok to take hold will have a dramatic impact on the tens of millions of Americans who visit the app every ...
Friday’s decision is a per curiam ruling, meaning that it’s attributed to the Supreme Court as a whole, rather than a group of individual justices. The court agreed with the g ...
In an unsigned decision, the court sided with the government’s arguments that the divest-or-ban law does not violate the ...
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.
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