Trump said that he plans to issue an executive order that would give ByteDance more time to find an approved buyer before the popular video-sharing platform is subject to a perman
The Supreme Court ruled on Friday, Jan. 17, to uphold a law that would ban the app for the 170 million people who use the app in the U.S. The ruling lines up with decisions other courts have made and sets up the ban to go into effect on Sunday, Jan. 19.
After hearing arguments on Friday morning, the U.S. Supreme Court decided to uphold the law, meaning that TikTok will be banned effective if the parent company ByteDance does not sell the company by Sunday.
The fate of 170 million TikTok users is now in the hands of President-elect Donald Trump.On Friday, the U.S. Supreme Court upheld the law requiring TikTok to be sold to a U.S. company or banned by Sunday,
RedNote, an increasingly popular alternative to TikTok, has links to Pentagon-designated "Chinese military companies."
TikTok went dark in the United States on Sunday as millions of dismayed users found themselves barred from the popular app, with President-elect Donald Trump vowing to seek a reprieve. After discussing TikTok with Chinese President Xi Jinping,
Xiaohongshu has been the most downloaded ... CBS News has asked President-elect Donald Trump's transition team whether the incoming administration might deem RedNote a national security threat ...
That decision shifts the focus to whether President-elect Donald Trump can intervene after he takes office on Monday.
TikTok could avoid a US ban at the last minute despite the Supreme Court ruling against the Chinese-owned app...
It remained unclear how long the ban would stay in place as President-elect Donald Trump has said he would try to find a "political resolution"