The Supreme Court upheld a federal law that President Joe Biden signed in April that will shut down TikTok on Jan. 19, 2025.
The Supreme Court upheld a US law that bans TikTok on Jan. 19 unless it is sold to an owner not controlled by a foreign ...
The Supreme Court rejected TikTok's appeal to halt a law banning the app in the U.S. unless Chinese parent ByteDance sells ...
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 ...
The decision came a week after the justices heard a First Amendment challenge to a law aimed at the wildly popular short-form ...
The U.S. Supreme Court on Jan. 17, 2025, upheld a law requiring TikTok’s China-based parent company, ByteDance, to sell the ...
Although President-elect Donald Trump could choose to not enforce the law, it’s unclear whether third-party internet service ...
Following a unanimous Supreme Court decision that upheld the Protecting Americans from Foreign Adversary Controlled ...
The decision resolves a long-running legal dispute between the Department of Justice and TikTok. But experts say ...
Meta’s Instagram and Google’s YouTube are getting ready to welcome TikTok users, as the Supreme Court upheld a law that effectively bans the Chinese-owned app from the United States.
The U.S. Supreme Court officially upheld the law to ban the TikTok social media app on Friday. The case has become a pivotal ...
TikTok's fate in the U.S. now lies in the hands of President-elect Donald Trump, who in December asked the Supreme Court to pause the law's implementation and allow his administration "the opportunity ...