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Just before the July Fourth holiday, we learned that President Donald Trump secretly claimed a power so dangerous that even ...
It’s looking increasingly likely that any deal to transfer control of TikTok to new owners will mean US users have to download a new TikTok. And that could mean an almost entirely different experience ...
The ban is a bad law. But leaving it on the books and willfully ignoring it sets a potentially more dangerous precedent.
TikTok owner ByteDance is developing a replacement app intended for US-based users, according to a report, as President Trump ...
TikTok races to launch a U.S.-based version of its platform by September 5 in a bid to avoid a federal ban and navigate ...
TikTok and ByteDance — another plaintiff in the lawsuit — are expected to appeal to the Supreme Court, though its unclear whether the court will take up the case.
TikTok is reportedly developing a US version of the social media app to avoid a nationwide ban or forced sale, according to ...
TikTok may soon launch a U.S. only version of the app, reportedly called “M2,” ahead of a potential ban or forced sale ordered by the U.S. government. The move follows national security concerns and a ...
In letters made public via the Freedom of Information Act, Attorney General Pam Bondi argued the president has the authority to nullify laws as he sees fit.
NPR speaks with Zachary Price, law professor at the University of California College of Law San Francisco, about the Trump administration's rationale for exempting tech companies from the TikTok ban.
The delay gives the Trump administration more time to broker a deal to bring TikTok under American ownership. It is the third time Trump has extended the deadline.