ByteDance has been embroiled in legal battles for months to attempt to block the ban, and the Supreme Court ruling comes as a ...
The Supreme Court appears inclined to uphold a law that would ban the video-sharing app TikTok in the U.S. after Jan. 19 unless its China-owned parent company divests.
TikTok, ByteDance and several users of the app sued to halt the ban, arguing it would suppress free speech for the millions ...
The Supreme Court has decided to uphold the law that will ban TikTok on Jan. 19 if its parent company ByteDance continues to ...
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 Supreme Court’s consideration of the case comes ... Noel Francisco, a lawyer for TikTok and ByteDance, emphasised to the court that the law risked shuttering one of the most popular ...
His attorneys filed an amicus brief last month, urging the Supreme Court to delay the ban until he is sworn in as president. If the goal of China and ByteDance, through TikTok, is "trying to get ...
The Supreme Court seemed to lean Thursday toward upholding a law forcing Chinese parent company ByteDance to sell off TikTok, with all nine justices indicating national security concerns posed by ...
When will TikTok be banned in the US? If the Supreme Court does not pause the law and ByteDance does not sell TikTok to someone less adversarial than a Chinese company by Sunday, Jan. 19 ...
Political shifts and legal hurdles have delayed TikTok's removal, with Biden reportedly kicking the issue to Trump.