Washington — The Supreme Court on Friday upheld a new law that would lead to a ban of the social media platform TikTok, ...
TikTok, ByteDance and several users of the app sued to halt the ban, arguing it would suppress free speech for the millions ...
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 ...
In an unsigned decision, the court sided with the government’s arguments that the divest-or-ban law does not violate the ...
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 upheld a law that requires TikTok's Chinese owner to sell off the app's U.S. business or face a nationwide ban Sunday.
President Joe Biden won't enforce the ban on the social media platform TikTok he signed into law last year that goes into ...
The U.S. Supreme Court officially upheld the law to ban the TikTok social media app on Friday.
The US Supreme Court on Friday upheld a law that could pave the way for a US ban of TikTok to take effect as soon as Sunday.
The law gives TikTok until January 19th to divest from ByteDance. The Supreme Court ruled that the law that could oust TikTok from the US unless Chinese parent company ByteDance sells it is ...
Without doubt, the remedy Congress and the President chose here is dramatic,” Justice Neil Gorsuch wrote in a concurring ...