TikTok’s CEO Shou Zi Chew was seated on the dais at Trump’s inauguration Monday, signaling a budding alliance with the president. Massie, the Republican who co-sponsored the bill to repeal the ban, posted a photo he’d taken of Chew from the crowd on X. “Tick tock, the TikTok ban is about to end,” Massie wrote.
President Trump signed an executive order on his first day in office that halts the ban on TikTok. But is TikTok actually "saved?"
President Trump’s efforts to force TikTok’s Chinese parent company to sell the popular app, all while keeping it available to U.S. users despite Sunday’s ban, raise a slew of legal and
As he promised Sunday, President Donald Trump on Monday signed an executive action that delays enforcement of the TikTok ban for 75 days.
The popular video app went dark in the United States late Saturday and then came back around noon on Sunday, even as a law banning it took effect.
TikTok remained unavailable in Google and Apple app stores on Tuesday as President Trump’s executive order delaying enforcement on Congress’s sale-or-ban bill by 75 days fueled uncertainty about
Justices brushed aside arguments that shutting down the platform prevents 170 million users from expressing themselves and exchanging ideas, writes Roy S. Gutterman of Syracuse University's Newhouse School.
President-elect Donald Trump proposed the U.S. own half of TikTok to satisfy national security concerns and save the social media app.
CapCut is a free video-editing platform created, owned and operated by ByteDance. It was launched in the U.S. in 2020. It was the second most downloaded photo and video app in the Apple App Store after Instagram, according to USA Today.
Donald Trump is asserting a muscular vision of presidential power, sometimes using novel or expansive interpretations of his authority. Legal battles are expected.
In a flurry of unilateral executive actions, Mr. Trump revived disputed claims of broad presidential authority from his first term — and made some new ones. Court battles seem likely.