The United States Supreme Court has ruled that a federal law that bans the TikTok app unless its Chinese owner sells it to a ...
The U.S. Supreme Court refused to rescue TikTok on Friday from a law that required the popular short-video app to be sold by ...
President-elect Donald Trump had called on the court to keep the ban on hold until after he takes office Monday.
With the court signaling it will release a decision on Friday, lobbyists for the app pushed lawmakers to shift course.
Donald Trump had asked the Supreme Court to delay TikTok’s ban-or-sale law to give him an opportunity to act once he returns ...
The court held that the risk to national security posed by the app's ties to China overcomes concerns about limiting speech.
The court’s decision Friday means new users won’t be able to download the app and updates won’t be available, but it won’t ...
A sale does not appear imminent and, although experts have said the app will not disappear from existing users’ phones once ...
Read the full Supreme Court ruling clearing the way for a law forcing TikTok to sell off the popular app or be banned in the ...
It is true that the ban, running under the legislation titled "Protecting Americans from Foreign Adversary Controlled ...
Looming over the Supreme Court's TikTok decision is what could happen after Donald Trump takes office. Trump promised to "save" the popular platform.