The Supreme Court heard oral arguments today over the ban of popular social media app TikTok. Former U.S. attorney Joyce ...
A forthcoming paper analyzed how different social media platforms surfaced content that displayed positive and negative ...
A majority of the justices appeared more concerned about the national security implications of the popular app’s Chinese ...
The Supreme Court seemed to lean Thursday toward upholding a law forcing Chinese parent company ByteDance to sell off TikTok, ...
The Supreme Court's nine justices heard arguments on Friday in a challenge by TikTok and its Chinese parent company ByteDance ...
TikTok has repeatedly denied any potential influence by the Chinese Communist Party and has said the law violates the First ...
Selling the app could be difficult, given its scale and nine-figure price. If TikTok’s parent company, the Chinese firm ...
In a battle over free speech and national security, the justices expressed skepticism about Chinese content manipulation.
Some of the 170 million Americans who use TikTok say the court has never confronted a free speech case that matters to so ...
Justice Neil Gorsuch criticized "the government's attempt to lodge secret evidence in this case." Still, things look grim for ...
A potential nationwide TikTok ban could dramatically reshape social media for millions of content creators and users.
TikTok could be banned from being distributed in the United States and, eventually, stop working as an app altogether if the U.S. Supreme Court does not intervene to block a bipartisan law ...