If it feels like TikTok has been around forever, that's probably because it has, at least if you're measuring via internet time.
TikTok fans in the U.S. are racing to secure alternatives and safeguard their digital empires ahead of a looming shutdown on Sunday, evoking the chaos of India's 2020 ban that erased the app from the lives of 200 million users overnight.
TikTok became unavailable in U.S. on Saturday evening after Supreme Court upheld the ban. Follow along for live updates.
TikTok told users the app will be "temporarily unavailable" as its Chinese parent company ByteDance pins its hopes on Donald Trump to save it.
TikTok’s time in the United States is counting down. But Washington is only the latest government to impose restrictions on the video app.
When India banned TikTok in June 2020, Meta's Instagram and Google's YouTube gained big time. Will it be the same with the US suspension?
Trump says an announcement will probably come once he takes office on Monday about the app's future in the US.
India's reusable launch vehicle (RSV) landed at the Aeronautical Test Range (ATR) in Chitradurga, Karnataka after a successful free flight. Credit: ISRO
The US is inching closer and closer to a potential TikTok ban — with the nation’s highest court upholding a law that’s set to halt new downloads of the app starting Sunday. But many questions around what exactly this ban will look like,
TikTok’s app effectively shut down in the US, just hours before a law banning the popular video-sharing platform was set to go into effect. “A law banning TikTok has been enacted in the US Unfortunately,
Following a temporary outage brought on by a government prohibition due to national security concerns related to its Chinese parent business, ByteDance, TikTok resumed operations in the United States on Sunday.