TikTok users may be experiencing a bit of déjà vu this week, with the app days away from a potential US ban and little concrete information available on its future.
Some areas have already banned TikTok on government-issued devices. New York State imposed a ban on state-issued mobile devices in 2020, and New York City followed suit in 2024, restricting the app from government-owned devices.
Billionaire Reid Rasner offered himself as the most "Trumpian" and least-influenced by China buyer to offer a bid for the social media platform TikTok.
A TikTok rescue reportedly being pursued by President Trump may not fully cut ties between the social media app and its Chinese parent company. But such a deal may survive any challenges due to how the US law was written — and the hold that Trump has over the GOP-controlled Congress.
Three Democratic senators said “there is a better solution” to banning TikTok in the U.S. and suggested President Donald Trump direct Senate Republicans to pass the “Extend the
President Donald Trump restarted the clock for TikTok in mid-January with a 75-day halt on order to ban the Chinese-owned app. Now, as the days tick down to single digits, little has changed about ...
The number of Americans who support banning TikTok has fallen dramatically over the past two years, according to a new poll. Just 34 percent of Americans said they support a TikTok ban, down from