TikTok says it’s “in the process” of restoring service to users in the United States after the popular video-sharing platform went dark in response to a new law.
Key Takeaways A TikTok ban could go into effect in the U.S. on Sunday, leaving other companies to compete for its users’ attention and almost $10 billion in ad revenue.Meta could be the biggest winner given its large user base said analysts at Morgan Stanley.
Discover the ultimate tech comparison of YouTube vs. TikTok, from recommendation systems and streaming quality to monetization and user engagement.
MrBeast is part of a growing list of individuals and businesses that have expressed interesting in purchasing TikTok.
President-elect Donald Trump has asked Google and Apple to keep TikTok in their app stores and pledged to “issue an executive order on Monday to extend the period of time before the law’s prohibitions take effect.” He also proposed a “50% ownership position” for the U.S.
TikTok shut down in the U.S. over a law banning the app Jan. 19 in the absence of a divestiture by parent ByteDance. Here's what could happen next.
TikTok faces U.S. ban on Jan. 19, leaving 170M users scrambling for alternatives amid national security concerns and data privacy debates.
The Supreme Court ruled on Friday, Jan. 17, to uphold a law that would ban the app for the 170 million people who use the app in the U.S. The ruling lines up with decisions other courts have made and sets up the ban to go into effect on Sunday, Jan. 19.
The platform is in need of saving in the United States, where approximately 170 million people have TikTok accounts. On Friday, the U.S. Supreme Court upheld a federal law that will ban the platform on Jan. 19 unless TikTok’s China-based owner ByteDance divests its U.S. operations.
STATEN ISLAND, N.Y. — TikTok users across the U.S. were unable to access videos on the platform Saturday evening, just hours before a nationwide ban on the app went into effect, and well-know Staten Island social media influencers are very distressed, yet others are determined to continue with their social media careers.
The Netflix series "Hype House" features a group of young TikTok and YouTube content creators who lived in a mansion in Los Angeles as they tried to make it as viral stars. The meta nature of the show − about kids trying to create their own "shows" and ...