The Supreme Court seems likely to uphold a law that would ban TikTok in the United States beginning Jan. 19 unless the popular social media program is sold by its China-based parent company.
FOX 13's Kylie Jones provides an update on the ongoing Supreme Court case that threatens to ban the app in the U.S. and details what that could mean for content creators and small business owners.
The University of Michigan says it is ending its partnership with a prominent Chinese university, a few months after five Chinese students in the joint program were charged over their suspicious ...
Some of the 170 million Americans who use TikTok say the court has never confronted a free speech case that matters to so ...
Love and Deepspace, the mega-popular mobile game from the studios behind Infinity Nikki, will be getting a head-turning ...
If Lemon8 were to be banned as well, TikTok users would largely be limited to long-established social media platforms like ...
TikTok could be banned from being distributed in the United States and, eventually, stop working as an app altogether if the ...
Fun’s over: The latest update to Marvel Rivals has killed support for PC mods that change the looks of its heroes, like ...
TikTok has repeatedly denied any potential influence by the Chinese Communist Party and has said the law violates the First ...
With just nine days to go until it's banned in the U.S., things aren't looking great for TikTok. The Supreme Court heard ...
On Friday, the nation's highest court heard arguments on whether to uphold or block a law that could effectively ban TikTok​ ...
The first chart shows how each day’s temperature compares with what would have been typical in the late 19th century. The ...