The Supreme Court upheld a law that requires TikTok's Chinese owner to sell off the app's U.S. business or face a nationwide ...
The case hinges on whether TikTok can convince Justices that such a mandate violates the First Amendment by forcing a foreign-controlled app to sell or shut down. As of Friday, they have not — and the ...
The ban is aimed at whipping up anti-Chinese hatred in preparation for a US war, and stepping up state and media censorship ...
Welcome to The Hill’s Technology newsletter {beacon} Technology Technology   The Big Story Supreme Court skeptical of ...
The justices are hearing arguments to decide whether the Chinese-owned app must shut down by Jan. 19 ...
Chief Justice John Roberts said. The law designates the Chinese government a foreign adversary. “Congress doesn’t care about ...
After nearly three hours of Supreme Court arguments Friday morning, Americans are one step closer to learning whether a ...
Over the last few months, though, arguments around potential national security risks emerged due to the company's ties to ...
A second argument, pressed by several justices and particularly by Chief Justice John Roberts, is that the TikTok ban is lawful because Congress wasn’t really motivated by a desire to restrict ...
Ahead of a looming U.S. ban on TikTok, content creators have been flocking to RedNote as well as Lemon8, TikTok's sister app.
Justices spent more than two hours arguing over whether a ban on the app would be infringing on the First Amendment ...
After nearly three hours of Supreme Court arguments Friday morning, Americans are one step closer to learning whether a TikTok ban will ... Chief Justice John Roberts joked that if ByteDance ...