President Donald Trump’s decision to issue an executive order Monday delaying enforcement of the federal ban on TikTok has deepened a murky legal landscape in the US for the popular social media app and its technology partners.
Donald Trump is now being hailed as TikTok's savior after he tried to ban the app during his White House first term.
For many of America’s 170 million TikTok users, US President Donald Trump’s move to delay a legal ban of the popular social media platform was cause for celebration. But in China, where TikTok’s parent company is based,
TikTok users in the U.S. flurried to social media platform X to complain that the ByteDance-owned app that went dark late on Jan. 18 was still unavailable to download on Apple and Google’s app stores,
On his first full day in office Tuesday, President Donald Trump continued sweeping actions, including ordering the shuttering of all executive branch diversity, equity, and inclusion offices and ordering all employees working in such offices to be placed on leave.
President Donald Trump has directed his Justice Department to pause enforcement of the TikTok ban until early April.
The US president says Russia will face "high levels of taxes, tariffs and sanctions" if it does not make a deal to end the conflict.
President Donald Trump said on Sunday that the US could have "a joint venture" with TikTok.
TikTok went dark for a few hours in the U.S. before the ban was suddenly reversed Sunday. Here's what to know about President Trump's executive order.
TikTok could still not be downloaded from the Apple and Google app stores in the U.S, even after President Trump's executive order.
A number of social-media posts claim that the Chinese-owned app is blocking content that is critical of the new president.