Legislation forcing TikTok’s parent company to sell the video-sharing platform or face a ban in the U.S. has received President Joe Biden’s official signoff.
Continue reading White House spokeswoman Karine Jean-Pierre said on Tuesday, according to Reuters will still be using it to reach young voters video posted on TikTok according to YouGov data from last month Montana last year Electronic Frontier Foundation Civil Liberties Director David Greene told Mashable bill of attainder to call lawmakers As Mashable's Tim Marcin wrote As journalist and commentator Casey Newton pointed out in Platformer piece for Lawfare on Monday Lamont v.
Congress passed a bill this week that forces TikTok to be sold or face a nationwide ban. President Biden signed it into law Wednesday, starting a 270-day timer for TikTok to decide its future in the United States.
Congress passed a bill this week that forces TikTok to be sold or face a nationwide ban. President Biden signed it into law Wednesday, starting a 270-day timer for TikTok to decide its future in the United States.
U.S. President Joe Biden signed a law that may lead to the ban of TikTok in the country. However ... It is not an outright ban. Instead, the new legislation will allow TikTok to stay available to U.S.
Forty-two percent of Americans support the U.S. government’s TikTok ban, according to new research. The survey of 2,000 Americans, conducted by Talker Research, found that only 23% of all those polled are against it,
Democrats are bracing for a backlash from young voters over the potential ban of TikTok on U.S. phones, something made more likely by the Chinese government’s opposition to ByteDance selling off one of the most sophisticated algorithms in the world.
The bill in question, which President Joe Biden signed Wednesday, gives Chinese parent company ByteDance nine months to divest TikTok or face a ban on app stores to distribute the app in the U.S. The law received strong bipartisan support in the House and a majority Senate vote Tuesday,
Do the lawmakers who support it call it a “TikTok ban” in shorthand as well? NO! Lawmakers go to great pains to insist that it’s not a “ban,” and that they would never want to ban anything beloved by hundreds of millions of eligible voters in an election year.
TikTok is now on the clock. The owners of the popular social media app have nine months to sell or face a federal ban. The head of TikTok and Texas Sen. John Cornyn say the fight is far from over.
This week President Biden signed a new law that gives TikTok’s Chinese owner ByteDance nine months to sell the app, with a possible three-month extension if a sale is in progress. “There’s certainly time on the books,
TikTok is facing restrictions worldwide and could be banned in the U.S. following a new law signed by President Joe Biden. Credit - Jakub Porzycki—. O n Wednesday, J