President-elect Donald Trump has pledged to stop TikTok going dark—but tech companies who help him risk incurring $850 billion in fines.
TikTok came back online after Donald Trump promised to delay a law banning it, but its service providers have taken different stances on the ban.
On the eve of his return to office, the President-elect's pivot from TikTok critic to potential savior marks a striking shift in the platform's U.S. prospects
TikTok restored service to users in the United States on Sunday, after the popular app went dark in response to a federal ban.
TikTok may be back, but that hasn't prevented other Chinese competitors from gaining users. In the lead up to a ban on TikTok — which kicked off Sunday
The 170 million U.S. users of the social video platform look to the new president to sustain the app, despite passage of a law banning it if it was not sold by its Chinese parent company.
President-elect Donald Trump is expected to grant TikTok more time to strike a deal after he returns to power on Monday as China has signaled it would be open to a deal to keep TikTok in the US market.
The company said TikTok was coming back online in the U.S. after President-elect Donald Trump provided assurances to its service providers.
Video sharing app TikTok returned Sunday after a 12 hour outage due to a U.S. government ban. What happens when Trump takes office? What we know.
As for Apple’s unprecedented action, this was spotted by Bloomberg’s Mark Gurman in a post on X, who pointed out that Apple issued a support document about TikTok, titled “About availability of TikTok and ByteDance Ltd. Apps in the United States.”
TikTok creators and users celebrate Trump's plan to "save" the app at the "Power 30" event in Washington, D.C.