The Washington Capitals will continue to wear the logo of Chinese-owned social media platform TikTok on their road jerseys after a U.S. ban on the company was lifted.
We (sort of) answer the burning questions about TikTok, which is back online in the United States (sort of). TikTok is back online — sort of. But also it’s still banned. Huh? You probably have some questions about this whole thing with TikTok. I (sort of) have answers.
The social media platform is back online after a brief shutdown. Will a Washington state lawsuit against the company impact its operations?
Potential TikTok buyers are lining up as President Trump and the Chinese government show heightened interest in striking a deal to sell the popular video-sharing platform in the face of a U.S.
On Monday evening, Trump took to the Oval Office to sign a stack of executive orders during one of his first acts as president. Among them was a measure to keep TikTok operational for another 75 days, saving it from immediately being banned under a law passed last year prohibiting the app because it is owned by a Chinese company.
President Donald Trump has directed his Justice Department to pause enforcement of the TikTok ban until early April.
In an effort to save TikTok, President Donald Trump, who has gained 15 million followers on the app since last year, is pressuring China to sell half the company to the United States.
Trump's most recent plan for TikTok centers on demands that the United States be given a 50% ownership position in the app under any proposed deal.
TikTok remains unavailable on Google and Apple’s app stores in the U.S. When might it return, and what could happen to TikTok without updates in the meantime? Here's what to know.
If it feels like TikTok has been around forever, that’s probably because it has, at least if you’re measuring via internet time.
Pausing the enforcement of the TikTok ban was one of a slew of executive orders Trump signed on Monday.