If you have your heart set on AI-generating some John Wick-style action scenes starring celebrities with weird voices, we have some bad news.
ByteDance's video generator wins the prize for being the splashiest new AI model of the past few weeks.
An entity has been created and a deadline has been avoided, as the TikTok deal drags on.
A new U.S.-based joint venture would keep TikTok online while handing oversight of its algorithm and data security to some of America’s wealthiest investors.
The Big Apple bites back.
Details of the proposed deal haven't been released.
Finally, I can get my eyeballs as close to TikTok as humanly possible.
After nearly two days of outages–longer than TikTok itself was down in the U.S.–developer Second Dinner says changes are being made to avoid Snap being caught by future potential action against Bytedance.
The U.S. government's ban against ByteDance products has hit folks hard, but Second Dinner says Marvel Snap "isn't going anywhere."
Yet another legal case against the Chinese-owned social media company alleges it has been illegally hoovering up data on children.
The former president says the social video app should still stick around, if for no other reason than it hurts Mark Zuckerberg.
The social media app might get hit with a federal lawsuit before its ban officially begins as the FTC has issued a warning for possible future crimes.
Accounts for CNN, Sony, and Paris Hilton have reportedly been compromised.
The company will reward your leap of faith with a handful of exclusive AI software features.
Frank McCourt says he wants to buy TikTok to make a "new and better version of the internet."
The social video platform says the law is unconstitutional.
The U.S. Secretary of State said "context, history, and facts" around Israel's war in Gaza are lost on social media, while emotional images dominate.
It was another week of bad news for some very rich people.
The TikTok ban is now the law of the land. What now?
A legal battle between TikTok and the United States is looming, and a court may decide whether you have the right to use the app.