The company behind TikTok unveiled its new $425 Pico headset, though it will only be available in some European and Asian countries.
The platform is banning political fundraising videos and will require U.S. politically affiliated accounts to be verified.
The new ad-technology is a clear sign of just how deep the ongoing TikTok-ification of the internet runs. Even the ads are adapting.
The short-form video app announced its TikTok Now feature lets users capture fun videos to send to their friends, very similar to one existing popular app.
Officers of Meta, YouTube, Twitter and TikTok gathered to be grilled over their company's protracted flaws.
The FTC’s lawsuit against Meta accused the company of being anticompetitive, but the social company says it needs rivals’ data to prove it isn’t a monopoly.
Meta has longed to see its Reels feature grab a piece of the short form video pie from TikTok, but both users and influencers apparently aren’t too interested.
Berkeley Professor Hany Farid writes that the arguments in favor of California's new children's privacy legislation are "clear and uncontroversial."
The short video app, known for sucking up a radical amount of your data, wants you to know that it didn't let hackers steal any of it.
Sometimes, vying for "viral" has seriously destructive consequences.
Microsoft researchers said they revealed the ‘one-click’ exploit to TikTok security back in February, adding that the flaw has already been patched out.
YouTube launched its Shorts feature two years ago to keep up with the growing popularity of short video clips most notably made trendy by TikTok.
While TikTok said the code’s only used for debugging, researchers also found Meta products Facebook and Instagram can track users’ in-app browser.
The new feature includes content generated by national associations to connect users with authoritative political information and resources.
Instagram steals from Snapchat, then Facebook steals from Instagram, and around and around we go.
Leaked documents detail what TikTok tells the media—and what it doesn’t.
The bipartisan pair of senators heightened calls to investigate TikTok following reports alleging China-based employees accessed U.S. user data.
The company has been on the defensive after recent reports brought new questions whether China’s government had access to U.S. user data.
Commissioner Brendan Carr railed against the popular Chinese-owned social platform, alleging it was handing over U.S. citizen’s data to Beijing.
A BuzzFeed report cites recorded audio from internal meetings claiming engineers had access to U.S. user data for five months.