The United States is forcing the Chinese company Bytedance to sell TikTok to a US owner or risk a ban from American app stores.
Trump's Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin and Shark Tank’s Mr. Wonderful are just two of TikTok's eager suitors.
The bill needs to be taken up by the U.S. Senate before it becomes law.
A House committee voted on a bill to divest TikTok by a vote of 50-0 Thursday afternoon.
The interrogation over Shou Chew's country of origin was just one of the awkward moments from today's hearing.
Montana’s first-of-its-kind TikTok ban suffers a major legal blow.
TikTok opened its shop feature to all users after testing the option in November of last year.
Three senators said recent news reports contradict CEO Shou Zi Chew's sworn testimony about where the app stores US user data.
ByteDance's ex-head of engineering claimed CCP officials were granted 'superuser' credentials to gain access to data on American users and Hong Kong protesters.
TikTok is reportedly uninterested in creating its own record label, and exclusive deals are likely as close as the company will get for now.
Bytedance employees monitored the account of one fluffy Buffy to track a Financial Times reporter in a botched attempt to trace an internal leaker.
In a fawning interview on the TED stage, CEO Shou Chew's made a pitch for why his app is good for the world.
For better or worse, a national TikTok ban looks more likely than ever. All the failed bills of the past offer competing visions of how that could happen.
The Kentucky Senator called Republicans hypocrites for trying to "censor" the app and said doing so would be politically disastrous.
Breaking with the hyperfixation on TikTok, France says none of the other recreational apps are secure either. Sacré bleu!
The company paid for the travel, hotel, meal, and shuttle expenses for 30 influencers protesting a national TikTok ban in Washington D.C.
America gets its first state-run internet bedtime. Utah may also force tech companies to scan driver's licenses.
Representatives played TikTok videos threatening their lives, misunderstood how the internet works, and watched as the CEO dodged questions
As Congress pushed around TikTok CEO Shou Chew, one representative played a video that threatened the committee, and Chew tacitly said the app sells user data.
In his first major address to the American public, CEO Shou Zi Chew will say that TikTok is super safe, super popular, and essential for America.