The Supreme Court heard TikTok’s challenge to the ban-or-sale law to consider whether it violates the First Amendment rights of of users and platform owners.
A majority of the justices appeared more concerned about the national security implications of the popular app’s Chinese ...
The Supreme Court seems skeptical of the Chinese-owned platform’s First Amendment claim.
Here is what Justices Brett Kavanaugh, Amy Coney Barrett, Kentanji Brown Jackson and Chief Justice John Roberts said about ...
TikTok's attorney's on Friday reiterated the popular app will shut down, rather than make a last-minute deal to keep it ...
The law that could ban TikTok is coming before the Supreme Court on Friday, with the justices largely holding the app’s fate ...
TikTok's lawyer danced around the question but said there is no precedent for a foreign government being subject to U.S. free ...
The Supreme Court is debating if TikTok can be banned in the U.S. later this month in a case pitting national security against free speech.
The Supreme Court is weighing if TikTok can be banned in the U.S. in a case pitting national security against free speech.
The Supreme Court seems likely to uphold a law that would ban TikTok in the United States beginning Jan. 19 unless the popular social media program is sold by its China-based parent company.