Multiple passengers are confirmed to have died following a mid-air collision over Washington, DC, on Wednesday night, including a well-known TikTok figure skating star
DeepSeek, the Chinese-owned ChatGPT rival, could pose the same national security concerns that Congress has about TikTok, Philip Elliott writes.
But with the Supreme Court approving on Friday a law that would shut off access to TikTok, the U.S. is poised to conduct the exact kind of internet authoritarianism it has spent decades warning ...
The child’s father found his daughter in the bedroom of a rental property in Fairfax County, Virginia, court records show.
TikTok is warning of some wide-ranging consequences if the Supreme Court allows the law banning the video app to take effect on Jan. 19.
There were no survivors after an American Airlines plane and Army Black Hawk helicopter collided in Washington, D.C. and crashed into the Potomac River on Wednesday
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.
A ban on TikTok went into effect as expected on Jan. 19, but the app was back online hours after TikTok stopped service in the United States.
The latest turn in the ongoing saga over TikTok in the United States has brought the balance of power among the three branches of government into the spotlight.
After all, TikTok is the reason there are more self-made millionaire influencers and content creators in the U.S. than ever before.
Case in point: the TikTok ban. Concerns about Chinese ownership of an app with 170 million American users are legitimate. Nevertheless, it is rash to force ByteDance to divest or shut it down. Unless a sale can be arranged,