The Supreme Court appeared ready to uphold a law that will ban TikTok in the U.S. if its Chinese owners don't sell the widly ...
TikTok will “go dark” after January 19 unless the Supreme Court intervenes to stop a law to force its Chinese parent to sell ...
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 signaled on Friday that it is considering upholding ... could arrive before the ban is slated to take ...
The law that could ban TikTok is coming before the Supreme Court on Friday, with the justices largely holding the app's fate ...
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.
Supreme Court justices appeared to be skeptical toward TikTok's arguments when challenging a law that may result in it being ...
Noel Francisco, who argued on behalf of TikTok and ByteDance, said the potential Supreme Court decision is "enormously consequential" for the platform's 170 million users in the U.S. and their ...
This article was updated on Jan. 17 at 12:45 p.m. The Supreme Court on Wednesday unanimously upheld ... At oral arguments on Jan. 10, TikTok’s lawyer, Noel Francisco, told the justices that TikTok ...
Here is what Justices Brett Kavanaugh, Amy Coney Barrett, Kentanji Brown Jackson and Chief Justice John Roberts said about ...
Noel Francisco, representing TikTok and ByteDance, argued that Supreme Court endorsement of this law could enable statutes targeting other companies on similar grounds. "AMC movie theaters used ...