As major platforms face mounting scrutiny over content moderation and user privacy, a developer's vision for ethical social media draws support
Former Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin has also taken steps to purchase TikTok. Shortly after Congress passed the ban, Mnuchin told CNBC he had started creating an investor group that would purchase the popular social media company. He offered no details ...
Though the TikTok Ban lasted less than 24 hours, content creators and influencers have been pushed to consider other social media platforms outside of TikTok.
President Donald Trump had recently expressed his support in SpaceX and Tesla CEO Elon Musk or Oracle CEO Larry Ellison purchasing TikTok.
While banning the Chinese app, blamed globally for misinformation and political influencing, in 2020 was the right step, India's battle against digital propaganda is ongoing
Several social media apps have appearing high in app store chart rankings as a potential U.S. ban hangs over the heads of TikTok and its American users.
While it is still not confirmed that the US will ban TikTok, the reality is looming ever-closer. US TikTok users are now considering whether they'll need a TikTok VPN to access the site, or turn elsewhere for their short-form video hits instead. Not ideal but it would certainly set an interesting precedent for other social media sites.
With a shutdown looming, some social media platforms have turned the charm up to woo a potential influx of new users.
Multiple people on social media, including conservative media personality Candace Owens, have claimed that Israeli lobbying groups have pushed the U.S. to ban TikTok because of the high number of pro-Palestine content being created and shared on the app.
The social media platform stopped working late Saturday night, and the sudden shock of losing it might affect some more than they expect. Here’s everything to know about the potential TikTok ban and how going cold turkey on social media can affect you: It’s true.
Chrissy Teigen has proposed the government implement a 12-hour social media shutdown after 6 p.m. to prevent it from consuming peoples’ lives. The 39-year-old model shared her idea in a series of Instagram Stories posted on Saturday (January 18), the same day TikTok briefly went dark in the U.S.
With TikTok banned over the weekend, LPGA star Chalrey Hull took to Instagram to suggest that all social media should be banned. Here's why.