The Supreme Court upheld a law that requires TikTok's Chinese owner to sell off the app's U.S. business or face a nationwide ban Sunday.
Bipartisan skepticism voiced by Justices Clarence Thomas, John Roberts ... both are famously censorship-happy. Despite its opposition from many parents and educators, TikTok has been a surprising ...
Chief Justice John Roberts asked TikTok's attorney. If the court backs the law, attention will turn to President-elect Donald Trump. More:Who could buy TikTok to avoid app's ban? Newest name being ...
Chinese social media platform Xiaohongshu, also known as RedNote, has been hiring for a surprising position in recent days: English-language content moderators.
When asked, for instance, about Chinese censorship of Twitter in 2009 ... approving on Friday a law that would shut off access to TikTok, the U.S. is poised to conduct the exact kind of internet ...
Bipartisan skepticism voiced by Justices Clarence Thomas, John Roberts, and Ketanji Brown ... run the most obvious substitutes for TikTok, and despite Mark Zuckerberg’s recent reforms, both are famously censorship-happy. Meta’s censorship empire ...
Heather Roberts, an American artist with more than 32,000 followers on TikTok and a new account ... some have started to express frustration over the censorship rules, which go far beyond what ...
As Donald J. Trump returns to the role of U.S. president, many Americans ask themselves a simple question: Will his administration protect their pocketbooks, their way of life and their
Listeners who were shocked to hear Trump declare that the U.S. government will now embrace the fact that there are only two sexes, male and female, need to pick up a copy of the New York Times. Its latest poll shows 79% of Americans support keeping biological males out of girls’ sports.
After all, TikTok is the reason there are more self-made millionaire influencers and content creators in the U.S. than ever before.
U.S. TikTok users who once saw the app as a haven for free speech say they see signs of censorship after the platform, which is owned by China’s ByteDance, was returned by an executive order from President Donald Trump.
In a historic development, Chinese-owned social media platform TikTok has become the center of a bipartisan bill to ban the app nationwide in the name of national security. Xiao Qiang, a research scientist at the UC Berkeley School of Information and a prominent scholar in the study of state censorship,