Clock ticking on US TikTok ban

 

FILE – A U.S. flag is displayed alongside a TikTok logo in this illustration photo taken March 20, 2024.

A look at some of the most popular short videos on the TikTok social media platform may prompt head-scratching about what the fuss is.

There is Charli D’Amelio (nearly 156 million followers) from the state of Connecticut, dancing in an 11-second clip to a remix of a Chris Brown song.

There is a smiling baby having her cheeks squeezed (400 million views).

And a video clip has racked up 2.3 billion views of California illusionist Zach King riding a “magic broomstick.”

Any day now, the billions of comedy skits, dance challenges, life hacks, and cute pets and babies on TikTok could become invisible in the United States.

The U.S. Supreme Court has fast-tracked oral arguments on a challenge by the Chinese company ByteDance, the owner of TikTok, to a new U.S. law that would ban the social media platform on grounds of national security.








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Clock ticks on US TikTok ban




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