January 17th, 2025

Supreme Court Backs Law Requiring TikTok to Be Sold or Banned

The Supreme Court upheld a law requiring TikTok's sale or ban in the U.S. due to national security concerns, impacting users and the book marketing industry amid bipartisan support.

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Supreme Court Backs Law Requiring TikTok to Be Sold or Banned

the Supreme Court's ruling takes effect, TikTok's operations in the U.S. will be severely impacted. The Court unanimously upheld a law requiring TikTok to either be sold or banned due to national security concerns related to its Chinese ownership. The law, signed by President Biden, reflects bipartisan support in Congress, emphasizing fears that the Chinese government could exploit TikTok for data collection and propaganda. As the ban approaches, many TikTok users, particularly teenagers, are seeking ways to circumvent it using VPNs. Meanwhile, authors and publishers who have relied on TikTok for marketing are anxious about losing their audience and are urging followers to connect on other platforms. The potential loss of TikTok could create a significant gap in the book marketing landscape, as the platform has been instrumental in driving sales and promoting new authors. The future of TikTok remains uncertain, with discussions about possible executive orders to allow its continued operation, but the likelihood of a ban looms large.

- The Supreme Court ruled unanimously to uphold a law banning TikTok in the U.S. due to national security concerns.

- TikTok's potential ban could significantly impact its 170 million American users and the book marketing industry.

- Many users are exploring ways to bypass the ban using VPNs.

- Authors and publishers are scrambling to maintain their audiences on other social media platforms.

- The law reflects bipartisan support, highlighting widespread concerns over TikTok's Chinese ownership.

Link Icon 6 comments
By @ellisv - 3 months
By @beardyw - 3 months
> ... to Be Sold or Banned

Or probably just fudged.

By @iugtmkbdfil834 - 3 months
Fascinating stuff. If there was a moment for SCOTUS to show that principles mean something, that was now, because it was easy and would have cost next to nothing. Now all bets are off, because the old guard likely managed to galvanize portion of the US user base by showing it what US truly values. edit:

Edit: To the downvotes. US espouses freedom of speech, but fails to live up to it. Tell me what TikTok is doing that Meta, MS and others are NOT doing.