TikTok

President Joe Biden signed a foreign aid bill that included a potential TikTok ban unless its Chinese owners sell the platform.
TikTok has already announced it is planning legal action against the divestiture bill recently signed by President Joe Biden.
The bill forces TikTok's Chinese parent company ByteDance to sell its stake in the platform to a U.S.-based entity within 12 months or risk a ban.
The president requested the money in October, but it was held up for months because of opposition from Donald Trump and House Republicans.
Legislators in Congress have introduced a bunch of proposals for addressing online harms, but it’s not clear if they’ll move.
The bill would also ban the popular video-sharing app TikTok in the U.S. next year unless it is divested from its Chinese parent company.
The president is expected to sign the measure, which requires TikTok's Chinese parent company to sell its stake in the popular video platform or get blocked.
The former president softened his stance on TikTok this year despite calling the app a national security threat when he was in the White House.
Her sister shared the news on Instagram about "our sweet, fabulous, creative, caring, hilarious Eva."
The measure, which has bipartisan Senate support, gives TikTok's Chinese parent company one year to divest itself of the popular video platform or get blocked.