Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The No TikTok on Government Devices Act was originally introduced in 2020 by Senator Josh Hawley (R-MO) and passed the United States Senate by unanimous consent on August 6, 2020. [3] The bill ( S. 1143 ) was reintroduced on April 15, 2021, by Senator Hawley and it passed the Senate by unanimous consent again on December 14, 2022.
The approved resolution cites the No TikTok on Government Devices Act approved by the U.S. Senate and the Consolidated Appropriations Act 2023 that calls for the removal of TikTok from government ...
And yes, bosses at private companies and corporations can ban workers from using TikTok on work-issued devices “more easily than the federal government,” J.S. Nelson, a law professor and ...
On 21 March 2023, the federal government began a review of the app. [134] The review is expected to ban TikTok on all official government devices. It has been reported that some politicians are using burner phones due to the ban. [135] On 4 April 2023, TikTok was banned on all government devices, including the mobile phones of politicians. [136]
The UK government and Parliament banned TikTok from staff work devices in 2023, as has the European Commission. The BBC also advised staff to delete TikTok from corporate phones because of ...
The federal government and 27 state governments have banned popular China-based video sharing mobile app TikTok from government-issued devices.
Message displayed to US users on the TikTok app during the shutdown on January 18, 2025. The short-form video-hosting service TikTok has been under a de jure nationwide ban in the United States since January 19, 2025, due to the US government's concerns over potential user data collection and influence operations by the government of the People's Republic of China.
The popular social media app TikTok went dark for its 170 million American users on Jan. 19, after months of fighting the federal government’s demand that it separate from its China-based parent ...