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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 House voted Wednesday to pass legislation that could ban TikTok in the U.S. as Republicans and Democrats alike sound the alarm that the popular video-sharing app, owned by a China-based ...
The House is poised to pass legislation that could ban TikTok in the U.S. as members warn the popular video-sharing app is a national security threat.
The US House of Representatives has passed a bill that would ban TikTok in the United States if its Chinese parent company ByteDance doesn’t sell.
The House has now passed a bill that could ban TikTok. What happens next? ... about six months to divest the video app used by 170 million Americans. ... the House’s TikTok bill is a ban, and it ...
President Biden signed a landmark bill Wednesday morning that gives China's ByteDance up to one year to divest TikTok or face a US ban on the app.
The post House passes bill to force TikTok sale or ban in the US, extending deadline to 9 months appeared first on TheGrio. ... The icon for the video sharing TikTok app is seen on a smartphone ...
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.