TikToker Siyah died at 17 in a shooting incident. Days before her death, She posted her typical dancing content for an audience of over 220,000 followers.
With the TikTok ban poised to go into effect Sunday, some influential California creators will lose their main platform.
President Donald Trump has signaled a potential deal to save TikTok over the weekend, as Republican attorneys general are skeptical of the app's safety but await Trump's action.
The first openly bisexual state legislator in California, Lee has made posts supporting ... “I’m not that big of a TikTok star.” But he also described how he uses it strategically, avoiding ...
However, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled against TikTok on Friday, requiring the popular app to now either be shut down or sold. In California, about 16 million people and 890,000 businesses actively ...
Bay Area content creators say they feel uneasy about how TikTok’s uncertain future will impact their businesses.
After President Trump gave TikTok a 90-day reprieve from a U.S. ban, a small but growing group of California politicians who are active on the app have been left wondering what comes next.
The TikTok ban, which will take effect this weekend, will result in the loss of the main platform of some influential California creators. The Chinese parent company of TikTok, ByteDance ...
"TikTok really allows you as an elected official ... Read more: Cannabis cafes, AI and parking: How new California laws could affect you in 2025 One of Garcia's most popular videos has over ...
The list goes on. Read more:This Latino Republican flipped a deep-blue California Assembly district. How? One federal lawmaker who voted against the TikTok ban last year, U.S Rep. Robert Garcia ...
After briefly going dark in the U.S., TikTok is back following an executive order. That's not good for young users, says psychologist Jonathan Haidt.
In a historic development, Chinese-owned social media platform TikTok has become the center of a bipartisan bill to ban the app nationwide in the name of national security. Xiao Qiang, a research scientist at the UC Berkeley School of Information and a prominent scholar in the study of state censorship,