Here is what Justices Brett Kavanaugh, Amy Coney Barrett, Kentanji Brown Jackson and Chief Justice John Roberts said about ...
The Supreme Court seemed likely to uphold a new law that could force TikTok to shut down in the U.S., with conservative and ...
The Supreme Court appeared ready to uphold a law that will ban TikTok in the U.S. if its Chinese owners don't sell the widly ...
The Supreme Court is hearing an appeal against a law that bans the video-sharing app in the country unless it is sold.
Chief Justice John Roberts also seemed reluctant to second-guess Congress, citing its findings that ByteDance is subject to Chinese laws that require it to assist with intelligence gathering.
Chief Justice John Roberts asked if the Chinese-based ByteDance is using TikTok to get Americans to argue with each other. “If they do, I’d say they’re winning,” Roberts said to laughter ...
Early in arguments that lasted more than two and a half hours, Chief Justice John Roberts identified his main concern: TikTok’s ownership by China-based ByteDance and the parent company's requirement ...
"You're ignoring the major concern here" of China manipulating content through TikTok's industry-envied algorithm and harvesting user data, Chief Justice John Roberts tells TikTok lawyer, Trump's ...
But ByteDance and TikTok users have challenged ... Conservative Chief Justice John Roberts pressed TikTok’s lawyers on the company’s Chinese ownership. “Are we supposed to ignore the fact ...
"So why can't we simply look at it as a restriction on ByteDance?" Chief Justice John Roberts noted that Congress found that ByteDance cooperates with the Chinese government's intelligence work ...