Summary

The Supreme Court appears likely to uphold a U.S. law requiring TikTok’s China-based owner, ByteDance, to divest ownership, potentially banning the app.

While TikTok and users argue the law violates First Amendment rights, justices leaned toward national security concerns about China’s access to American user data.

Chief Justice Roberts noted Congress’s findings on ByteDance’s ties to Chinese intelligence.

TikTok argued the law is unprecedented and impacts free speech, but Solicitor General Prelogar downplayed claims of operational shutdown.

A decision is imminent, and political complexities remain, including potential divestiture negotiations.

  • @DarkFuture
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    1212 hours ago

    Come on TikTok. Just buy the justices some RVs or pay their family’s rents/mortgages. Have you learned nothing?

      • @[email protected]
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        26 hours ago

        Yeah but he had a very friendly meeting with some TikTok executives and they told him the error of his ways in a manner he couldn’t deny

    • @MrMcGasion
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      514 hours ago

      Trump already asked them to delay the ban until after he gets into office (politico article source). This might say less about his promises, and more about the Supreme Court not being as much in his pocket as he thinks.

      • FiveMacs
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        512 hours ago

        Because he wants them to pay him, to remain unbanned.