The US government's move to ban TikTok isn't just about protecting users—it's about geopolitics and economic control. With ByteDance pressured to sell, US companies stand to benefit while data privacy ...
The reported move comes as ByteDance faces pressure from Washington to sell its popular video-sharing app TikTok in the United States ByteDance is placing a big bet on artificial intelligence (AI) ...
Jan. 19 (actually Monday here in the Philippines), unless there is an 11th-hour deal to prevent it, the short-video social media platform TikTok will cease to exist in the United States, per the terms ...
YouTube is running ads on TikTok targeting the app’s content creators, an effort to lure these valuable users to the Google-owned rival and capitalize on TikTok’s uncertain future.
For context, the Protecting Americans from Foreign Adversary Controlled Applications Act, requires ByteDance, to sell its U.S. operations by January 19. TikTok has resumed service in the United States ...
An executive from Chinese social media giant ByteDance played down the role of its content-recommendation algorithms in creating so-called filter bubbles, as the company faces intense scrutiny ...
Another day in the music industry, another update on the possible futures for TikTok in the US. ByteDance board member Bill Ford told Bloomberg Television that the company is seeking alternatives to a ...
Under the deal being negotiated, TikTok's owner ByteDance would retain a stake in the company, but data collection and software updates would be overseen by Oracle. U.S. businessman Frank McCourt ...
While SpaceX is the most valuable private company in the world, the funding round could push OpenAI up to second spot alongside Chinese tech giant ByteDance. OpenAI currently ranks as the third ...