Current:Home > ContactUS banning TikTok? Your key questions answered -Prime Capital Blueprint
US banning TikTok? Your key questions answered
View
Date:2025-04-12 04:15:49
No, TikTok will not suddenly disappear from your phone. Nor will you go to jail if you continue using it after it is banned.
After years of attempts to ban the Chinese-owned app, including by former President Donald Trump, a measure to outlaw the popular video-sharing app has won congressional approval and is on its way to President Biden for his signature. The measure gives Beijing-based parent company ByteDance nine months to sell the company, with a possible additional three months if a sale is in progress. If it doesn’t, TikTok will be banned.
So what does this mean for you, a TikTok user, or perhaps the parent of a TikTok user? Here are some key questions and answers.
WHEN DOES THE BAN GO INTO EFFECT?
The original proposal gave ByteDance just six months to divest from its U.S. subsidiary, negotiations lengthened it to nine. Then, if the sale is already in progress, the company will get another three months to complete it.
So it would be at least a year before a ban goes into effect — but with likely court challenges, this could stretch even longer, perhaps years. TikTok has seen some success with court challenges in the past, but it has never sought to prevent federal legislation from going into effect.
WHAT IF I ALREADY DOWNLOADED IT?
TikTok, which is used by more than 170 million Americans, most likely won’t disappear from your phone even if an eventual ban does take effect. But it would disappear from Apple and Google’s app stores, which means users won’t be able to download it. This would also mean that TikTok wouldn’t be able to send updates, security patches and bug fixes, and over time the app would likely become unusable — not to mention a security risk.
BUT SURELY THERE ARE WORKAROUNDS?
Teenagers are known for circumventing parental controls and bans when it comes to social media, so dodging the U.S. government’s ban is certainly not outside the realm of possibilities. For instance, users could try to mask their location using a VPN, or virtual private network, use alternative app stores or even install a foreign SIM card into their phone.
But some tech savvy is required, and it’s not clear what will and won’t work. More likely, users will migrate to another platform — such as Instagram, which has a TikTok-like feature called Reels, or YouTube, which has incorporated vertical short videos in its feed to try to compete with TikTok. Often, such videos are taken directly from TikTok itself. And popular creators are likely to be found on other platforms as well, so you’ll probably be able to see the same stuff.
“The TikTok bill relies heavily on the control that Apple and Google maintain over their smartphone platforms because the bill’s primary mechanism is to direct Apple and Google to stop allowing the TikTok app on their respective app stores,” said Dean Ball, a research fellow with the Mercatus Center at George Mason University. “Such a mechanism might be much less effective in the world envisioned by many advocates of antitrust and aggressive regulation against the large tech firms.”
veryGood! (532)
Related
- What to know about Tuesday’s US House primaries to replace Matt Gaetz and Mike Waltz
- With Biden’s Win, Climate Activists See New Potential But Say They’ll ‘Push Where We Need to Push’
- Fading Winters, Hotter Summers Make the Northeast America’s Fastest Warming Region
- Beginning of the End for Canada’s Tar Sands or Just a Blip?
- The Daily Money: Spending more on holiday travel?
- Is Climate-Related Financial Regulation Coming Under Biden? Wall Street Is Betting on It
- Trump Budget Risks ‘Serious Harm’ to America’s Energy Future, 7 Former DOE Officials Warn
- The Third Rail of Climate Change: Climate Refugees
- Sam Taylor
- Trump heard in audio clip describing highly confidential, secret documents
Ranking
- Head of the Federal Aviation Administration to resign, allowing Trump to pick his successor
- Coal Ash Is Contaminating Groundwater in at least 22 States, Utility Reports Show
- Get 5 Lipsticks for the Price 1: Clinique Black Honey, Charlotte Tilbury Pillow Talk, YSL, and More
- Climate Policies Could Boost Economic Growth by 5%, OECD Says
- DoorDash steps up driver ID checks after traffic safety complaints
- Big Oil Has Spent Millions of Dollars to Stop a Carbon Fee in Washington State
- Supreme Court rejects independent state legislature theory in major election law case
- National Governments Are Failing on Clean Energy in All but 3 Areas, IEA says
Recommendation
Travis Hunter, the 2
Developing Countries Weather Global Warming, Cold Shoulders
Court dismisses Ivanka Trump from New York attorney general's fraud lawsuit
In Florence’s Floodwater: Sewage, Coal Ash and Hog Waste Lagoon Spills
Newly elected West Virginia lawmaker arrested and accused of making terroristic threats
Stitcher shuts down as podcast industry loses luster
Dangers of Climate Change: Lack of Water Can Lead to War
Beginning of the End for Canada’s Tar Sands or Just a Blip?