


A federal appeals court on Friday upheld the federal ban on TikTok, which is poised to take effect in January, though the case is likely to go to the Supreme Court and it remains to be seen if President-elect Donald Trump can preserve access to the app.
Participants hold signs in support of TikTok outside the U.S. Capitol Building on March 13 in ... [+]
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit denied TikTok’s petition to review the law, after both sides asked for a ruling by Dec. 6, before the nationwide ban’s scheduled Jan. 19 start date.
TikTok and creators on the app sued the federal government in an effort to halt the ban, which forces TikTok to either divest from Chinese-owned parent company ByteDance or else be banned from U.S. app stores.
TikTok argued the ban infringes on the company’s First Amendment rights and divesting from ByteDance is “not possible technologically, commercially, or legally,” while the government maintained the ban was essential for national security—though the specific evidence to justify that is under seal and was not publicly released.
The case is likely to get appealed to the Supreme Court before Jan. 19, though it’s unclear how long it will take that appeal to play out and if justices could still block the lawwhile it’s pending. It also remains to be seen what will happen in court if the appeals process continues beyond Jan. 20, as President-elect Donald Trump reportedly wants to stop the TikTok ban, meaning his administration may not want to argue in favor of it at the Supreme Court.
More than 170 million. That’s how many people in the U.S. use TikTok, according to the company, which is approximately half of the country’s total population.
President Joe Biden signed the TikTok ban into law in April as lawmakers had become increasingly opposed to the social media app, banning it from government devices and warning about its Chinese ties before taking the extreme step of trying to ban the app entirely. TikTok has long denied having any links to the Chinese government, and the federal government has not made public any of the specific intelligence it’s used to justify its hostility against the company. The court ruling on the ban’s fate came after multiple other courts have ruled against bans on TikTok in the past, with Montana’s statewide ban on the app getting blocked in court and judges ruling against Trump’s effort to ban TikTok during his first term. The ex-president sought to outlaw the app while in office before changing his tune and praising TikTok ahead of the 2024 election, as his supporters have boosted him on the app and billionaire GOP megadonor Jeff Yass, a ByteDance investor, has lobbied against the ban. Trump’s about-face on TikTok is in line with general public sentiment, as polling shows banning TikTok has become increasingly unpopular with Americans. Only 32% supported a ban on the app as of July and August, according to the Pew Research Center, down from 50% who backed a ban in March 2023.
Though TikTok has long denied any wrongdoing, Forbes has reported on numerous concerns involving the company, including TikTok spying on journalists, tracking “sensitive” words, promoting Chinese propaganda criticizing U.S. politicians and mishandling user data. TikTok has denied the allegations against it or blamed actions on individual bad actors within the company.
The legal debate over the federal TikTok ban comes as Canada has also recently taken action against the company, shutting down TikTok’s Canadian operations in November and closing its office in the country. The government did not ban the app entirely, however, so Canadians can still access and use TikTok unlike under the U.S.’s ban. A number of other major countries have banned TikTok from being on government devices, such as Australia, New Zealand and many European countries, but only Afghanistan, India, Pakistan, Somalia and Taiwan have restricted access to the app besides the U.S.