Americas
TikTok Makes Comeback to Apple, Google App Stores In US
Apple and Google announced that that TikTok is once again available in their app stores on Thursday, almost a month after a new security law led to its removal.
The social media platform, owned by a Chinese company, is at risk of being banned in the United States due to national security worries regarding user data it collects. The popular video-sharing app went offline for a short period starting January 18, leaving millions of users disappointed when it vanished from app stores.
The service resumed when the new US President, Donald Trump, initiated a 75-day halt on enforcing the law, signed by his predecessor, Joe Biden, and overwhelmingly passed by Congress.
However, Apple and Google had not previously made TikTok available on their app stores until now.
The decision to implement the TikTok ban arose from fears that the Chinese government might utilize the app for spying on Americans or subtly sway US public opinion via data gathering and content manipulation.
The government mandated that the company separate from its Chinese parent company, ByteDance, or face a ban.
Trump has proposed a joint venture between the US and ByteDance, although he has not shared specifics on how this might materialise.
“With TikTok, I have the option to either sell it or shut it down,” Trump remarked shortly after mandating the pause.
“We might need to obtain approval from China as well, but I’m confident they would consent or view it as a hostile act,” which could lead to retaliatory tariffs, he stated.
Firms that breach the law, which is still officially in place, could incur penalties of up to $5,000 per user if the app is used.
During his first term, Trump tried to prohibit TikTok in the United States over analogous national security issues but mentioned that he currently has a “soft spot” for the app.
Initially introduced in 2016 as Douyin for the Chinese audience, the international version was branded as TikTok and launched in 2017.
Governments worldwide have intensely examined the platform due to worries about data privacy and potential connections to the Chinese government.
Kenya Insights allows guest blogging, if you want to be published on Kenya’s most authoritative and accurate blog, have an expose, news TIPS, story angles, human interest stories, drop us an email on [email protected] or via Telegram
-
Business2 weeks agoKenyan Motorists Stare At Possible Engine Damage And Heavy Losses As Report Confirms Substandard Fuel In Circulation
-
Business1 week agoTHE FUEL CABAL: How Mohamed Jaffer, a KPC Insider, and a Ministry Official Are Alleged to Have Manufactured Kenya’s Worst Petroleum Crisis in Three Years, While Kenyans Burned
-
Business2 weeks agoGetting Away With It: How Kenya’s Most Politically Connected Fuel Company Gulf Energy Is Pocketing Billions While Rival Firms Face Public Wrath
-
Business5 days agoNairobi Freezes Binance Accounts in Sweeping Anti-Fraud Crackdown as Global Scandal Record Haunts World’s Largest Crypto Exchange
-
Investigations5 days agoEXCLUSIVE: Odibets Bought Stolen Data From Millions Of Kenyans
-
Business2 weeks agoSugar Empire in the Dock: How Kibos’s Mombasa Refinery Landed 1,481 Phantom Tonnes at the Port — and Why Nine Government Agencies Are Now Watching Its Every Move
-
Investigations6 days agoTHE BRAZEN RETURN: Triton Thief Yagnesh Devani, Who Pillaged Kenya of Sh7.6 Billion and Fled, Now Asks the Same Courts He Escaped to Restore His Stolen Wealth
-
Investigations4 days agoTHE FIXER IN THE FILE ROOM: How Parliamentary Health Committee Clerk Adan Gindicha Cleared Mediheal Hospital of Organ Harvesting Claims Despite Mounting Evidence
