Two men were arrested after Texas police said they approached children after school and asked them “if they wanted to be kidnapped.” Authorities said a 7-year-old and 9-year-o
TikTok will go dark Sunday for roughly 170 million users due to a proposed ban in the U.S, which a majority of Texas politicians have backed.
As a TikTok ban looms this weekend, a family that has one of Texas' most well-known accounts on the app said they "aren't losing sleep over it" but they're frustrated by what's to come.   "It’s not the end of the world for us but we don’t want it to go,
U.S. officials have long feared that the widely popular short-form video app could be used as a vehicle for espionage.
TikTok users around the country are saying their goodbyes. On Friday, the Supreme Court upheld a law that would ban the popular social media app on Sunday, unless the Chinese company that owns it finds a U.S. buyer. The app has 170 million users in the U.S. — including 16-year-old Marium Zahra.
The incident is being investigated by the Texas police after the video, which was recorded in Port Arthur, went viral.
North Texas TikTok creators face uncertainty as the Supreme Court upholds a ban, raising fears over livelihoods, security concerns and starting over.
But as a new vision to keep the app online takes shape, experts say sweeping changes could be in store regardless of who owns it. Wendy Gratereaux, a marketing professor of practice at UTSA, says the changes reflect a lot of things from addressing security risks to reflecting Western values.
Swig's famous "dirty soda" will be dirt cheap this weekend with a special deal to celebrate the chain reaching 100 locations. The Utah-based shop, popularized in part thanks to a group of Mormon women who gathered a TikTok following as "MomTok,
A TikToker is under investigation by police and Child Protective Services for using a 3-month-old baby as a windshield wiper.
After a father used his three-month-old baby to wipe snow off the windshield of his car for clicks on TikTok, the