The Trump 2.0 era may have officially begun this week, but the much-hyped tariff-fueled trade war has not. At least, not yet.
Our daily email brings you smart and engaging news and analysis on the biggest stories in business and finance. For free.
Advertising big wigs say they may flee Meta platforms if their brands appear next to toxic content. But where else would they go?
With military conflict continuing across the globe, and the world’s superpowers locked in a stare-down, it’s not easy being a global business
If similar cases are a guide, the US has given equal weight to both known and hypothetical threats to national security.
After a brief blackout period from late Saturday, TikTok began restoring services to US users on Sunday morning.
A federal appeals court upheld the “TikTok Ban” that would force China-based ByteDance to sell its app next month or face exile from the US.
Last week, Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese announced the government plans to introduce a law banning children from social media.
Google is revamping its shopping service into a more Instagram-slash-TikTok-esque feed, showing users an infinite scroll of products.
The clock is ticking on TikTok. Or is it? And if it is, whose hand is on the alarm setting as of this morning?
TikTok is calling it quits on a music streaming business that barely made it out the door, and only launched trials last year.
TikTok kicked off its legal fight challenging the US government’s divest-or-ban law passed in April, calling it unconstitutional.
Parents and family members are Gen Z’s No. 1 source for financial advice, even topping social media influencers.
It’s the latest in several moves — announced in swift succession — that suggest a radical overhaul in Zuckerberg’s thinking about Meta.
TikTok agreed to permanently withdraw a rewards program that it had on “TikTok Lite,” essentially a pared-down version of its core app.