TikTok has gone dark in the U.S., the result of a federal law that bans the popular short-form video app for millions of Americans — at least for now.
TikTok users began receiving a message about the ban around 10:30 p.m. Eastern. As of Saturday evening, the app was also no longer available in the Apple app store.
“Sorry, TikTok isn’t available right now,” the message reads. “A law banning TikTok has been enacted in the U.S. Unfortunately, that means you can’t use TikTok for now.”
However, the message also suggests that this may only be a temporary disappearance, crediting President-elect Donald Trump for indicating “he will work with us on a solution to reinstate TikTok once he takes office,” with users urged to “stay tuned!”
The company had indicated that the app’s disappearance was imminent, saying Friday that it would “go dark” unless President Joe Biden’s administration made a “definitive statement” that it wouldn’t enforce the ban.
Biden signed the law in April, requiring TikTok’s owner ByteDance to sell the app or see it banned in the United States, due to concerns over potential Chinese surveillance and propaganda. And while efforts to force ByteDance to divest go back to Trump’s first administration, he has taken a very different tone recently, asking the Supreme Court to delay the ban and saying that he would “most likely” give the company a 90-day extension.
And while the Supreme Court issued a ruling upholding the law Friday, the Biden administration seemed inclined to leave the app’s fate in the hands of the next president, with White House Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre saying with Sunday being Biden’s last day in office, “actions to implement the law simply must fall to the next Administration” and Deputy Attorney General Lisa Monaco issuing a similar statement that “the next phase of this effort — implementing and ensuring compliance with the law after it goes into effect on January 19 — will be a process that plays out over time.”
TikTok, however, suggested that this was not enough to assurance for “critical service providers” to continue listing or hosting the app in the US, unless the Biden administration made the aforementioned “definitive statement.” Jean-Pierre called TikTok’s response “a stunt” and claimed there’s “no reason for TikTok or other companies to take actions in the next few days before the Trump administration takes office on Monday.”
Stunt or not, TikTok is gone for now.
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