TikTok
News •
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What is TikTok?
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What type of videos can you find on TikTok?
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How do people create and share videos on TikTok?
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What features make TikTok different from other video apps?
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How does TikTok's 'For You' page recommend videos to users?
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What impact has TikTok had on popular culture and social media trends?
TikTok, social media platform designed for creating, editing, and sharing short videos between 15 seconds and three minutes in length. TikTok provides songs and sounds as well as filters and special effects that users can add to their videos. Users also have the option to upload videos from their own devices to TikTok. TikTok is available to people in most countries around the world. China has a separate version called Douyin that has the same basic functionality but includes content of interest to the Chinese public.
Background and Musical.ly acquisition
Short-form videos initially achieved popularity in 2013 thanks to Vine, an app that allowed users to create and share clips that were just six seconds long. The following year saw the debut of Musical.ly, a Chinese social media platform that allowed for longer videos (from 15 seconds to one minute). It originally focused on the lip-synching craze, offering thousands of songs to which users could make entertaining lip-synching and dance videos. Musical.ly quickly gained popularity, especially among American teenagers, and within a few years it had tens of millions of users. At the end of 2017 the Chinese company ByteDance acquired Musical.ly for some $800 million. In the summer of 2018 ByteDance merged all the content and user accounts of Musical.ly into TikTok.
How it works
TikTok users can make and share videos on any topic. Comedic and educational videos are common, and others challenge users to dance, to lip-synch, or to complete a nonsensical act, such as rolling on the ground like a tumbleweed. Users also watch clips of long-form media such as films and TV shows on the app. For example, the 2025 season of the popular reality dating show Love Island USA generated 1.7 billion views on TikTok, with almost 30 percent of the season’s viewing taking place on mobile devices.
Many TikTok users have found success and virality on the app, and have become full-time influencers as a result. Some of the most followed TikTok users are Khaby Lame, who makes short, humorous content, and Jimmy Donaldson (MrBeast), whose content revolves around stunts and giveaways. In 2020 multiple users posted short-form dance content during worldwide COVID-19 lockdowns, including 16-year-old Charli D’Amelio, who boasts more than 150 million followers as of August 2025. Following her rapid rise to TikTok stardom, D’Amelio successfully launched a career as a model and reality television star. Singer-songwriter Benson Boone, who had posted clips of his music on the platform, gained a record deal in part because of his TikTok fame.
TikTok provides guidelines for submissions, but sometimes users post dangerous or illegal content, such as dares that involve safety risks. One challenge sparked a wave of car thefts across North America after TikTok users demonstrated a security flaw in certain models of Kia and Hyundai vehicles. Critics, as well as the owners of the app, advise users to remain cautious about the type of stunts they choose to perform and share. Likewise, they suggest that parents regulate their children’s activity on TikTok. To that end, TikTok has added a feature that monitors screen time and allows users to set reminders to take breaks.
Safety and security concerns
Regulators around the world have expressed privacy, safety, and security concerns about TikTok. They point out that the Chinese-owned business collects personal information on its users, and critics argue that the company might not be able to keep the information safe from the Chinese government. The Chinese government, in turn, could use the information to keep people under surveillance or to carry out other criminal acts. Critics also suggest that if Chinese authorities interfere with TikTok, they could influence millions of users by controlling what they watch.
In 2020 India imposed a nationwide ban on the app in the wake of a deadly border clash between Chinese and Indian troops. In December 2022 U.S. Pres. Joe Biden signed a law prohibiting TikTok on U.S. government-issued devices; after determining that the app presented a cybersecurity risk, the European Commission and the governments of Australia, Canada, New Zealand, Taiwan, and the United Kingdom enacted similar bans. Nevertheless, by the early 2020s more than one billion people worldwide were regularly using TikTok.
TikTok ban and restoration
In April 2024 a foreign aid bill that included provisions relating to TikTok was passed by the U.S. Congress and signed into law by Biden. The law states that TikTok will be banned in the United States if ByteDance does not sell its stake in the company within a year. TikTok executives said that they would challenge the law in court, claiming that it violates Americans’ First Amendment rights to free speech. In the meantime, many avid TikTok users flocked to the Chinese-owned social media application Rednote, which grew by more than 700,000 users in January 2025. Some prior users welcomed the “TikTok refugees” while others reacted with suspicion.
Trump, who was elected president in the November 2024 U.S. presidential election, expressed that he would keep TikTok available to Americans and asked the Supreme Court to delay their decision. The Supreme Court, however, upheld Biden’s ruling in January 2025, and the app was scheduled to be banned starting the day before Trump was inaugurated into office. The app would remain on users’ phones, but it would no longer be available for download on app stores, and there would be no new updates, leading it to eventually become slower and less reliable. Trump stated that he would pass an executive order (coinciding closely with his inauguration date) to prevent the ban from taking effect. It is uncertain whether such an order would have staying power—it may merely delay the inevitable. According to Kent Law School professor Mark Rosen, such an order would also theoretically grant a U.S. president “king-like” power since it would be in direct defiance of the law.
The app shut down temporarily starting on Saturday, January 18, 2025, but services were gradually restored by the following morning. The official TikTok Policy account posted on X about the short-lived ban, thanking Trump for “providing the necessary clarity and assurance to our service providers that they will face no penalties providing TikTok to over 170 million Americans.” On January 20, 2025, the day of his inauguration, Trump passed an executive order that provided TikTok a 75-day extension to find alternative owners, suggesting that a U.S. entity take 50 percent ownership of the app in an attempted compromise. While some large tech companies chose to abide by the initial ruling (Google and Apple, for example, removed TikTok from their app stores), others, such as Oracle, once again restored TikTok support.
Trump negotiated the beginnings of a deal with China in the following months which would have made TikTok a majority-American-owned application. Shortly before the April 5, 2025 deadline, however, negotiations with China hit a roadblock after Trump’s administration passed numerous global tariffs, including fees that would affect Chinese imports. In response, Trump once again extended the ban deadline by 75 days. On June 19, 2025, Trump signed an executive order to extend the ban by another 90 days.
Trump ultimately extended the TikTok ban deadline to January 23, 2026. (No challenges were presented regarding the legality of Trump’s numerous deadline extensions.) The day before the ban was to take effect, a new joint venture took control of Tiktok in the US. Business software company Oracle, private equity firm Silver Lake, and the United Arab Emirates’s state investment fund MGX each controlled 15 percent of Tiktok USDS Joint Venture. ByteDance kept 19.9 percent, and several other American companies controlled the remainder..

