Dangerous TikTok trend leaves boy badly burned
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TikTok USA isn't just (arguably) a tool of corporate power, it doesn't seem to work as well as the old TikTok.
The deal keeps TikTok available for 200 million users across the U.S.
Posts have been going viral on social media accusing TikTok's new owners of suppressing content, but eight academics examined the issue and found no evidence to support the claims.
Sean Cooksey, a former Federal Election Commission chair, had only planned to serve in the role of counsel to the vice president for about a year.
Some TikTok users are raising questions about the app's new terms and conditions after the social media platform's split from its China-based parent.
The joint venture acquiring TikTok’s US assets has been formally established and has announced its leadership team, according to the company, one day before the deadline set by President Donald Trump for the app’s US assets to be spun off by Chinese parent company ByteDance.
The popular short form video app has a new corporate structure in the United States, which could result in some changes for the 200 million Americans who use TikTok.
A year ago, a law that effectively banned TikTok in the U.S. went into effect, though President Trump has not enforced it.
The young boy suffered second-degree burns to his face and hands, and doctors at Loyola University Medical Center had to cut away dead skin, his mother told CBS News. Fortunately for Caleb, he didn’t need any skin grafts. Still, he will likely develop scars, said Kelly McElligot, a burn unit doctor at the medical center.