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TikTok is inching closer to a potential ban in the US. So what's next?

TikTok is inching closer to a potential ban in the US. So what's next?
(Reuters)
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Updated 07 December 2024

TikTok is inching closer to a potential ban in the US. So what's next?

TikTok is inching closer to a potential ban in the US. So what's next?

TikTok's future in the U.S. appeared uncertain on Friday after a federal appeals court rejected a legal challenge to a law that requires the social media platform to cut ties with its China-based parent company or be banned by mid-January.
A panel of three judges on The U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit ruled unanimously that the law withstood constitutional scrutiny, rebuffing arguments from the two companies that the statute violated their rights and the rights of TikTok users in the U.S.
The government has said it wants ByteDance, TikTok's parent company, to divest its stakes. But if it doesn't and the platform goes away, it would have a seismic impact on the lives of content creators who rely on the platform for income as well as users who use it for entertainment and connection.
Here are some details on the ruling and what could happen next:
What does the ruling say?
In their lawsuit, TikTok and ByteDance, which is also a plaintiff in the case, had challenged the law on various fronts, arguing in part that the statute ran afoul of the First Amendment and was an unconstitutional bill of attainder that unfairly targeted the two companies.
But the court sided with attorneys for the Justice Department who said that the government was attempting to address national security concerns and the way in which it chose to do so did not violate the constitution.
The Justice Department has argued in court that TikTok poses a national security risk due to its connections to China. Officials say that Chinese authorities can compel ByteDance to hand over information on TikTok's U.S. patrons or use the platform to spread, or suppress, information. However, the U.S. hasn't publicly provided examples of that happening.
The appeals court ruling, written by Judge Douglas Ginsburg, said the law was “carefully crafted to deal only with control by a foreign adversary." The judges also rejected the claim that the statute was an unlawful bill of attainder or a taking of property in violation of the Fifth Amendment. Furthermore, Ginsburg wrote the law did not violate the First Amendment because the government is not looking to “suppress content or require a certain mix of content” on TikTok.
What happens next?
TikTok and ByteDance are expected to appeal the case to the Supreme Court, but it's unclear whether the court will take up the case.
TikTok indicated in a statement on Friday the two companies are preparing to take their case to high court, saying the Supreme Court has “an established historical record of protecting Americans’ right to free speech."
"We expect they will do just that on this important constitutional issue,” a company spokesperson said.
Alan Morrison, a professor at The George Washington University Law School, said he expects the Supreme Court to take up the case because of the novelty of the issues raised in the lawsuit. If that happens, attorneys for the two companies still have to convince the court to grant them an emergency stay that will prevent the government from enforcing the Jan. 19 divestiture deadline stipulated in the law, Morrison said.
Such a move could drag out the process until the Justices make a ruling.
Tiffany Cianci, a TikTok content creator who has supported the platform, said she was not shocked about the outcome of the court's ruling on Friday because lower courts typically defer to the executive branch on these types of cases. She believes the company will have a stronger case at the Supreme Court.
“I believe that the next stages are more likely to produce a victory for TikTokers and for TikTok as a whole,” Cianci said.
What about Trump?
Another wild card is President-elect Donald Trump, who tried to ban TikTok during his first term but said during the recent presidential campaign that he is now against such action.
The Trump transition team has not offered details on how Trump plans to carry out his pledge to “save TikTok." But spokeswoman Karoline Leavitt said in a statement last month that he plans to “deliver” on his campaign promises.
After Trump takes office on Jan. 20th, it would fall on his Justice Department to enforce the law and punish any potential violators. Penalties would apply to any app stores that would violate a prohibition on TikTok and to internet hosting services which would be barred from supporting it.
Some have speculated that Trump could ask his Justice Department to abstain from enforcing the law. But tech companies like Apple and Google, which offer TikTok's app on their app stores, would then have to trust that the administration would not come after them for any violations.
Craig Singleton, senior director of the China program at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies, said enforcement discretion — or executive orders — can not override existing law, leaving Trump with “limited room for unilateral action."
There are other things Trump could potentially do. It's possible he could invoke provisions of the law that allow the president to determine whether a sale or a similar transaction frees TikTok from “foreign adversary” control. Another option is to urge Congress to repeal the law. But that too would require support from congressional Republicans who have overwhelmingly supported the prospect of getting TikTok out of the hands of a Chinese company.
In a statement issued Friday, Republican Rep. John Moolenaar of Michigan, chairman of the House Select Committee on China, said he was “optimistic that President Trump will facilitate an American takeover of TikTok” and allow its continued use in the United States.
Is anyone trying to buy TikTok?
ByteDance has said it won't sell TikTok. And even if it wanted to, a sale of the proprietary algorithm that powers TikTok is likely to get blocked under Chinese export controls that the country issued in 2020.
That means if TikTok is sold without the algorithm, its likely that the buyer would only purchase a shell of the platform that doesn't contain the technology that made the app a cultural powerhouse.
Still, some investors, including Trump’s former Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin and billionaire Frank McCourt, have expressed interest in buying it.
This week, a spokesperson for McCourt’s Project Liberty initiative, which aims to protect online privacy, said participants in their bid have made informal commitments of more than $20 billion in capital. The spokesperson did not disclose the identity of the participants.


Thieves grab $2 million in jewelry in Seattle heist that took less than 2 minutes

Thieves grab $2 million in jewelry in Seattle heist that took less than 2 minutes
Updated 16 August 2025

Thieves grab $2 million in jewelry in Seattle heist that took less than 2 minutes

Thieves grab $2 million in jewelry in Seattle heist that took less than 2 minutes

SEATTLE: Smash-and-grab thieves in Seattle made off with an estimated $2 million in diamonds, luxury watches, gold and other items in a daring midday jewelry store robbery that took just about 90 seconds, police said Friday.
Video from the West Seattle store’s surveillance cameras shows four masked suspects shattering the locked glass front door with hammers and then ransacking six display cases Thursday.
One display held around $750,000 worth in Rolex watches, police said in a statement, and another had an emerald necklace valued at $125,000.
A masked suspect threatened workers with bear spray and a Taser, police said, but no one was injured.
“We’re pretty shook up as a staff,” Josh Menashe, vice president of the family-owned store, said by phone Friday. “We’re gonna be closed for a while.”
Menashe said workers finished cleaning up the broken glass and were working on a full inventory of the losses.
Police said they responded to the robbery but the suspects had already fled in a getaway car and eluded a search of the area.

 

 

 


Stressed UK teens seek influencers’ help for exams success

Stressed UK teens seek influencers’ help for exams success
Updated 15 August 2025

Stressed UK teens seek influencers’ help for exams success

Stressed UK teens seek influencers’ help for exams success
  • Former teacher Waqar Malik tells thousands of followers that he can predict this year’s exam questions
  • But educators and examiners are concerned some pupils are relying too much on online advice

LONDON: Posing as a fortune teller on his YouTube channel, former teacher Waqar Malik tells thousands of followers that he can predict this year’s exam questions.

He is among online study influencers gaining popularity among stressed British teenagers in search of exam success.

But educators and examiners are concerned some pupils are relying too much on online advice.

Malik posts videos on TikTok and YouTube forecasting questions on classic English literature for the UK GCSE school exam taken at 16.

Last year “I predicted the entire paper,” he says on his popular “Mr Everything English” channel.

Malik, who says he is a former assistant head teacher, notes that he is just making an “educated guess,” but educators remain concerned.

“If you are a 15- or 16- year-old doing your GCSEs and you’ve got somebody in your phone who’s telling you ‘this is what the English exam is going to be about’... that is so appealing,” said Sarah Brownsword, an assistant professor in education at the University of East Anglia.

After British pupils sat their exams in May, some complained that Malik’s predictions were wrong.

“Never listening to you again bro,” one wrote, while others said they were “cooked” (done for) and would have to work in a fast food restaurant.

With GCSE results set to be released on August 21, one exam board, AQA, has warned of “increasing reliance on certain online revision channels.”

“Clearly this is an important source of revision and support for students,” it said.

But the examiners want “your interpretation of the texts you have studied, not some stranger’s views on social media.”

Students are overloaded, school leaders say.

“With so much content to cover and revise in every subject it can be completely overwhelming,” Sarah Hannafin, head of policy for the school leaders’ union NAHT, told AFP.

“And so it is unsurprising that young people are looking for anything to help them to cope.”

Malik, whose prediction video has been viewed on YouTube 290,000 times, did not respond to a request for comment.

Brownsword praised TikTok, where she posts grammar videos for student teachers, saying: “You can learn about anything and watch videos about absolutely anything.”

Teachers have always flagged questions that could come up, she said, but predicting exam questions online is “really tricky.”

“But I think there’s a real difference between doing that and doing it on such a scale, when you’ve got thousands or tens of thousands or even hundreds of thousands of followers online.”

Other content creators defended such videos, however.

“Those kinds of videos were never to mislead,” said Tilly Taylor, a university student posting TikTok videos with candid revision advice to 100,000 followers.

“I make it very clear in my videos that these are predictions,” based on past papers and examiners’ reports, said Taylor, who appeals to younger viewers with her fashionable eye makeup.

Other content creators sell predicted papers “all the time,” Taylor said, but “I don’t think it’s right.”

Other educational influencers were more in favor.

“If you’re marketing it as a predicted paper, that’s completely fine... you just can’t say guaranteed paper,” said Ishaan Bhimjiyani, 20, who has over 400,000 TikTok followers.

He promoted a site offering an English predicted paper for £1.99 ($2.70) with a “history of 60-70 percent accuracy.”

Predicted papers allow you to “check whether you’re actually prepared for the exam,” said Jen, a creator and former teacher who posts as Primrose Kitten and declined to give her surname.

Her site charges ÂŁ4.99 for an English predicted paper and includes a video on phrasing to score top marks.

Bhimjiyani, who went to a private school, started posting on TikTok at 16, saying he was “documenting my journey, posting about how I revise.”

“And then it kind of took off.”

He founded an educational influencer agency, Tap Lab, that now represents over 100 bloggers in their mid-teens to mid-20s.

Influencers earn most from paid promotions – for recruiters or beauty or technology brands – which must be labelled as such, he said.

Bhimjiyani made ÂŁ5,000 with his first such video. Taylor said she recently promoted student accommodation.

No one explained “how do you actually revise,” Taylor said of her school years. So she turned to YouTube for ideas.

“I wanted to help someone like myself,” she said, “who couldn’t necessarily afford to go to private school or have private tuition.”


World’s first humanoid robot games begin in China

World’s first humanoid robot games begin in China
Updated 15 August 2025

World’s first humanoid robot games begin in China

World’s first humanoid robot games begin in China
  • Over 500 androids alternated between jerky tumbles and glimpses of real power as they compete in events from the 100-meter hurdles to kung fu

BEIJING: The world’s first-ever humanoid robot games began Friday in Beijing, with over 500 androids alternating between jerky tumbles and glimpses of real power as they compete in events from the 100-meter hurdles to kung fu.
Hundreds of robotics teams from 16 countries are going for gold at the Chinese capital’s National Speed Skating Oval, built for the 2022 Winter Olympics.
The games include traditional sports like athletics and basketball, as well as practical tasks such as medicine categorization and cleaning.
“I believe in the next 10 years or so, robots will be basically at the same level as humans,” enthusiastic 18-year-old spectator Chen Ruiyuan told AFP.
Human athletes might not be quaking in their boots just yet.
At one of the first events on Friday morning, five-aside football, 10 robots the size of seven-year-olds shuffled around the pitch, often getting stuck in a scrum or falling over en masse.
However, in a 1500-meter race, domestic champion Unitree’s humanoids stomped along the track at an impressive clip, easily outpacing their rivals.
The fastest robot AFP witnessed finished in 6:29:37, a far cry from the human men’s world record of 3:26:00.
One mechanical racer barrelled straight into a human operator. The robot remained standing, while the human was knocked flat, though did not appear to be injured.
Robot competitions have been held for decades, but the 2025 World Humanoid Robot Games is the first to focus specifically on robots that resemble human bodies, organizers said.
The Chinese government has poured support into robotics hoping to lead the industry.
Beijing has put humanoids in the “center of their national strategy,” the International Federation of Robotics wrote in a paper on Thursday.
“The government wants to showcase its competence and global competitiveness in this field of technology,” it added.
Authorities are working to raise awareness of the sector across society.
Cui Han, accompanying her 10-year-old, told AFP that her son’s school had organized and paid for the trip to the Games.
“I hope it will encourage him to learn more about these new technologies,” she said.
In March, China announced plans for a one-trillion-yuan fund to support technology startups, including those in robotics and AI.
The country is already the world’s largest market for industrial robots, official statistics show, and in April, Beijing held what organizers dubbed the world’s first humanoid robot half-marathon.
Chen, the spectator, told AFP he was about to begin studying automation at university.
“Coming here can cultivate my passion for this field,” he said. “My favorite is the boxing, because... it requires a lot of agility and I can really see how the robots have improved from before.”
Meanwhile, at the kung fu competition area, a pint-sized robot resembling one from the popular Transformer series attempted to execute a move, but fell flat on its front.
It spun around on the floor as it struggled to get back up, the crowd happily cheering.


Keep your furry friends cool for the summer

Keep your furry friends cool for the summer
Updated 14 August 2025

Keep your furry friends cool for the summer

Keep your furry friends cool for the summer
  • From frozen treats to cool-down measures, ways to keep your cat or dog safe as temperatures soar

RIYADH: If you think you can barely stand the scorching summer heat, think about how your pets feel.

The hot months can be a brutal time for stray animals and house pets. Normal body temperature ranges for dogs and cats are higher than for human beings, making them prone to overheating, dehydration, and paw pad burns from hot surfaces.

Arab News spoke to a few pet care centers for their top summer care tips.

Keep pets out of dangerous heat

Albanderey Aloyeadi, CEO Saudi Animal Welfare Society (Refq), said they campaign against leaving pets outdoors or in cars.

Humane World for Animals also advises never to leave your pets in a parked car because temperatures inside a vehicle can rapidly rise to dangerous levels.

Pawsers operates with an emphasis on raising animal awareness in the Kingdom through working with multiple community led groups. (Supplied: Pawsers Pet Care)

Temperatures inside a parked car can rise by almost 11 degrees Celcius within the first 10 minutes, even with a window cracked open, according to the US Center for Disease Control and Prevention.

“During the summer, we make a concerted effort to spread awareness in the community about the dangers of heat for animals,” Aloyeadi said.

This includes educational campaigns on proper hydration and sheltering.

Helping strays

Operationally, Refq increases monitoring of stray animals in urban areas in the summer to make sure they have access to clean water and shade.

They also partner with community members to designate safe feeding zones that help Refq track, feed, and protect stray animals more efficiently.

The Refq mobile app, a volunteer-driven platform, enables users to report animal abuse or neglect, locate animals in need, and facilitate adoptions, operating in collaboration with government agencies.

Adjust routines for cooler hours

“A good rule of thumb is if you can’t place your hand on the pavement outside, then neither can your pet,” said Pawsers Pet Care founder Ali Alriyahi.

Located in Alkhobar and Riyadh, they are a “one-stop shop” for all your pets’ needs.

When the weather starts to heat up, Pawsers employees are careful not to allow their pets outside if the temperature reaches above 32 C, especially if the humidity is high. They limit playtime to indoor activities where a controlled air conditioning unit and circulation system maintains optimal temperature and air quality conditions for the pets.

Outdoor time at Pawsers is during the very early mornings and late evenings and will last only about five minutes, depending on the heat index.

Through their outreach programs, Pawsers has found homes for thousands of abandoned and/or injured cats and dogs, also offering subsidized and discounted prices in services for strays and rescue animals.

Hydration is key

Chez Ayah, a full-service pet center in Riyadh, is known for its individualized approach to dog services.

Founder and owner Ayah Al-Bokhari said: “We’ve added indoor enrichment, supervised pool sessions and — most importantly — a lot of melon. Seriously, a lot of melon. It’s hydrating, safe, and the dogs love it.”

In the summer, Chez Ayah adjusts the entire routine to prioritize cooler hours, starting as early as 5:30 a.m. before the sun rises.

Their in-house park is additionally equipped with more than 10 outdoor AC units and large shaded areas for comfort.

“Every dog’s routine is customized based on their temperament, energy level, and needs,” Al-Bokhari added.

In addition to daycare and pet center services, there are best practices for pet owners to adopt in their homes in the summer, as well as for pedestrians to practice when coming across a stray on the street.

Pawsers operates with an emphasis on raising animal awareness in the Kingdom through working with multiple community led groups. (Supplied: Pawsers Pet Care)

Be mindful of humidity

It is important to watch out for high humidity levels, especially if you live on the coast, because it reduces the ability of an animal to cool itself.

Limit exercise on hot days and provide shade and water (preferably ice water) when taking your pets out for a walk.

Home cooling hacks

Make “pupsicles” by freezing pet-safe treats.
Use cooling wraps, vests, or mats soaked in cold water.
Don’t shave your pet’s fur — it insulates from heat and sun.
Provide shaded areas or ventilated rooms indoors.
Avoid leaving pets in enclosed spaces such as dog houses, which trap heat.

Very old, very young, overweight, inactive pets, and pets with heart or respiratory diseases are more prone to heat strokes. (Supplied: Pawsers Pet Care)

Know the signs of heat stroke

Be mindful for signs of heat stroke, which include heavy panting, glazed eyes, difficulty breathing, a rapid heartbeat, fever, excessive thirst, unresponsiveness and inactivity, dizziness, lack of coordination, excessive salivation, vomiting, a deep red or purple tongue, seizures, and unconsciousness.

Very old, very young, overweight, inactive pets, and pets with heart or respiratory diseases are more prone to heat strokes.

Certain breeds of cats and dogs, such as pugs and shih tzus who have short muzzles, will find it harder to breathe in the heat.

With temperatures regularly soaring above 40 C in Saudi summers, pet owners have to take extra measures to keep animals safe.

A national network of cooling and hydration stations for animals could be a valuable initiative, giving pets and strays a place to drink and cool off with minimal disruption.


 


McDonald’s Japan’s Pokemon card Happy Meals promotion comes to an unhappy end

McDonald’s Japan’s Pokemon card Happy Meals promotion comes to an unhappy end
Updated 13 August 2025

McDonald’s Japan’s Pokemon card Happy Meals promotion comes to an unhappy end

McDonald’s Japan’s Pokemon card Happy Meals promotion comes to an unhappy end

TOKYO: Fast-food chain McDonald’s Japan has canceled a Happy Meal campaign that came with coveted Pokemon cards, apologizing after resellers rushed to buy the meals and then discarded the food, leaving trash outside stores.
The meals, called Happy Sets in Japan, were meant for children. They came with a toy, such as a tiny plastic Pikachu, and a Pokemon card. They sold out in a day, according to Japanese media reports.
Mounds of wasted food were found near the stores.
“We do not believe in abandoning and discarding food. This situation goes against our longtime philosophy that we have cherished as a restaurant to ‘offer a fun dining experience for children and families.’ We sincerely accept that our preparations had not been adequate,” the company said in a statement Monday.
McDonald’s said it was working on ways to prevent such a situation from happening again, such as limiting the number of meals each person can buy and ending online orders. It said it might deny service to customers who fail to abide by the rules.
“We vow to return to the basics of what lies behind the Happy Set, which is about helping to bring smiles to families so we can contribute to the wholesome development of the hearts and bodies of children, who are our future,” the company said.
Collecting Pokemon cards is popular among adults and children in many places, with the most popular cards selling for $1,000 or more.
Unusually large crowds were seen flocking to McDonald’s stores when the meals with Pokemon cards went on sale. The cards were later being resold for up to tens of thousands of yen (hundreds of dollars) online.
McDonald’s has been selling Happy Meals for more than 40 years. In Japan, they usually sell for 510 yen ($3.40).