The Supreme Court is weighing if TikTok can be banned in the U.S. in a case pitting national security against free speech.
The Supreme Court seems likely to uphold a law that would ban TikTok in the United States beginning Jan. 19 unless the popular social media program is sold by its China-based parent company.
The high court today heared oral arguments on TikTok v. Garland, also known as the Protecting Americans from Foreign ...
A thawing in commercial real estate investment is expected to occur this year. How much of a thaw will occur is hard to ...
Mang noted the area suffered from not-infrequent power outages, raising the possibility that the data center could make the ...
Here are 11 healthcare industry lawsuits, settlements and legal developments that Becker's has reported since Jan. 3: ...
This brief from the CSIS Economics Program and Scholl Chair in International Business analyzes Taiwan’s role in U.S. economic ...
A United Arab Emirates investment firm has pledged $20 billion to build new data centers targeting AI across a number of ...
The president-elect vows to force millions of undocumented immigrants from the United States. The results are unpredictable ...
The Supreme Court signaled in oral arguments Friday that it may uphold the federal ban on TikTok, potentially leaving it up ...
President-elect Donald Trump's breezy rollout this week of a Dubai real estate developer's $20 billion pledge shows the chasm ...
Biden fulfilled a promise to restore the refugee resettlement program but also cracked down on the right to asylum ...