ABOARD AIR FORCE ONE (AP) — President Donald Trump hasn’t been shy about sharing his thoughts since taking office, and he added a 20-minute Q&A with reporters aboard Air Force One to the mix. He held forth on everything from the color of the presidential plane to the fate of TikTok, Greenland and Canada.
President Donald Trump hasn’t been shy about sharing his thoughts since taking office, and he added a 20-minute Q&A with reporters aboard Air Force One to the mix Saturday night. He held forth on everything from the colour of the presidential plane to the fate of TikTok, Greenland and Canada.
Canadian TikTok users say the app is down for them too, as the U.S. ban takes effect, with dozens of annoyed Canadian users flocking to social media to vent their frustrations.
On the TikTok file, the federal government has been full of muddled policies with a lack of transparency and a reactive approach to U.S. decision-making
US President Donald Trump has been vocal since his inauguration, recently engaging in a 20-minute Q&A with reporters on Air Force One. He discussed various topics, including the presidential plane's colour scheme and the future of TikTok,
TikTok’s time in the United States is counting down. But Washington is only the latest government to impose restrictions on the video app.
The uncertainty may have ripple effects in Canada, experts say, although Ottawa says what happens in the U.S. won't impact its own moves to curtail TikTok's business.
It’s not yet known how Donald Trump will resolve TikTok’s complicated legal limbo, but what does seem clear is that the fate of the social media app is increasingly linked in the president's mind to his top issue of tariffs.
A TikTok ban briefly came into effect this past weekend in the U.S., but service came back the next day. What exactly happened?
U.S. President Donald Trump on Monday, his first day back in office, signed an executive order postponing the country's ban of TikTok for 75 days. But whether this move was lawful is up in the air.
To access TikTok after the ban, you’ll also need to use a VPN. VPNs are privacy tools that conceal a user’s Internet Protocol (IP) address. Not only does this obfuscation make it harder for cybercriminals to access user data, but it also allows users to bypass geo-restrictions and access content from anywhere in the world.
Canadian TikTok users took to X on Saturday night to vent that TikTok had also gone down for them after it went down for American users despite the app not being banned completely in Canada