What will be the public reaction to the TikTok ban by April 30, 2025?
Mostly supportive • 25%
Mostly opposed • 25%
Indifferent • 25%
Mixed reactions • 25%
Surveys, polls, and public opinion reports
Supreme Court Upholds TikTok Ban Starting January 19, 2025, Over ByteDance Ownership
Jan 19, 2025, 09:30 PM
The U.S. Supreme Court has upheld a federal law banning TikTok unless its China-based parent company, ByteDance, sells the app to a U.S. owner. This decision follows years of scrutiny over TikTok's potential national security risks, including concerns about data privacy, its ties to the Chinese government, and its pandemic-driven popularity. ByteDance had challenged the law, arguing it violated free speech rights, but the Court ruled that the national security risks outweighed these concerns. TikTok, which merged with Musical.ly in 2017 and became a global trendsetter, has faced multiple controversies, including allegations of censorship and data misuse. In April 2024, President Joe Biden signed legislation requiring the sale or banning of TikTok, and despite ByteDance's efforts to host U.S. user data on Oracle servers, concerns persisted. The ban, set to take effect on January 19, 2025, has led to TikTok being removed from app stores and becoming inaccessible in the U.S. The app, which had 170 million U.S. users, has also been criticized for its potential use as a propaganda tool by the Chinese Communist Party. President-elect Donald Trump has signaled a possible intervention, but ByteDance has stated it will comply with the ban unless definitive assurances are provided.
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Divided opinion • 34%
Majority support ban • 33%
Majority oppose ban • 33%
Widespread opposition • 25%
Indifference • 25%
Widespread support • 25%
Mixed reactions • 25%
Minimal response • 25%
Legal challenges • 25%
Adoption of alternatives • 25%
Major protests • 25%
Evenly split opinions • 25%
Majority oppose the ban • 25%
Majority support the ban • 25%
No clear consensus • 25%
Public largely supports decision • 25%
Public largely opposes decision • 25%
Mixed public reaction • 25%
Minimal public reaction • 25%
Insufficient data • 25%
Opinion is evenly split • 25%
Majority oppose the ban • 25%
Majority support the ban • 25%
Mixed • 25%
Neutral • 25%
Mostly Negative • 25%
Mostly Positive • 25%
Majority support the ban • 25%
Opinion remains divided • 25%
Insufficient data • 25%
Majority oppose the ban • 25%
Protests or public demonstrations • 25%
Online campaigns or petitions • 25%
No significant public reaction • 25%
Legal actions or lawsuits • 25%
Support • 25%
Oppose • 25%
Neutral • 25%
Other • 25%
General indifference • 25%
Widespread protests • 25%
Other reactions • 25%
Support for the ban • 25%
Majority support reversal • 25%
Majority oppose reversal • 25%
Evenly split opinion • 25%
Insufficient data • 25%
Increase in use of U.S. apps • 25%
Other impacts • 25%
No significant change • 25%
Emergence of new platforms • 25%