Tiktok is up and running in the United States just hours after it shuts down, and that’s thanks to Trump

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TikTok was back up and running on Sunday, hours after President-elect Donald Trump pledged to keep it from “going under. “

The Chinese social media app showed it was restoring the service in a post on X and praised Trump for his component in bringing the site back.

“We thank President Trump for providing clarity and assurance to our service providers that they will face no consequences for offering Tiktok to over 170 million Americans and enabling over 7 million small businesses to thrive,” Tiktok Policy wrote on X .

“This is a firm position in favor of the first amendment and against arbitrary censorship. We will work with President Trump about a long -term solution that helps keep Tiktok in the United States, ”he said.

In a “Welcome back!” Message that seems to be in the Post-Ban application, users were also informed: “Thank you for your patience and support. As a result of President Trump’s efforts, Tiktok is back in the United States!”

Delighted TikTok users took to other social-media sites to share they had regained access to their accounts.

Among them were New Yorkers who rejoiced at the news, although they expressed surprise that the ban had been lifted so quickly.

“It’s fast!” “Said a surfer walking in Central Park.

Emma, 19 students in South Carolina, said, “I was really emotional when I saw him because of the short time he was gone.

“I kept looking to click on the app because I missed it a lot,” he laughs. “I hope it may not happen. “

The news came hours after Trump said he would issue an executive order on Monday to “prevent Tiktok from going dark. ”  In announcing his plans to save the app, Trump, 78, said the United States would take 50% ownership of a joint venture to buy the platform.

It is not clear if Trump wanted to say that the United States government had partial property of the application.

Tiktok’s parent company, Bytedonce, had already had nine months (or until January 19) to sell the platform business in the United States or be expelled from the country.

The ban passed overwhelmingly in either house of Congress in April and signed through President Biden.

But Trump, who originally backed the ban in 2020, said Sunday that he hoped to give the app a 90-day extension to find it a non-Chinese owner — prompting the company to go back online without fear of retribution.

Tiktok, which claims to have a user base of more than 170 million in the United States alone, has long raised national security concerns, adding China to the trove of American data.

Despite Trump’s change of center on the app, some Republicans and tech moguls have strongly opposed bringing it back online as is, raising ongoing dangers to US national security.

“Unless and until TikTok is no longer controlled by Beijing, the national security threat that motivated the divestiture law hasn’t been addressed,” Evan Swarztrauber, a senior fellow at the Foundation for American Innovation, told The Post on Sunday.

Other technology experts criticized the application to create a “sensation of panic made” while keeping the plug in their US operations even before the day, to repair them quickly.

“Tiktok’s early closure is due to the company’s incompetence or a planned exposure trick to inspire a sense of panic manufactured,” said Joel Thayer, a generation lawyer based in Washington and president of the Institute of Digital Progress. “As it is in relief, I guess it’s the last.

“The fact is, even before Congress passed the law, the U. S. told TikTok how to deal with its egregious national security concerns for more than five years, and the company did nothing,” Thayer said. “Now, after attempting to provide false claims of the First Amendment to hinder the implementation of the law and, on the eve of its ban, it needs a pity party. We’re sorry, but the company is frankly an unfriendly and deceitful agent.

U. S. Senator Tom Cotton also voiced considerations after the app returned for millions of Americans.

“Any corporation that hosts, distributes, maintains, or otherwise facilitates Tiktok under the communist can face many billions of dollars of ruinous duty under the law, not only in the Justice Department component, but also under the Securities Act, Shareholder Prosecution, and the state’s GA.

While Tiktok was back up and running for millions of Americans, the app was not available for new consumers to download from the App Store.

Earlier news of the app being shut down for good sent some American users into a tizzy trying to access it through a VPN, or virtual private network, which can trick websites and apps into thinking a user is based in a different country.

VPNs may not help Americans access their overdue accounts on Saturday and Sunday while the short-lived ban remains in effect.

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