She was already “Instagram famous” by age 16,but it was becoming a mother almost four years ago that propelled the social media creator to star status.
Elon Musk’s company has launched a case in the Administrative Appeals Tribunal to test the merits of the eSafety Commissioner’s order to remove church stabbing videos.
TikTok has filed a court challenge against a recently-enacted US law that would force its Chinese parent to divest its US business or close it down.
There are dozens,possibly hundreds,of other similar videos on social media,prompting leading advertising figures to call out marketing tactics lacking social responsibility.
Something strangely dark wells up inside while I’m looking at the Instagram post of a popular Australian fashion influencer.
New figures show TikTok is a money-making machine locally,despite mounting political and regulatory pressure.
Iraqi authorities are investigating the killing of a well-known social media influencer,who was shot by an armed motorcyclist in front of her home in central Baghdad.
Melburnian Rice was acting alongside Ryan Gosling and Nicole Kidman while her school friends were working at Kmart. Now,she’s scaling the Hollywood hills.
The argument about the violent terror attack video is urgent and important. But what if the greater danger is slow and insidious?
While most people in their 20s are struggling to pay rent,a cohort of A-list influencers are ditching make-up and skincare collabs in favour of a new,more lucrative domain.
A decision made by House Republicans last week to attach the TikTok bill to the high-priority Ukraine and Israel package helped expedite its passage in Congress.