news
16 Jan 2025
Barring a last-minute change, the TikTok ban is set to happen on Sunday, Jan. 19. President Biden signed legislation last spring requiring either a sale or ban of the Chinese-owned app for national security reasons, and during the Supreme Court's oral arguments on the case Friday, one of the social media app's lawyers told justices that the app could "go dark" immediately after it takes effect.
In countries like India where the app is banned, users cannot download it, or if it was downloaded already, it does not load content.
Some experts say, however, that TikTok will slowly become less usable over time because it will stop updating once removed from the App Store and Google Play in the U.S.
Though what the app will look like on the 19th remains unclear, some users are downloading their videos, likes, comments and other information just in case they lose all access.
Keep in mind that receiving your information could take a few days.
Then, once TikTok has filled your request, you'll have four days to download your data.
Here's how to view your posts from the text file:
A few notes:
The data sent is not always comprehensive. TikTok says it will not send you data that "affects the privacy of others."
Your saved videos will download as TikTok links, not downloadable videos.
If you do not receive all of your posts, try downloading them one by one, manually.