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The Morning After: In a bid to stop ban, TikTok creators are suing the US government


The biggest news stories this morning: Apple brings eye tracking to recent iPhones and iPads, Bandai is finally rereleasing a beloved Tamagotchi from 2004, Android 15 will make it harder for phone thieves to steal your data.

The lawsuit claims the Protecting Americans from Foreign Adversary Controlled Applications Act is unconstitutional because it violates the First Amendment rights of the creators who depend on the platform. Coinciding with Global Accessibility Awareness Day, this week, Apple is bringing eye-tracking support to recent models of iPhones and iPads (with an A12 chip), as well as customizable vocal shortcuts, music haptics, vehicle motion cues and more. This means players can set up the Proteus Controller in myriad ways: in one hand, flat on a desktop or as part of a traditional gamepad with palm grips.

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TikTok

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Bid

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Ban

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A group of TikTok creators are also suing the US government to stop a ban of the app

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TikTok content creators sue the US government over potential ban

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Eight TikTok creators file their own suit against the divest-or-ban law