TikTok went dark for approximately 14 hours on January 19, 2026 — the deadline set by a federal law requiring ByteDance to divest its US operations or face a ban. The shutdown ended after the incoming Trump administration signaled it would not enforce the law immediately, and the app was restored. The episode was disorienting for the platform's 170 million US users and created one of the strangest social media migrations in internet history.
During the 72 hours before the expected ban, millions of American TikTok users downloaded RedNote (Xiaohongshu), a Chinese social platform with a mixed Instagram-Pinterest format. The irony of Americans fleeing a Chinese app by joining another Chinese app was noted extensively. RedNote briefly became the top downloaded app in the US App Store before TikTok's reprieve rendered the migration largely unnecessary.
Instagram and YouTube were the more durable beneficiaries. Instagram Reels viewership spiked 23% in the two weeks around the shutdown, according to Meta's internal metrics disclosed to advertisers. YouTube Shorts crossed 100 billion daily views for the first time in January 2026. Many creators who had built audiences primarily on TikTok used the uncertainty as motivation to finally diversify onto platforms they owned more of their distribution on.
Meta's family of apps — Instagram, Facebook, WhatsApp, and Threads — collectively represents the largest social media footprint in the world by active users, though younger demographics remain more fragmented across TikTok, Snapchat, Discord, and emerging platforms. Threads, launched as a Twitter alternative in 2023, has grown to over 300 million monthly active users but has not displaced X as the primary platform for real-time political and sports commentary.
X (formerly Twitter) under Elon Musk's ownership has stabilized at roughly 350 million monthly active users — down from its 450 million peak before the acquisition but no longer in freefall. Its subscription tier, X Premium, has reduced bot activity meaningfully and generates around $1.3 billion in annual revenue, though the platform remains unprofitable overall.