News

The “Unconditional, irrevocable” license granted to CapCut for user-generated content has understandably angered many users. But among the TikTokers complaining about the new terms, there are ...
Liscah Isaboke, Esq. explains in an article that the legalese means that users still own their content, but the part of where the internet’s fury comes from includes the “irrevocable,” which means ...
But that doesn't necessarily mean you have to immediately find a new, non-CapCut editing tool — though there may be alternative software that doesn't require those sorts of terms.
TikTok's owner, ByteDance, has plans to move Americans to a US-specific version of CapCut as it looks to meet requirements ...
Is this relevant to businesses? This recent attention to the CapCut terms is the wake-up call our industry needs to start being more conscious about the tools we allow into our workflows.
Launching a U.S.-specific app could be part of the company's broader plan to comply with a 2024 law requiring ByteDance to ...
TikTok's parent company plans to transition US users to an advanced version of CapCut, the popular video-editing app. This ...
It's harder to ignore the link between both apps, especially with growing national security concerns. CapCut now claims ...
Meta shared that it was working on Edits in January after ByteDance-owned CapCut was removed from U.S. app stores.
Here’s everything you need to know about CapCut’s new privacy terms, how it affects Nigerian content creators, and what other video editing app alternatives you can switch to.
CapCut’s policy update raises major red flags for newsrooms The go-to mobile-editing app for TikTok, Reels, and Shorts has slipped in problematic new terms for newsrooms which risks source safety and ...
I tested out a few other video editing apps to find a suitable replacement in case CapCut and TikTok go dark.