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TikTok accepts deal revisions as Donald Trump prepares to review proposal, Technology News, ETtech


Illustration: Rahul Awasthi
Illustration: Rahul Awasthi

The Chinese company that owns TikTok has accepted the Trump administration’s changes to a deal designed to mitigate the White House’s concerns that the popular app poses a national security threat, two people with knowledge of the talks said.

The Treasury Department, which leads a group reviewing the deal for national security purposes, provided TikTok’s owner, ByteDance, with revisions to its proposal Wednesday, one of the people said. Some of the revisions were intended to address how TikTok’s data and source code would be handled and secured, one of the people said. The two sides have agreed in principle but are still discussing some technical details, the other person said.

The exact ownership structure of TikTok under the proposed deal is unclear. President Donald Trump and some members of his administration have said that ByteDance cannot retain a majority stake in TikTok if their concerns are to be satisfied. Oracle, the Silicon Valley business software-maker, is set to be a technology partner for TikTok while taking an ownership stake in the app but would not own it outright, people with knowledge of the situation have said.

Any resolution on ownership could involve some tricky math. The percentage of TikTok owned by non-U.S. interests depends partly on how officials treat the portion of ByteDance, a privately held company, that is already backed by U.S. investors, one person said.

TikTok would also go public on a U.S. stock market in about a year if the deal went through, the person said. While that plan is not a formal part of the proposal being vetted by the government, it is something the Trump administration is aware of, the person said.

The deal still requires approval from Trump. As of early Thursday afternoon, the president had not been briefed on it. One person familiar with the deliberations said the meeting had not been scheduled but would happen “soon.”

An executive order signed by Trump essentially mandates that TikTok strike a deal to sell its U.S. operations by Sunday or risk having all of its commercial transactions halted in the United States. TikTok has became a point of contention between the United States and China, which have increasingly battled over trade, security and tech dominance.

Some Republican lawmakers, such as Sens. Marco Rubio of Florida, Thom Tillis of North Carolina and John Cornyn of Texas, have criticized any deal that would leave ByteDance in control of TikTok’s code or algorithms as inadequate in addressing national security concerns. That has raised questions of whether Trump could face criticism for the Oracle-TikTok proposal while running for reelection.

At a news conference Wednesday, Trump said he was “not going to be happy” if ByteDance still owned a majority of TikTok as part of its deal with the government.

TikTok and a spokesperson for the Treasury Department declined to comment. Oracle did not immediately respond to a request for comment. ByteDance’s acceptance of the Treasury Department’s changes to its proposal was reported earlier by Bloomberg. The plan to take TikTok public was earlier reported by CNBC.

While rushing to secure a deal, TikTok is also hunting for a permanent chief executive to replace Kevin Mayer, who resigned in late August, citing the changing political pressures of the role. Vanessa Pappas, general manager of TikTok in North America, took over in the interim.

Among those whom TikTok has talked to about the job is Kevin Systrom, a founder and former chief executive of Instagram, people briefed on the matter said. Talks are preliminary, and no final decisions have been made, they said.

The parties to a deal expect to name a U.S. chief executive of the new TikTok entity, one person familiar with the matter said.

Systrom left Instagram, which Facebook owns, in 2018. He did not respond to a request for comment Thursday.

The drama over TikTok is part of a battle between Washington and Beijing over who will control central aspects of the internet. U.S. officials said that because China has laws that require tech companies to provide the government with access to data, its internet companies pose a national security risk.

The Trump administration’s early efforts focused on the equipment that delivers internet connections around the world, by trying to keep products made by Huawei and ZTE out of U.S. networks and those used by U.S. allies. More recently, it has begun to scrutinize consumer technology companies. The administration forced a Chinese company to sell Grindr, a gay dating app, this year, for example.

In a series of executive orders last month, Trump made it clear that ByteDance must sell TikTok or face an outright ban of the app. Another executive order threatened to ban WeChat, a messaging platform owned by Chinese internet giant Tencent.

Beijing responded with new export restrictions that appeared to ban the sale of TikTok’s valuable video recommendation algorithm, a move that cast a shadow over the talks in the United States.





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