National Post (National Edition)

— U.S. PRESIDENT DONALD TRUMP ON TIKTOK’S FATE,

Trump says popular video app must close in U.S. if deal not reached in next 45 days

- SHELLY BANJO AND DINA BASS

It’ll close down on Sept. 15 unless Microsoft or somebody else is able to buy it and work out a deal, an appropriat­e deal, so the Treasury … gets a lot of money.

In a bid to salvage a deal for the U.S. operations of TikTok, Microsoft Corp. Chief Executive Officer Satya Nadella spoke with President Donald Trump by phone about how to secure the administra­tion’s blessing to buy the wildly popular, but besieged, music video app.

Microsoft in a blog post Sunday confirmed talks to buy TikTok’s operations in the U.S., as well as in Canada, Australia and New Zealand, and said it’s aiming to complete the deal no later than Sept. 15. Trump said on Monday that if a deal is not struck with an American company by that date TikTok will have to close in the U.S.

The software giant’s public statement follows closeddoor discussion­s with TikTok and Trump, who floated plans for an outright ban of the app on national security grounds and publicly lambasted the idea of a deal late Friday night.

The companies now have 45 days to hash out a plan acceptable to all parties, a deadline insisted on by the White House. The two companies have not yet worked out key details for a deal, including price, according to people familiar with the matter.

On Monday Trump also said the federal government will have to be paid a “substantia­l amount of money” as part of any deal.

“I don’t mind whether it’s Microsoft or someone else, a big company, a secure company, a very American company buys it,” Trump told reporters at the White House. “It’ll close down on Sept. 15 unless Microsoft or somebody else is able to buy it and work out a deal, an appropriat­e deal, so the Treasury of the United States gets a lot of money.”

TikTok has become a flash point among rising U.S.China tensions in recent months as U.S. politician­s raised concerns that parent company ByteDance Ltd. could be compelled to hand over American users’ data to Beijing or use the app to influence the 165 million Americans, and more than 2 billion users globally, who have downloaded it.

The app also drew ire from the U.S. president after anti-Trump activists used the platform to disrupt campaign activities.

THE TREASURY OF THE UNITED STATES GETS A LOT OF MONEY DONALD TRUMP

In its blog post, Microsoft pledged to add more security, privacy and digital safety protection­s to the TikTok app and ensure all private data of Americans be transferre­d back to the U.S. and deleted from servers outside the country. The company also said it may invite other American investors to take minority stakes in the company.

“Microsoft fully appreciate­s the importance of addressing the President’s concerns,” the company said. “It is committed to acquiring TikTok subject to a complete security review and providing proper economic benefits to the United States, including the United States Treasury.”

If a deal goes through, it would mark a dramatic interventi­on by the U.S. government in private enterprise and alter the global technology landscape. It would hand Microsoft a more prominent role in social media and online advertisin­g — and threaten to end an era of globalizat­ion in the tech industry.

Microsoft’s statement didn’t explicitly say whether Trump would approve an agreement and forgo a TikTok ban, though Microsoft would likely make such a public pronouncem­ent only if it thought that would be forthcomin­g. Microsoft’s shares rose more than 4 per cent in Germany.

The blog post from Microsoft came after a weekend of tense negotiatio­ns that lasted late into the night among Microsoft, TikTok and the White House, as well as a string of appearance­s on Sunday morning cable shows by U.S. politician­s trying to sway the President’s decision.

Factions within the administra­tion and Congress have split into two camps: Those that want to keep the wildly popular music video app in operation by delivering it into the arms of an American company, and those that want to ban the app altogether in the U.S. because of TikTok’s Chinese roots. The latter would send a message to China that the U.S. too can also block internet companies from operating on its shores like China does with Facebook, Twitter and Google.

TikTok was launched in the U.S. more than two years ago, following ByteDance’s 2017 purchase of lip-synching app Musical.ly, which it folded into TikTok. The app became a social-media hit in the U.S — the first Chinese platform to make such inroads.

As TikTok surged to popularity, officials began calling for a national security investigat­ion into the app. In November 2019, The Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States, or CFIUS, which investigat­es overseas acquisitio­ns of U.S. businesses, opened a review of the Musical.ly purchase.

TikTok has repeatedly rejected accusation­s it feeds user data to China or is beholden to Beijing, even though ByteDance is based there. It spent months trying to distance itself from its Chinese roots. It hired its first American CEO in June, former Walt Disney Co. executive Kevin Mayer, as well as dozens of D.C. lobbyists. It announced plans for a new global headquarte­rs outside of China and said it was considerin­g other organizati­onal changes to satisfy U.S. authoritie­s.

 ?? HOLLIE ADAMS / BLOOMBERG ??
HOLLIE ADAMS / BLOOMBERG

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