Houston Chronicle

U.S. extends deadline for TikTok deal

- By David McCabe

WASHINGTON — The Trump administra­tion gave TikTok’s Chinese owner more time to reach a deal to sell the app, after demanding that it divest its interest in the social media service over national security concerns.

President Donald Trump had signed an executive order in August requiring that TikTok’s parent company, ByteDance, sell any assets that allowed it to operate the app in the United States by Thursday. That deadline was extended 15 days until Nov. 27, according to a document that TikTok filed Friday in U.S. District Court for theDistric­t of Columbia.

The extension keeps in limbo a deal that was aimed at preventing the U.S. government from banning the popular video app. ByteDance has offered to sell stakes in TikTok to U.S. cloud computing firm Oracle and Walmart. Under the deal, Oracle would supervise TikTok’s data tomitigate concerns that the app could feed customer informatio­n about Americans to the Chinese government.

The Trump administra­tion has put pressure on TikTok, where people share lip-syncing and other videos, as part of its campaign against China’s influence in the global technology industry. U.S. officials have limited the use of Chinese equipment in 5G wireless networks, taken issue with U.S. companies’ backing undersea internet cables intomainla­nd China and increasing­ly targeted consumer apps like TikTok and WeChat, a messaging app owned by Chinese internet giant Tencent.

U.S. officials have said TikTok’s

Chinese ownership means the app could send data back to Beijing under local laws that require Chinese companies to cooperate with government requests. TikTok has denied that its app poses any security threat to Americans, noting that many of its investors are American and that its customer data is not stored in China.

TikTok declined to comment on the extension. The Treasury Department, which is playing a central role in vetting the proposed deal, did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

Since Trump’s executive order in August, the administra­tion’s efforts to clamp down on TikTok

have met legal resistance.

Under a separate executive order, the Commerce Department released rules in September to force app stores run by Apple and Google to stop hosting TikTok and WeChat. Federal judges have blocked them for now.

TikTok also asked a federal court this week to block the order demanding that ByteDance sell its interest in the app. While Trump signaled in September that he approved the broad strokes of the deal involving TikTok, Oracle and Walmart, it still needs to be considered by a federal committee that vets foreign investment in the United States.

“In the nearly two months

since the president gave his preliminar­y approval to our proposal to satisfy those concerns, we have offered detailed solutions to finalize that agreement — but have received no substantiv­e feedback on our extensive data privacy and security framework,” a TikTok spokespers­on said in a statement Tuesday.

Oracle andWalmart declined to comment.

Monica Crowley, a spokespers­on for the Treasury Department, said in a statement Friday afternoon that the extension would give the companies “additional time to resolve this case in amanner” that complied with Trump’s executive order.

 ?? Olivier Douliery / AFP via Getty Images ?? An executive order required TikTok’s Chinese parent company to sell any assets that allowed it to operate the app in the United States by Thursday. That deadline was extended 15 days until Nov. 27.
Olivier Douliery / AFP via Getty Images An executive order required TikTok’s Chinese parent company to sell any assets that allowed it to operate the app in the United States by Thursday. That deadline was extended 15 days until Nov. 27.

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