China Daily Global Edition (USA)

TikTok’s owner picks Oracle as US tech partner

ByteDance signals app’s US sale; China urges fair environmen­t for foreign firms

- By LIA ZHU in San Francisco liazhu@chinadaily­usa.com Mo Jingxi and Cui Haipei in Beijing contribute­d to this story.

Oracle said Monday that the Chinese owner of TikTok has picked it to be its “trusted technology provider” over rival Microsoft.

Oracle spokeswoma­n Deborah Hellinger told The Associated Press that she was confirming remarks made by US Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin, who told CNBC on Monday that TikTok’s parent company, ByteDance, submitted its proposal to the US government for approval.

“We did get a proposal over the weekend that includes Oracle as the trusted technology partner with Oracle making many representa­tions for national security issues,” Mnuchin said.

Mnuchin said there’s also a commitment to make TikTok’s global operations a US-headquarte­red company with 20,000 new jobs.

However, doubts that a deal with any US buyer would go ahead were fueled by a report from China’s English television channel CGTN on Monday. It cited sources as saying that ByteDance would not sell TikTok’s US operations to Oracle or Microsoft, and would not give the source code for the platform to any US firm.

Earlier, people familiar with the matter told Reuters that ByteDance had abandoned the sale of TikTok in the US and decided to pursue a partnershi­p with Oracle in hopes of avoiding a US ban threatened by

US President Donald Trump. ByteDance would not give the source code for the platform to any US firm, the report said.

ByteDance declined to comment on the CGTN report.

Amid fast-changing developmen­ts, Microsoft’s exit from the scene came a week before Trump promises to follow through with his plan to ban the app in the US, if its assets there are not sold. Microsoft was the first to confirm it was courting TikTok. It had teamed up with the retailer Walmart to make its bid.

Under ByteDance’s latest proposal, Oracle will be the firm’s technology partner and assume management of TikTok’s US user data, sources told Reuters on Sunday. Oracle is also negotiatin­g taking a stake in TikTok’s US operations, they said.

The Trump administra­tion has given a Sept 20 deadline for TikTok’s US operations to be sold in order to avoid a ban.

TikTok denies it is a national-security risk, as claimed by the administra­tion, and is suing to scuttle the ban.

Any deal for the TikTok assets must be reviewed by the Committee on Foreign Investment in the US, a group chaired by the Treasury secretary that studies mergers for national-security reasons. The president can approve or deny a transactio­n recommende­d by the panel, though Trump has already voiced support for Oracle as a “great company” that could handle the acquisitio­n.

TikTok has had remarkable success in the US. It had 91.9 million monthly active users in the country in June, up from 26.7 million in February last year. The secret of the app’s rapid success is its algorithm, which makes the platform so popular and addictive to its users, mostly adolescent­s.

Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Wang Wenbin said on Monday that TikTok’s being hunted down is a typical coerced transactio­n by the US government. He urged Washington to provide an open, fair, just and nondiscrim­inatory business environmen­t for foreign companies.

“China will firmly support related companies to safeguard their own legitimate rights and interests, and firmly uphold internatio­nal economic and trade rules,” he said at a news conference in Beijing.

He said some US politician­s, on the one hand, keep talking about fairness and reciprocit­y and the socalled clean network, but on the other hand, without any solid evidence, abuse US national power under the weakest pretext of national security to suppress non-US companies that have advantages in a certain sector.

“This fully reveals a few US politician­s’ real intention of robbery and their ugliness of economic bullying,” Wang said, adding that China firmly opposes it.

China revised the catalog of technologi­es prohibited and restricted from export at the end of last month, including algorithm-backed services such as those provided by ByteDance.

The Chinese company then issued a statement that it would “strictly follow” the new technology export rules and handle its “related export businesses”.

Unlike other technology companies in Silicon Valley, Oracle has cultivated close ties with the Trump administra­tion. Its founder, Larry Ellison, hosted a fundraiser for Trump this year, and its chief executive, Safra Catz, served on the president’s transition team and has frequently visited the White House.

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