New Haven Register (New Haven, CT)

Oracle-TikTok strike a deal, but details remain scarce

-

The short-video app TikTok has chosen Oracle as its corporate savior to avoid a U.S. ban ordered by President Donald Trump. The U.S. government will review the prospectiv­e deal.

That much is known. Everything else is confusion, at least to outsiders. For instance:

What does it mean that, as Oracle declared, it will become a “trusted technology provider” for TikTok? Is this a joint venture, a vendor agreement or something else? Oracle is pointedly not referring to its deal as a sale.

Will Trump approve such an arrangemen­t after having threatened a ban if TikTok remains owned by its Chinabased parent ByteDance? Would it answer the national-security concerns around potential data siphoning, censorship and propaganda from Beijing that Trump raised?

Will the Chinese government go along with it?

Will TikTok get kicked out of the major app stores after Sept. 20, when Trump’s threatened ban was supposed to go into effect, threatenin­g its future in the U.S.?

“This whole process has been a mess,” said Martin Chorzempa, a research fellow at the Peterson Institute for Internatio­nal Economics.

Microsoft, an announced TikTok suitor, said Sunday that its rejected bid would have protected U.S. national security interests by making “significan­t changes” to ensure security, privacy, online safety, and anti-misinforma­tion measures. Oracle’s statement Monday was more muted, emphasizin­g that it has a “40-year track record providing secure, highly performant technology solutions.”

U.S. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin appeared to support the Oracle bid on CNBC Monday morning. Oracle’s proposal made “many representa­tions for national security issues,” Mnuchin said. He also noted a new commitment — by whom, he didn’t say — to make TikTok’s global operations a U.S.-headquarte­red company with 20,000 new jobs. Neither TikTok nor Oracle mentioned that pledge Monday, although TikTok said in July that it would add 10,000 U.S. jobs

TikTok said in a statement Monday that its proposal to the Treasury Department should “resolve the Administra­tion’s security concerns” and emphasized the importance of its app to the 100 million users it claims in the U.S.

TikTok, which says it has about 700 million globally, is known for its fun, goofy videos of dancing, lip-syncing, pranks and jokes. It’s also home to more political material, some of which is critical of Trump.

An Aug. 6 Trump order threatened a vague ban on TikTok, creating a sense of emergency and seeding chaos into an existing national-security review of TikTok by a U.S. interagenc­y group, the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States, or CFIUS. A subsequent Aug. 14 order demanded that ByteDance divest its U.S. business. In addition, Trump insisted that the U.S. government get a cut of any deal, something experts said was unpreceden­ted and possibly illegal.

Matters were complicate­d further when the Chinese government appeared to suggest that the technology used in TikTok’s algorithm could not be exported without government permission. On Sunday, ByteDance tapped Oracle as its U.S. partner, embracing a company whose co-founder Larry Ellison has raised funds for Trump. Its decision also followed criticism of Microsoft by a Trump trade adviser, Peter Navarro.

Oracle and TikTok did not answer questions about the structure of the proposal on Monday. The Treasury Department didn’t return an emailed request for more informatio­n about the proposal.

“We don’t know that this is the wrong outcome. But we do know that (the administra­tion) shouldn’t have politicize­d it this way,” said Derek Scissors, who studies China at the American Enterprise Institute think tank.

Eurasia analyst Paul Triolo noted that if ByteDance retains ownership of TikTok, it won’t have actually sold anything. China doesn’t want to be seen approving a deal where a Chinese company is forced to a sale or stripped of its intellectu­al property, he said, while Trump can’t easily walk back a ban without major concession­s he can point to. “A face saving way out of this will be very difficult for all parties to find,” he said.

 ?? Getty Images ?? People walk past a restaurant with a TikTok logo displayed Monday in the window in Beijing, where it offers a discount to anyone who posts videos on the TikTok app. Tech giant Microsoft said on Sunday its offer to buy TikTok was rejected, leaving Oracle as the sole remaining bidder ahead of the imminent deadline for the Chinese-owned video app to sell or shut down its U.S. operations.
Getty Images People walk past a restaurant with a TikTok logo displayed Monday in the window in Beijing, where it offers a discount to anyone who posts videos on the TikTok app. Tech giant Microsoft said on Sunday its offer to buy TikTok was rejected, leaving Oracle as the sole remaining bidder ahead of the imminent deadline for the Chinese-owned video app to sell or shut down its U.S. operations.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States