TikTok has less than 75 daysbefore facing another ban after President Donald Trump signed an executive order granting the viral video app an extension to find a buyer.
With the clock ticking,idle eroticism the Trump administration is facilitating talks between potential U.S. buyers and TikTok's China-based parent company, ByteDance.
According to a new reportfrom NPR, the current deal in the works features the business-oriented software company Oracle taking over and overseeing "the app’s algorithm, data collection and software updates." Other U.S. investors, such as Microsoft, are also involved in the acquisition process, according to a source close to the discussions.
However, ByteDance wouldn't be completely out of the picture. The current deal in the works would allow the company to hold a minority stake in TikTok.
President Trump has since denied the report, saying that "numerous people are talking to me, very substantial people, about buying it" and that he will make his decision within the next 30 days.
Obviously, things could change at this point, but Trump has previously shared his preferences for an Oracle takeover of TikTok.
The latest TikTok deal talks come just one week after TikTok went darkafter being removed from Apple and Google's mobile app stores. The removal came in response to a law, passed by a bipartisan Congress and signed into law by then-president Joe Biden, requiring that TikTok cut ties with its China-based owner over national security concerns pertaining to China's government.
Trump, who previously spearheaded the original plan for the U.S. government to ban TikTok, had a sudden change of heart this time around. Citing his own usage of the platform in his successful 2024 election campaign, Trump vowed to make a deal to "save" TikTok. Shortly after his inauguration, Trump signed an executive ordergranting TikTok a 75-day extension.
With a nod to Trump, TikTok has since restored its service for U.S. users. However, Apple and Google have yet to restore the app on app stores due to potential fines they can receive as a result of the TikTok ban law. TikTok cannot push updates or fixes for the app to U.S. users as a result of the removal. Users who want to reinstall the TikTok app or install it on a new device are currently unable to do so.
Oracle is no stranger to these TikTok takeover talks.
The software company was originally floated as the lead buyer for TikTok during Trump's last presidency when he required that ByteDance sell off the app. While an acquisition deal never went through, a result of the talks saw Oracle partnering with TikTok to provide cloud services for its U.S. data.
In fact, TikTok has become such a major customer of Oracle's, that the latter said a ban on the former would hurt its business. Other U.S. investors are also involved in the TikTok takeover talks.
Microsoft, which was one of the leading interested parties alongside Oracle last time around, is said to be one of those companies. One major party that was involved in talks last time around that is missing from this round of discussions is Walmart. The big box retailer is said to be sitting out of this one due to TikTok's estimated asking price.
While these talks can change, it does appear that Oracle is at least President Trump's preference for taking over TikTok. A few days ago, Trump was askedby a reporter if he was open to Elon Musk buying TikTok.
While Trump said he was fine with that arrangement, he offered up his own suggestion for a buyer.
“I’d like Larry to buy it, too," Trump said, referring to Oracle's billionaire founder Larry Ellison.
It looks like we'll know more about TikTok's future sometime in the next 30 days.
Topics Microsoft TikTok Donald Trump
Colombian president Juan Manuel Santos awarded Nobel Peace Prize'Doctor Who' Christmas special trailer and Season 10 details revealedMylan to pay $465 million over Medicaid pricing of EpiPenNo, 'Invincible' isn't ending because 'The Walking Dead' is more popularSnapchat is making some big changes to Stories (again)This eagle stuck in a car grille, but okay, is a metaphor for America during this election4 'League of Legends' players who surprised at Worlds group stagesHow a Trump or Clinton presidency could change your peanut butter and jelly sandwich'Mr. Robot' book 'Red Wheelbarrow' could hold the key to Season 3Explanation for damaged letter will make you grateful for emailNo, 'Invincible' isn't ending because 'The Walking Dead' is more popularThat iconic Trump meme may save eyes this eclipseAll the humans in 'Stranger Things,' replaced by hamstersExplanation for damaged letter will make you grateful for emailBumble bans mirror selfies, immediately becomes best dating appWeather experts to skeptics: Evacuate before Hurricane Matthew hurts youNew Facebook messenger bot wants to help you register to vote'Doctor Who' Christmas special trailer and Season 10 details revealedTrump just lost the Arnold Schwarzenegger voteMatt Damon smiles for a teenager's screaming fans at New York Comic Con The Future of Toilet Art Is in Japan On Blood Moons and Singing in Public Big, Bent Ears, Chapter 9: Surrender to the Situation, Part 2 by Nicole Rudick Hotel Life: An Interview with Joanna Walsh On the Fjords Back to School with Nietzsche Mapplethorpe’s “Polyester Man”—Own an Obscene Photo French Frames: Golden, Gilt, Grandiose Bordellos of the Southland: An Interview with Liz Goldwyn by Erik Morse In Which Robert Walser Translates Paul Verlaine (Kind of...) September Song Staffage: A Word I Learned from John Ashbery Visiting Persephone Books Birtwistle and Harsent’s Operas Turn Myths on Their Heads My Bitterness, My Mission: Poems by David Ray from 1977 The Bad Air and Dubious Science of the Miasmatists On Prison Literature & Dostoyevsky’s Notes from a Dead House C. K. Williams, 1936–2015; Read His Poem “From My Window” On Translating Marianne Fritz and redefining the idea of literary genius. Evelyn Waugh on the Modernists: “Great Rot”
1.443s , 10194.7265625 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【idle eroticism】,Fresh Information Network