China's ByteDance will get 1 of 7 board seats for TikTok's US operations, official says

US President Donald Trump delays TikTok ban as US and China near a deal to transfer US operations to American investors and secure user data locally. - REUTERS
WASHINGTON: A U.S.-China agreement on TikTok's U.S. operations includes China's ByteDance choosing one of seven board members for the new entity, with Americans holding the six other seats, a senior White House official said on Saturday.
AI Brief
- Trump paused enforcement of a 2024 law banning TikTok to allow time for a deal transferring its US assets to American investors.
- The proposed deal includes US control of user data and the algorithm, with Oracle managing cloud storage and oversight.
- Lawmakers remain skeptical, questioning whether the deal ensures full divestiture and protects Americans data from Chinese access.
Trump has delayed enforcement of the law through mid-December amid efforts to extract TikTok's U.S. assets from the global platform, line up American investors and ensure the new ownership qualifies as a full divestiture needed under the 2024 law.
This week's progress toward a deal marked a rare breakthrough in months-long talks between the world's two biggest economies that have sought to defuse a wide-ranging trade war that has unnerved global markets.
Trump said on Friday that he and Chinese President Xi Jinping had made progress on a TikTok agreement in a phone call and would meet face-to-face in six weeks. But Beijing's statements have not clarified how advanced the progress has been.
Details of the agreement, as laid out by the senior White House official, largely align with reporting from Reuters and other news outlets in recent days. The official said Trump would extend the latest pause in enforcement of the 2024 law for an additional 120 days, suggesting the next deadline for an agreement to be finalized would be in April.
TikTok, China's Ministry of Commerce, and the Cyberspace Administration of China did not respond to requests for comment.
Still, lawmakers will want an explanation about how the deal will work.
"The devil will be in the details," said Representative Frank Pallone, a Democrat. "We cannot allow China continued access to massive amounts of Americans’ personal data, and we cannot allow Trump to hand TikTok over to his tech bro buddies and turn it into a MAGA mouthpiece. Period."
It is not clear if the deal in its current state will qualify as a full divestiture as required by Congress under the 2024 law.
Trump has credited TikTok with helping him win re-election last year and has 15 million followers on his personal account. The White House also launched an official TikTok account last month.
The agreement described by the official, as expected, will require that all data on American users will be stored on U.S. cloud computing infrastructure run by U.S. software firm Oracle.
The official also said the TikTok algorithm "will be secured, retrained and operated in the United States outside of ByteDance's control."
"TikTok's content-recommendation algorithm will be retrained from the ground up - reviewed and analyzed under U.S. supervision with U.S. data that will not be shared outside of the United States," the official said.
This is an important point because U.S. officials had warned in recent years that the algorithm could be used by China to manipulate what Americans see on social media. Reuters and others reported this week that the algorithm could be licensed from ByteDance.
The official said U.S. users would still be able to use TikTok to interact with content from around the world.
TikTok's U.S. assets would be majority-owned by American investors and operated in the United States by a board of directors with national security and cybersecurity credentials, the official added.
ByteDance's current shareholders include Susquehanna International Group, General Atlantic, and KKR. ByteDance would hold less than 20% of the stock of a joint venture controlling TikTok's U.S. operations, the official said.
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