TikTok sale uncertain as Trump ban looms — reports
SAN FRANCISCO — Negotiations for Microsoft to buy the US operations of Chinese-owned TikTok are on hold after US President Donald Trump threatened to bar the social media app and came out against the sale, the Wall Street Journal reported Saturday.
Trump has pledged to get tough on the massively popular video-sharing app, which US officials have said could be a tool for Chinese intelligence — a claim the firm, owned by Chinese internet giant ByteDance, has repeatedly denied.
While there has been no sign yet of the ban he threatened on Friday to impose, his words were reportedly already adding to uncertainties for TikTok.
"Before Mr. Trump's remarks, the two sides believed the broad strokes of a deal could be in place by Monday," the paper reported on a possible TikTok-Microsoft sale, citing unnamed sources.
It also said Trump's threats and opposition to the deal had prompted TikTok to make further concessions, including adding up to 10,000 jobs in the US over the next three years.
TikTok defended itself on Saturday, with its general manager for the US, Vanessa Pappas, telling users that the company was working to give them "the safest app," amid US concerns over data security.
"We're not planning on going anywhere," Pappas said in a message released on the app.
TikTok, especially popular with young audiences who create and watch its short-form videos, has an estimated one billion users worldwide.
It has grown even faster as the coronavirus pandemic has pushed people physically away from each other, but into close contact online.
Earlier media reports had suggested Trump would require that the app's US operations be divested from ByteDance, but he instead announced a ban.
Trump's announcement drew criticism from some in the tech sector, including former Facebook chief security officer Alex Stamos, who questioned whether the move was spurred by national security concerns.
"A 100-percent sale to an American company would have been considered a radical solution two weeks ago and, eventually, mitigates any reasonable data protection concerns," he wrote on Twitter.
TikTokers employed the apps' signature short-form videos to poke fun at Trump.
One clip that was liked over 300,000 times shows a young woman stacking bricks and smearing orange paint on her face, apparent digs at the president's skin tone and controversial pledge to build a wall between the US and Mexico.
"Me trying to convince Trump to let us keep TikTok", read the text on the post.
'For the long run'
The American Civil Liberties Union cried foul over the possibility of a ban on the app.
"Banning an app that millions of Americans use to communicate with each other is a danger to free expression and is technologically impractical," said the ACLU's surveillance and cybersecurity counsel, Jennifer Granick.
"With any internet platform, we should be concerned about the risk that sensitive private data will be funneled to abusive governments, including our own," Granick said in a statement.
"But shutting one platform down, even if it were legally possible to do so, harms freedom of speech online and does nothing to resolve the broader problem of unjustified government surveillance."
Pappas said she was "proud" of TikTok's 1,500 US employees, and also noted the "additional 10,000 jobs" the company plans on creating in the US in the next three years.
"When it comes to safety and security, we're building the safest app because we know it's the right thing to do," she said.
"So we appreciate the support. We're here for the long run, and continue to share your voice here and let's stand for TikTok."
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