What’s really going on with the TikTok deal
The author of The Art of the Deal always likes to claim he’s a big winner when it comes to any business arrangement he makes. And in some ways, Donald Trump appears to have won big by finalizing a deal that will see Oracle, Silver Lake, and MGX take part-ownership of a new joint venture designed to oversee operations in the United States of TikTok , the wildly popular social video appl. But dig into the details and you’ll see that what Trump’s White House is keen to present as a big win for national security looks more like a standard business deal—or more cynically, a shakedown. Concerns around TikTok first bubbled up at the end of Trump’s first term, when the 45th president, running unsuccessfully for re-election in 2020, presented the app, owned by the Chinese tech champion ByteDance, as a national-security concern. On both sides of the aisle, China hawks worry that TikTok’s algorithm could be used to catalyze opposition to the American way of life, and indoctrinate U.S. teens into Chinese ways of thinking—or nudge public opinion to be more favorable to the Chinese regime. Trump tried unsuccessfully to ban the app outright from the United States, a gambit that didn’t stand up in court. He has continued to try and alter its ownership even as he appears to have changed tack about whether the platform ought to be banned outright. Trump has claimed that TikTok’s purported Chinese links still gave him pause, but that he was willing to allow the app to continue existing in the U.S. provided that it was brought under American control. With this finalized deal, even that’s not guaranteed—which could suggest this is little more than a shakedown and carve-out to ensure the U.S. capitalizes on the only non-American social network that has managed to gain a mass global foothold in the last 20 years. “The leaked details of this deal seem to imply that the public debate and concerns were a red herring,” says Catalina Goanta, associate professor in private law and technology at Utrecht University. The U.S. “just wanted in on a profitable business model that has been growing faster and with more potential than any of its competitors,” she argues. The terms of the agreement suggest that the joint venture will own between 45% and 50% of the new U.S.-Tiktok entity (reports differ on the precise percentages involved). Around one-third of the entity will be owned by ByteDance’s current investors, with the remainder—an estimated 20% or so—still under ByteDances control. The deal is due to close by January 22. Others are equally uncertain that the deal matches up to what Trump claimed was the core concern. “Will the sale enrich the new investors or protect American interests?” asks Hussein Kanji, founder of Hoxton Ventures. “Let’s see if the algorithm changes in the new leadership to support a particular political viewpoint.” So far, there’s no suggestion that the app’s algorithm will change in any way, beyond being fed U.S. user...
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