Categories: Business

TikTok May Split With China-Based ByteDance To Avoid U.S. Ban, Report Says

Topline

TikTok’s American leadership is exploring a potential split with Chinese parent company ByteDance as it comes under increasing scrutiny from lawmakers and regulators about the company’s links to the Chinese government, according to Bloomberg, though the move remains far from certain and would require Beijing’s approval.

Key Facts

TikTok is in legal limbo with the U.S. as the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States conducts a security review, which has reportedly thus far not assuaged regulators’ concerns about ByteDance’s connections with the Chinese Communist Party and the safety of Americans’ data.

A separation from ByteDance could lead to a sale or the company going public via an initial public offering, but Bloomberg reported the move is still seen as a last resort, citing sources with knowledge of talks.

TikTok and ByteDance did not immediately respond to requests for comment from Forbes.

Key Background

Talks of a TikTok ban over concerns the Chinese government might abuse the app to surveil Americans dates back to the Trump Administration, but they picked up steam last year after reports revealed China accessed private information from U.S. users and planned to use TikTok to spy on certain Americans, including Forbes reporters. A wave of states quickly moved to ban TikTok on government devices, while President Joe Biden signed a bill in December banning TikTok on most federally owned devices. Sen. Mark Warner (D-Va.) introduced a bipartisan bill earlier this month that would let the Department of Commerce ban programs made in countries that pose an “undue or unacceptable risk” to the U.S., including China. Warner claimed the bill wasn’t designed to ban TikTok specifically, but he acknowledged that “everybody is talking about the company,” which he claimed 100 million Americans use for 90 minutes a day on average.

Contra

TikTok has launched a $1.5 billion lobbying effort dubbed “Project Texas” in response to regulator concerns, which has included inviting U.S. tech company Oracle to examine its software, according to Bloomberg.

Further Reading

TikTok Considers Splitting From ByteDance If Deal With US Fails (Bloomberg)

EXCLUSIVE: TikTok Spied On Forbes Journalists (Forbes)

TikTok Could Be Banned Under New Bipartisan Bill (Forbes)

Source

InfoLair

Our primary beliefs and values include giving our readers quality material, disseminating information to encourage informed thinking, and supporting policies and ideas. We frequently curate or extract content from reliable online sources in order to uphold those ideals.

Recent Posts

Kylie Jenner & Timothee Chalamet Make Red Carpet Debut as a Couple During Event in Italy – Just Jared

Kylie Jenner & Timothee Chalamet Make Red Carpet Debut as a Couple During Event in… Read More

7 hours ago

How AJ Bell DIY investors navigated the Liberation Day sell-off and recovery – AJ Bell

To read the full article click below: How AJ Bell DIY investors navigated the Liberation… Read More

2 days ago

Stick a needle in them: Crafting wars heat up with the demise of a beloved retailer – KTLA

Stick a needle in them: Crafting wars heat up with the demise of a beloved… Read More

2 days ago

National Small Business Week, 2025 – The White House (.gov)

National Small Business Week, 2025  The White House (.gov) Source Read More

2 days ago

Odisha: Boy makes e-Scooter by watching YouTube tutorials – orissapost.com

Odisha: Boy makes e-Scooter by watching YouTube tutorials  orissapost.com Source Read More

3 days ago

MLB games today: Schedule, times, how to watch for May 4 – USA Today

To read the full article click below: MLB games today: Schedule, times, how to watch… Read More

4 days ago

This website uses cookies.