US President Trump's executive order banning transactions with ByteDance amps up the pressure on the Chinese-owned video sharing app company to consider an acquisition
TikTok, owned by China’s ByteDance and banned in India recently for reasons of national security, now faces a bigger battle. Transactions with ByteDance have been barred in TikTok’s most important market, the United States, by President Donald Trump via an executive order Thursday.
Trump also banned transactions with China’s Tencent, which owns the messaging app WeChat, in another order. The US president cited national security as the reason, and the ban—while its exact specifics aren’t clear—is to take effect in 45 days.
The ban ratchets up pressure on ByteDance to conclude a deal with Microsoft, which is in talks to buy TikTok. Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella has spoken to Trump about the deal, the company confirmed in a statement on its website, and expects to conclude discussions with ByteDance no later than September 15.
The US ban on the two Chinese companies comes even as the American lawmakers are investigating the country’s biggest tech companies Google, Amazon, Facebook and Apple for the power they wield over the internet economy, and if they have abused that power.
In that backdrop, TikTok’s US-based CEO Kevin Mayer, a former Disney executive, has called on all social media companies to embrace greater transparency and work with regulators.
“With our success comes responsibility and accountability. The entire industry has received scrutiny, and rightly so. Yet, we have received even more scrutiny due to the company’s Chinese origins,” Mayer said in a blog post on July 29. “We accept this and embrace the challenge of giving peace of mind through greater transparency and accountability. We believe it is essential to show users, advertisers, creators, and regulators that we are responsible and committed members of the American community that follows US laws.”