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TikTok US Deal: Trump Extends Deadline, China Framework Reached

by Rachel Kim – Technology Editor

Trump Again Delays TikTok ​Sale⁣ Deadline,Citing Preliminary ‌Agreement‍ with China

WASHINGTON – ​President Trump has issued an executive order‍ extending the deadline for⁤ TikTok⁣ to divest⁣ its U.S.assets for a fourth time, following a preliminary agreement reached with ⁣China. The move postpones a‌ potential ban of the popular video-sharing app, owned by​ Chinese ‌company ByteDance, and comes as negotiations continue over national security concerns.

Originally,Congress had set a deadline of January‌ 19,2020 ⁢- the day before TrumpS second⁤ term began – for ‌TikTok to find an American buyer. ⁣The President has repeatedly⁤ delayed enforcement of that deadline, citing⁣ ongoing discussions.

During a ⁣press⁣ briefing Tuesday, ⁣Trump indicated he would discuss the TikTok issue⁣ during a scheduled phone call with Chinese President xi Jinping on Friday. ⁤He stated that ‌multiple companies have expressed interest ‌in acquiring TikTok and that‍ details regarding ⁣potential buyers would be forthcoming.

“I hate to see how a value like this ⁣is⁣ wasted,” Trump said as he departed the White House for a state visit to⁢ the United ⁣Kingdom, accompanied by First Lady Melania Trump.

The preliminary⁣ agreement emerged from⁢ a ⁢meeting‍ in Madrid on ⁤Monday between ⁣U.S. ‍Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin and‌ Chinese Vice premier He⁤ Lifeng,‌ among other officials. mnuchin told⁢ reporters ‍the goal is to⁣ transfer tiktok’s U.S. operations into American ⁤hands, but declined to elaborate ⁢on specifics.

China’s International Trade Representative, Li Chenggang, stated ‌that both sides had ​reached a “basic consensual framework” to cooperatively address ⁣TikTok-related ‍concerns,⁤ reduce investment‍ barriers, and promote broader economic ‍and ‍commercial cooperation.

Trump has previously⁢ expressed support for​ TikTok,believing the platform​ helped him​ reach younger voters during the 2024 presidential ‌election. Though, the push for a sale or ​ban stems from concerns about potential​ security​ risks ⁢associated with the app’s data collection practices.

Experts ⁤caution that the prolonged negotiations may yield limited results. Dimitar Gueorguiev, a Professor of Political Science at Syracuse University,⁣ noted that ⁢TikTok’s once-revolutionary algorithm has “slowly faded” in⁣ significance. “The agreement between the United States and China on TikTok‌ may‌ seem an advance, but runs the risk of being a pyrrhic victory,” Gueorguiev said. “Any American buyer⁢ is being‍ purchased, therefore, a market share‌ and a user base, ‌not transformative technology.”

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