TikTok Successfully Navigates US Ban by Creating Majority-American-Owned Venture
In a significant move, TikTok's Chinese parent company ByteDance has finalized a deal to establish a new US entity, sidestepping the ban imposed on the popular social media platform. The agreement allows TikTok to operate in the US with increased safeguards, including comprehensive data protections and algorithm security.
Under the arrangement, a majority of TikTok's operations will be owned by an American venture led by Larry Ellison's Oracle, private-equity group Silver Lake, and Abu Dhabi-based MGX, which hold 80.1% of the new entity. ByteDance will retain 19.9%. The deal marks the end of a long-standing legal battle over TikTok's future in the US.
The ban on TikTok was first threatened by former President Donald Trump during his first term, with Congress passing a law in 2024 that required a US buyer for the platform to remain operational. The Supreme Court upheld the law in January 2025, but Trump delayed its enforcement while negotiations were underway between the US, TikTok, and potential American partners.
The new venture will be overseen by a seven-member board of directors, including cybersecurity experts from Oracle, Silver Lake, MGX, and Shou Zi Chew, TikTok's CEO. The company has committed to retraining and updating its content recommendation algorithm using US user data to ensure it is free from outside manipulation.
TikTok's US entity will be subject to "defined safeguards that protect national security," according to the announcement. The deal comes after concerns over user data security and fears that China could use the platform to harvest data from American users, claims which TikTok has repeatedly denied.
The agreement has been welcomed by the White House, with a spokesperson confirming that the Chinese and US governments have signed off on the deal. Former President Trump expressed gratitude for China's president Xi Jinping's cooperation in securing the agreement, saying it will be "an important Voice" under new American ownership.
In a significant move, TikTok's Chinese parent company ByteDance has finalized a deal to establish a new US entity, sidestepping the ban imposed on the popular social media platform. The agreement allows TikTok to operate in the US with increased safeguards, including comprehensive data protections and algorithm security.
Under the arrangement, a majority of TikTok's operations will be owned by an American venture led by Larry Ellison's Oracle, private-equity group Silver Lake, and Abu Dhabi-based MGX, which hold 80.1% of the new entity. ByteDance will retain 19.9%. The deal marks the end of a long-standing legal battle over TikTok's future in the US.
The ban on TikTok was first threatened by former President Donald Trump during his first term, with Congress passing a law in 2024 that required a US buyer for the platform to remain operational. The Supreme Court upheld the law in January 2025, but Trump delayed its enforcement while negotiations were underway between the US, TikTok, and potential American partners.
The new venture will be overseen by a seven-member board of directors, including cybersecurity experts from Oracle, Silver Lake, MGX, and Shou Zi Chew, TikTok's CEO. The company has committed to retraining and updating its content recommendation algorithm using US user data to ensure it is free from outside manipulation.
TikTok's US entity will be subject to "defined safeguards that protect national security," according to the announcement. The deal comes after concerns over user data security and fears that China could use the platform to harvest data from American users, claims which TikTok has repeatedly denied.
The agreement has been welcomed by the White House, with a spokesperson confirming that the Chinese and US governments have signed off on the deal. Former President Trump expressed gratitude for China's president Xi Jinping's cooperation in securing the agreement, saying it will be "an important Voice" under new American ownership.