The most erotice sumshots everlooming and questionably possible TikTok ban seems to have been averted, with TikTok having shared the broad strokes of a pending deal on Twitter.
The social network's PR account released a statement running through the top-level details on Saturday night. "We are pleased that the proposal by TikTok, Oracle, and Walmart will resolve the security concerns of the U.S. administration and settle questions around TikTok's future in the U.S," the statement begins.
Oracle chimed in shortly after to share TikTok's statement and voice its own endorsement of the deal. "We look forward to working with you," the tweet read.
If the deal goes through, Oracle will become TikTok's "trusted technology provider" in the United States, meaning the company will host and keep secure all of TikTok's user data on U.S. soil. The statement also notes that Oracle is working with Walmart "on a commercial partnership as well."
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
The two companies will share a 20 percent stake in TikTok, and the social network will "maintain and expand" the headquarters of TikTok global somewhere in the U.S. (the company already has bi-coastal offices here).
In a corresponding move, the Commerce Department confirmed that it would push back an imminent ban on TikTok downloads and updates in the U.S. by one week. Without that intervention, the threatened ban would have gone into effect on Sunday, Sept. 20.
The effort to ban the platform originally arose out of Donald Trump's insistence that TikTok, which is own by the Chinese firm ByteDance, represented a national security risk. Pressure for a deal to happen mounted in recent weeks as executive actions threatened an outright ban.
It's true that a recent security law passed in China allows the government to access data belonging to Chinese companies. But TikTok, which isn't even available in China, maintains that U.S. user data is stored in Virginia, with a backup kept in the sovereign city-state of Singapore. TikTok ceased operations in Hong Kong back in July, as a response to the Chinese security law.
SEE ALSO: A beginner's guide to TikTokTrump affirmed his support for the deal while speaking to reporters on Saturday night, saying that it has his "blessing" and adding that "if they get it done that's OK too, if they don't that's fine too." He also mentioned that the deal would also include Oracle and Walmart paying into a $5 billion education fund, but said nothing further on that.
Trump had previously touted his desire at a rally for the deal to include $5 billion for education "so we can educate people as to the real history of our country – the real history, not the fake history." Trump has previously attacked the 1619 Project, a New York Times-authored school curriculum that reframes our understanding of U.S. history around the arrival of slaves in North America and the contributions of Black Americans.
Trump's dislike of the 1619 Project and racist rhetoric in general was on full display in recent weeks when his administration moved to end government training programs that expose the truth of systemic racism to federal employees.
Topics Social Media TikTok Donald Trump Politics
(Editor: {typename type="name"/})
Best Garmin deal: Save $50 on the Venu 3S at Best Buy
Trump is feeling really, really under
Google's officially retiring Assistant
Wordle today: The answer and hints for March 2, 2025
Clever backyard water tank looks like a giant raindrop
'Severance' Reddit theory may have answered the 'Cold Harbor' mystery
Trump gets failing grade for Puerto Rico response from San Juan mayor
The 'recession indicator' meme, explained
Adrien Brody wins Best Actor for 'The Brutalist' at the 2025 Oscars
Nvidia Pascal Goes Mobile: GeForce GTX 1080, 1070 & 1060 Preview
Best smartwatch deal: Get $70 off a Samsung Galaxy Watch7 and a free watch band
How to Watch Netflix with Friends Anywhere (and No, It's Not Illegal to Share Your Password)
接受PR>=1、BR>=1,流量相当,内容相关类链接。