Washington — President Trump on Thursday signed an executive order that paves the way for a deal brokered by his administration to keep TikTok operating in the U.S.under a new corporate structure with American investors.
“With this executive order, you will be effectively bringing into effect the agreement that will save TikTok and ensure that it can operate safely and securely,” White House staff secretary Will Scharf said ahead of a signing ceremony in the Oval Office.
The move declares that the deal represents a “qualified divestiture” that satisfies a law passed by Congress requiring TikTok’s China-based parent company to divest or face a ban and pushes back enforcement of the bipartisan law by 120 days to allow for an agreement on how the app operates in the U.S.to be finalized.
Mr.Trump told reporters that Chinese President Xi Jinping signed off on the deal during their call last week.
“He gave us the go-ahead,” Mr.Trump said.
The TikTok deal Under the law, TikTok’s China-based parent company ByteDance must sever ties with TikTok or lose access to U.S.
app stores and web-hosting services.Earlier this month, the president extended the enforcement pause until Dec.
16.The new order extends the pause until Jan.23, 2026.
According to a senior White House official, under the deal, ByteDance’s content recommendation algorithm that powers TikTok will be copied and retrained to run solely on the data of its U.S.user base.Cloud-computing firm Oracle will provide “top to bottom security” by hosting Americans’ user data and reviewing the app’s code to ensure “the algorithm is behaving appropriately and it’s secure,” the official said.
The deal will establish a “joint venture” based in the U.S., with a majority of U.S.investors and owners and a majority of Americans on its board of directors, according to the White House.The executive order says ByteDance and its affiliates will own less than 20% of the new entity, keeping it below the limit on foreign ownership set by the divest-or-ban law.
Vice President JD Vance said at the White House that the new entity would have a valuation of about $14 billion.
A consortium of American investors, including Oracle, will have a stake in the new TikTok, according to the White House.(Oracle was cofounded by Larry Ellison, whose son David Ellison is the chairman and CEO of Paramount Skydance, which is the parent company of CBS.
The Ellison family owns a controlling interest in Paramount Skydance.)
The full roster of U.S.investors and their stakes in the company remain unclear, but Vance said Thursday the administration is planning to announce the other investors in the coming days.
“We feel 100% confident that this proposal, if it’s completed, complies with the law,” the senior White House official said, adding that the White House believes it “complies with all the relevant laws and policies on both sides.”
China’s comments about what has been agreed to have been more vague.
The law, which was upheld by the Supreme Court , took effect a day before Mr.Trump’s inauguration in January.Mr.Trump, however, has issued new orders every few months directing the Justice Department not to take action or impose penalties against companies like Apple and Google for failing to remove the widely popular app from their platforms.
CBS News contributor Christopher Krebs, the former director of the U.S.Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency, said there are “still some questions on how operationally …it’s going to play out and what the user is going to experience on a daily basis.”
There’s been limited pushback from lawmakers, who for years raised concerns about TikTok’s potential risks to national security if the Chinese government was able to access the vast amount of Americans’ data collected by the app or carry out influence operations through it.
Still, some could see the deal as not going far enough when it comes to TikTok’s algorithm.As details on the deal trickled out from the administration last week, Republican Rep.
John Moolenaar of Michigan, the chairman of the House China Committee, expressed concern.
“Congress set clear legal safeguards for a deal, including precluding any cooperation with ByteDance or its affiliates on TikTok’s recommendation algorithm, and prohibiting any ongoing operational relationship between a new TikTok and ByteDance,” Moolenaar said in a statement.”Based on initial reports, I am concerned the reported licensing deal may involve ongoing reliance by the new TikTok on a ByteDance algorithm and application that could allow continued CCP control or influence.”
The law says that there cannot be any operational relationship between the new owners and ByteDance, including any cooperation with respect to TikTok’s algorithm and data sharing.
Congress, however, left it up to the president to ultimately determine what constitutes a “qualified divestiture.” The law gives the president the power to decide, through an interagency process, whether “the relevant foreign adversary controlled application [is] no longer being controlled by a foreign adversary.” It defines “controlled by a foreign adversary” as a company headquartered in a foreign adversary country and owning at least a 20% stake.
According to the executive order, the joint venture resolves national security concerns because ByteDance will have a minority stake; the joint venture will operate the algorithm and code and make content-moderation decisions; the data of U.S.users will be stored in a cloud environment run by an American company; and the arrangement includes “intense monitoring” of software updates, algorithms and data.
“These safeguards would protect the American people from the misuse of their data and the influence of a foreign adversary, while also allowing the millions of American viewers, creators, and businesses that rely on the TikTok application to continue using it,” it says.
The interagency process was led by Vance and included consultation with the National Security Council, the Office of Science and Technology Policy, the Treasury Department, the Justice Department, the Commerce Department and the Office of the Director of National Intelligence.
“This process has included, among other things, significant interagency deliberations and consultations, numerous briefings by informed experts and national security officials, and extensive negotiations with outside parties,” the executive order says.
The senior White House official said the administration plans to engage “vigorously” with lawmakers “to show them what a great deal this is” for Americans while also making the app “safe and secure.”
During the legal battle over the law, TikTok’s lawyers said the app “would be a fundamentally different platform” if it was forced to cut ties with ByteDance because the new owner would have to rebuild the algorithm, which would take years.TikTok said the inability to share any data with ByteDance would mean that the app’s 170 million American users would not be able to see videos shared by users from around the world and vice versa.
White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said Monday that global content will still be accessible for American users.
For that to happen, the U.S.
algorithm would have to interact with the original algorithm that feeds the rest of the world content, according to Ari Lightman, a professor of digital media and marketing at Carnegie Mellon University.
“The semantics associated with how that’ll work have not been disclosed at all,” Lightman said.
Lightman added that the level of complexity involved in retraining an algorithm to run off a smaller set of users and potentially weighting data sets differently while also maintaining the quality of the current user experience is “huge.”
“The TikTok algorithm has been optimized over a long period of time to understand its community’s interests and what defines value for them,” he said.”It’s kind of it’s impossible to recreate.”
Emma Nicholson contributed to this report.
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courts to brink Trump Administration TikTok ByteDance Caitlin Yilek Caitlin Yilek is a politics reporter at CBSNews.com, based in Washington, D.C.She previously worked for the Washington Examiner and The Hill, and was a member of the 2022 Paul Miller Washington Reporting Fellowship with the National Press Foundation..