From the "please not this again" department comes the news that China is looking to sell TikTok's U.S. operations to (who else?) Elon Musk.
According to Bloomberg, Chinese officials are "evaluating" this option as TikTok gets increasingly close to getting banned in the U.S.
TikTok tried to fend off the ban, which goes into effect on Jan. 19, through legal means, with no luck so far. To stop the ban, ByteDance, TikTok's parent company, would have to find a buyer for TikTok's U.S. arm, as President Biden's administration deemed Chinese state influence over TikTok too large to continue operating in the U.S.
This, apparently, is where Musk could step in. According to Bloomberg, Beijing officials "strongly prefer" to keep TikTok under ByteDance ownership, but if that proves impossible, one option is to sell it to Musk, who could consolidate it under his X brand.
All of this is still very preliminary, and it's unclear whether any real talks between Musk and ByteDance even happened. Also – officially at least – the Chinese government only controls ByteDance's Chinese subsidiary Douyin, and cannot influence what ByteDance does outside of China.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
Last April, Musk did publicly say that "TikTok should not be banned in the USA, even though such a ban may benefit the X platform," as this is "contrary to freedom of speech and expression." And President-elect Donald Trump, who is on very good terms with Musk these days, recently said he wants to "keep TikTok around."
Musk acquired X (then Twitter) in October 2022 after a highly publicized back and forth, in which he gave up on the acquisition midway but ultimately closed the deal, paying $44 billion for the platform. X's user base has been on a decline since the acquisition, and advertising revenues have plummeted.
It's unclear whether a potential acquisition of TikTok by Musk would go in a similar fashion, or if the site would even be up for sale publicly — perhaps it's most likely for China and ByteDance to arrange everything behind closed doors. Musk isn't the only potential byer, however. Microsoft, for example, tried to acquire TikTok earlier, and failed.
Copyright © 2023 Powered by
China is considering selling TikTok to Elon Musk, report claims-如火燎原网
sitemap
文章
2
浏览
1267
获赞
81114
No Nut November doesn't actually affect porn traffic
No Nut November is, um, cumming to an end. For those who aren't familiar, No Nut November (NNN) is nHow to survive Valentine's Day when you're heartbroken
Many Februarys ago, I went for lunch with a friend and was served a devastating blow. As I ordered aElon Musk changes his name to Harry Bolz on X again. Hundreds of memecoins immediately spring up.
This is real: You can buy Harry Bōlz memecoins now.Elon Musk — the owner of X, CEO of TesJuly 4 fireworks livestreams: How to watch online tonight
Fireworks are typically best viewed in person on July 4th, preferably while you lay on a blanket inTikTok will reportedly sell to Oracle after Microsoft bid rejected
Oracle has beat out Microsoft to win the bid for TikTok's U.S. operations, according to a report bySave 20% on Apple AirTags at Amazon
Save $20.01:Apple AirTags are on sale for $78.99. You'll save $20.01 for 20% in savings to help protBest monitor deals: Get discounted Samsung monitors at Amazon
Time to buy a new monitor? Find the perfect one for you during this Samsung monitor sale at Amazon:TEverything AI allows you to do in Windows 11 that saves you time
AI is becoming a major part of our digital lives, and Microsoft has adopted the new tech with open aTwitter is developing a new misinfo moderation tool called Birdwatch
The President of the United States is in the hospital with COVID-19 — and no one can seem to aKendrick Lamar halftime show: Every Drake diss we spotted
The biggest loser of the Super Bowl isn’t just the Chiefs — it’s also Drake. The TWalmart+ Week's laptop deals: Do your shopping elsewhere
UPDATE: Jun. 21, 2024, 10:15 a.m. EDT We've checked all of the featured deals to make sure pricing aRabbit R1 has a major security flaw in its code
"All [Rabbit] R1 responses ever given can be downloaded," according to an R1 research group called RThis week in politics on Instagram: Breitbart vs. 'Feminist'
Every Tuesday in the run up to the Nov. 3, 2020 election, Mashable will break down the most viral poThe best Windows laptop of 2024 so far: 17
The best Windows laptop we've tested in 2024 so far is — drumroll, please — the HP OmniBMicrosoft being investigated over new ‘Recall’ AI feature that tracks your every PC move
Microsoft's new AI-powered computer history feature, Recall, has been receiving criticism among PC u