TikTok chooses Oracle, Bytedance rejects Microsoft bid

IANS

Bytedance, the Chinese owner of TikTok, has chosen cloud major Oracle over Microsoft to run its US operations as a “trusted tech partner”, media reports revealed Monday while an official announcement was still awaited.

According to The New York Times, it was unclear whether TikTok’s choice of Oracle as a technology partner would mean that “Oracle would also take a majority ownership stake of the social media app.”

This is different from an outright sale and appears to suggest Oracle will help run TikTok’s US operations with its cloud technologies.

In an official statement, Microsoft said its bid for TikTok operations in the US was rejected.

“ByteDance let us know today they would not be selling TikTok’s US operations to Microsoft. We are confident our proposal would have been good for TikTok’s users, while protecting national security interests,” Microsoft said.

“To do this, we would have made significant changes to ensure the service met the highest standards for security, privacy, online safety, and combating disinformation, and we made these principles clear in our August statement,” the tech giant added.

After TikTok was banned in India in June, along with 58 other Chinese apps, the Donald Trump administration increased pressure on the ByteDance-owned platform to sell its US operations by mid-September or face a ban.

According to NYT, Oracle has cultivated close ties with the Trump administration.

“Its founder, Larry Ellison, hosted a fund-raiser for Trump this year, and its chief executive, Safra Catz, served on the president’s transition team and has frequently visited the White House.”

Trump said last month that he would support Oracle buying TikTok.

“I think that Oracle would be certainly somebody that could handle it,” he told reporters. The President maintained there will be “no extension of the TikTok deadline.”

Riding on new customer wins in both cloud applications and infrastructure businesses, Oracle posted better than expected results for its FY21 first quarter results last week, generating $9.4 billion in revenue which was up 2 percent compared to the same period last year.

Meanwhile, China said the Trump administration’s deadline for TikTok sale is tantamount to “coercive robbery.”

“The tricks of economic bullying and political manipulation that the US played on non-American companies are tantamount to coercive robbery,” a Chinese foreign ministry spokesperson said over the weekend.