TikTok US Deal Finalized: What to Know
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ByteDance’s 2017 acquisition of the U.S. app, then called Musical.ly, triggered a yearslong investigation and efforts by three U.S. administrations to require ByteDance to divest of TikTok over national security concerns tied to the Chinese communist regime’s intelligence-sharing laws.
Who Runs and Owns TikTok Now?
The deal creates a seven-member board of directors to govern the joint venture, according to the Jan. 22 deal announcement.The directors include TikTok CEO Shou Chew; Timothy Dattels, a senior adviser at asset manager TPG Global, where he previously chaired the Asia division and was a member of the executive committee; Mark Dooley, managing director at trading giant Susquehanna International Group; Egon Durban, co-CEO of private equity firm Silver Lake; and Oracle executive Kenneth Glueck, who heads the tech giant’s global corporate affairs and communications and advises the CEO on global strategy and policy.
The two other board members are Raul Fernandez, who will serve as independent director and chair of the joint venture’s security committee, and David Scott, who will also serve on the security committee. Fernandez is the president and CEO of IT consultancy DXC Technology, and Scott is the chief strategy and safety officer at tech investment firm MGX.
The board appointed Adam Presser as CEO of the TikTok USDS Joint Venture and Will Farrell as chief security officer. Presser previously served as TikTok’s global head of Operations and Trust & Safety and as an executive in WarnerMedia, including heading its China division. Farrell previously served as global head of business operations and protection for TikTok and has a cybersecurity background with 16 years at Booz Allen Hamilton.
Why Does the US Need to Own TikTok?
Congress passed a law in 2024 requiring apps owned or controlled by foreign adversaries to sever that connection in order to operate in the United States, singling out ByteDance’s ownership of TikTok.Then-President Joe Biden signed the Protecting Americans from Foreign Adversary Controlled Applications Act into law in April 2024, triggering a countdown for ByteDance to divest of the popular social media app by the end of Biden’s term. ByteDance took the government to court, which extended the deadline so as to give Trump, as the incoming president, a say over the fate of the app.
Will the App Change?
White House officials have said there will be no interruption to service. The purpose of the joint venture is to adhere to national security mandates as set out in the 2024 law, and the new group will be responsible for creating safeguards for U.S. users.The joint venture will be responsible for training, testing, and updating the algorithm, which is to be secured by Oracle. Oracle will serve as the venture’s Trusted Security Partner and will also play a part in the ongoing review of the app’s source code.
The new joint venture will also have “decision-making authority for trust and safety policies and content moderation,” according to the Jan. 22 deal announcement.
However, the joint venture will create a data privacy and cybersecurity program to be audited and certified by third-party security experts, a move that ByteDance had previously proposed as an alternative to divestment.


