Commentary: China will decide TikTok’s fate in America

Commentary: China will decide TikTok’s fate in America

But President Xi Jinping probably didn’t see a reasonable concession on taxes as a win.

TikTok doesn’t actually work in China, so&nbsp, Xi isn’t under any stress to choose American consumers. And state-backed advertising have been clear that China sights this as a precedent-setting story that could keep other businesses available to US “plunder”.

TRUMP HAS DELEGITIMISED NATIONAL SECURITY Problems

Earlier, the key question was:” What will it take for Beijing to let TikTok go” ?&nbsp, Now, we also need to worry about what it will take for Trump to let it go.

And by obfuscating the national safety issues to expand his tax plan, he has delegitimised them. &nbsp,

While all the last-minute purchaser drama spurred intrigue, it’s for questioning if any of this may fulfil the goal of keeping British social media users secure.

A situation where ByteDance maintains control over the engine does alleviate some data set and spying concerns, but seems to bring us back to where we started over fears of engine invasion. And punting the date more doesn’t solve those concerns, either. &nbsp,

While ByteDance has been mum on the TikTok crisis, its Chinese girl software, Douyin, has been in the media at home after regional regulators forced the company to offer the open much more precision on how the game recommends and moderates articles. In a recently launched site, Douyin says that it does not spy on people and offered&nbsp, more clarity into how its algorithm lines behaviour to provide information. &nbsp,