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US-China relations
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US billionaire Frank McCourt says he’s readying bid to buy TikTok

  • The real estate mogul and former LA Dodgers owner says he’s putting together a consortium to buy the app from China-based ByteDance
  • If a sale occurs, McCourt said he would plan to restructure TikTok and migrate the platform to an open-source protocol

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A potential US ban on the Chinese-owned TikTok app could be averted if it is sold to an American owner. But chances are slim, for business and political reasons. Photo: Shutterstock
Associated Press

Billionaire businessman and real estate mogul Frank McCourt said he is putting together a consortium to purchase TikTok’s US business, adding to the number of investors hoping to benefit from a new federal law that requires TikTok’s China-based parent company to sell the popular platform or face a ban.

The announcement, made on Wednesday, said the former owner of the Los Angeles Dodgers was organising the bid in consultation with the investment bank Guggenheim Securities and “with the goal of placing people and data empowerment at the centre of the platform’s design and purpose”.

If a sale occurs, McCourt said he would plan to restructure TikTok and give more agency to people “over their digital identities and data” by migrating the platform to an open-source protocol that allows for more transparency.

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Other investors, including former US Treasury secretary Steven Mnuchin, have expressed a desire to purchase TikTok. However, parent company ByteDance has already said it does not plan to sell the platform.

The Chinese government is also unlikely to approve a sale – especially not one that includes the recommendation engine that powers the videos that populates users’ feeds.

US businessman Frank McCourt looks is seen in October 2016. Photo: AP
US businessman Frank McCourt looks is seen in October 2016. Photo: AP

Last week, ByteDance and TikTok filed a lawsuit against the US government to block the law from going into effect. On Tuesday, eight TikTok creators filed their own challenge, arguing the law violates their First Amendment rights to free speech.

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