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Trump says would be open to Musk buying TikTok

US President Donald Trump said Tuesday he would be open to tech billionaire Elon Musk -- the owner of social media platform X -- buying Chinese-owned app TikTok.
(FILES) (COMBO) This combination of pictures created on August 01, 2020 shows the logo of the social media video sharing app Tiktok displayed on a tablet screen in Paris, and US President Donald Trump at the White House in Washington, DC, on July 30, 2020. The US Supreme Court on January 17, 2025, upheld a law that will ban TikTok in the United States, potentially denying the video-sharing app to 170 million users in the United States starting on January 19. White House officials on January 17 told US media that they would not enforce the ban and leave it up to President-elect Donald Trump, who takes office a day later. (Photo by Lionel BONAVENTURE and JIM WATSON / AFP)

US President Donald Trump said Tuesday he would be open to tech billionaire Elon Musk — the owner of social media platform X — buying Chinese-owned app TikTok.

“I would be if he wanted to buy it,” Trump told reporters when asked if he was open to Musk, world’s richest man and the head of a budget cutting initiative in the new administration, acquiring the video-sharing platform.

TikTok is facing down a US law that ordered the company to divest from its Chinese owner ByteDance or be banned in the United States.

In one of his first acts in office, Trump ordered a pause on enforcing the law that should have seen TikTok effectively made illegal in the country on Sunday, a day before he took office for a second term.

The executive order directed his attorney general to delay the implementation of the law for 75 days.

To save the company’s US operations, Trump on Monday also floated the idea of a 50-50 partnership between “the United States” and its Chinese owner ByteDance, though he did not provide details on how this could be achieved.

The TikTok ban passed due to concerns that the Chinese government could exploit the app to spy on Americans or covertly influence US public opinion through data collection and content manipulation.

Asked on Tuesday if his phone had TikTok, which is banned on US government devices, Trump said: “No, but… I think I’ll get it right now.”

TikTok briefly shut down in the United States late Saturday as the law’s sale deadline approached, leaving millions of dismayed users barred from the app.

With the tacit cooperation of Oracle, its server provider, TikTok restored service in the United States on Sunday crediting Trump’s commitment to save the app for making the reversal possible.

But even if existing users can still enjoy TikTok, Apple and Google have still not made the app available in their app stores, therefore denying downloads to new users as well as updates to those who have it.

Companies that violate the law, which remains officially in effect, face penalties of up to $5,000 per user if the app is accessed.

Last week, a report that Chinese officials were considering selling the company’s US operations to Musk’s social media platform X was met with a firm denial from TikTok.

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