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Not just the US operations, Microsoft is aiming to acquire the global business of Chinese short-video making app TikTok, including in India where the app is banned, The Financial Times reported on Thursday. 5 August.
However, according to the FT report, the Satya Nadella-run tech giant is aiming to buy the entire business of TikTok, including in India where it has been banned along with 58 other Chinese apps.
Microsoft "is exploring whether it can add regions including India and Europe to the deal". The software giant has been involved in the Chinese tech world for far longer than many rivals.
"Microsoft has mentored and trained the talent behind China's consumer tech explosion. That brought ByteDance founder Zhang Yiming to approach them once President Trump threatened to ban TikTok if it wasn't sold to an American company," tweeted Yuan Yang, Beijing deputy bureau chief and tech correspondent of the Financial Times.
US President Donald Trump has said that the country should get a large percentage of the proceeds if part of the short video-sharing platform TikTok's business is bought by an American firm.
“If such a deal does not materialise, TikTok will be out of business in the US by that time,” Trump said.
Meanwhile, facing threats of a US ban and smears by rival Facebook, ByteDance, owner of the video platform, said that in the course of becoming a global firm, it has "faced all kinds of complex and unimaginable difficulties, including the tense international political environment, collision and conflict of different cultures and plagiarism and smears from competitor Facebook".
The firm's US job growth has already nearly tripled this year, surging from almost 500 employees on 1 January to just under 1,400.
Last month, India's Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology (MeitY) directed the 59 banned Chinese apps to strictly adhere to the orders or face serious action in case of violation.
The government banned 59 Chinese apps including TikTok, WeChat and UC Browser and Xiaomi's Mi Community in June over national security concerns amid the border tussle at Ladakh which also led to the death of 20 Indian soldiers in the Galwan Valley clash with Chinese PLA troops.
"These measures have been undertaken since there is credible information that these apps are engaged in activities which are prejudicial to sovereignty and integrity of India, defence of India, security of state and public order," MeitY had said in a statement.
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