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US lawmaker says licensing deal for TikTok algorithm would raise serious concerns | Technology News

The chair of the House Select Committee on China said Thursday that a licensing agreement for use of the TikTok algorithm, as part of a deal China-based teDance to sell U.S. assets of the short video app, would raise “serious concerns.”
Representative John Moolenaar, a Republican, is waiting for a briefing to get more details on the deal that White House officials said previously would include the new owners of TikTok’s U.S. assets licensing the algorithm. “I think anytime you have (China) with leverage over the algorithm, I think that’s a problem,” Moolenaar said at an event at the Hudson Institute.
TikTok did not immediately comment.
President Donald Trump signed an executive order on September 25 declaring that the plan to sell TikTok’s U.S. operations to a consortium of U.S. and global investors meets the national security requirements set out in a 2024 law and gave them 120 days to complete the transaction.
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“I just believe you have to have a new algorithm, and I don’t know that you can reprogram,” Moolenaar added, pointing to technology experts who say it is unclear precisely what is in the algorithm. “I would say it’s still very much a work in progress.”
Trump last month delayed until January 20 enforcement of the law banning the app used 170 million Americans unless its Chinese owners sell it.
Trump’s order said the algorithm will be retrained and monitored the U.S. company’s security partners, and operation of the algorithm will be under the control of the new joint venture.
The agreement on TikTok’s U.S. operations includes the appointment teDance of one of seven board members for the new entity, with Americans holding the other six seats.Story continues below this ad
teDance would hold less than 20% in TikTok U.S. to comply with requirements set out in the 2024 law that ordered it shut down January 2025 if teDance did not sell its U.S. assets. 

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