TikTok has reached a major agreement with Oracle and a group of U.S. investors that will reshape how the popular social media platform operates in the United States, securing its continued presence and addressing long-running national security concerns.
This landmark deal comes after years of political pressure from U.S. lawmakers and regulators who had demanded that TikTok’s Chinese parent company, ByteDance, divest its U.S. operations or face a ban under laws aimed at protecting national security.
Under the agreement, TikTok’s U.S. business will be reorganized into a new joint venture, TikTok USDS Joint Venture LLC, that shifts operational control and corporate governance to American and international investors. Oracle, along with private equity firm Silver Lake and Abu Dhabi-based MGX, will collectively hold half of the new entity, with each investor owning a meaningful stake. ByteDance will retain a smaller share and continue to benefit from the platform’s success.
A key feature of the deal requires that U.S. user data be stored domestically on servers controlled by Oracle’s cloud infrastructure, a move intended to satisfy U.S. data privacy and security standards.
“It’s going to be real household names,” a U.S. official noted in earlier discussions about the investor group, underscoring how significant the roster of backers has become.
The agreement also calls for the creation of a majority-American board to guide strategic decisions and ensure that governance aligns with U.S. expectations about transparency and accountability. Oracle’s involvement extends to overseeing certain aspects of TikTok’s technology stack to maintain compliance with U.S. cybersecurity requirements.
“This arrangement marks a major milestone in TikTok’s journey in the United States,” one insider source described. “It sets a new framework that balances national security priorities with the platform’s ability to innovate and serve users.”
The deal is slated to formally close by January 22, 2026, marking a new chapter for TikTok’s U.S. operations and providing a pathway for uninterrupted service to more than 170 million American users who rely on the platform for entertainment, social interaction, and content discovery.
Over the past few years, TikTok’s path in the United States has been fraught with legal and regulatory hurdles. Congress passed the “Protecting Americans from Foreign Adversary Controlled Applications Act” in 2024, a law designed to block the operation of apps controlled by certain foreign entities unless they complete a qualified divestiture.
When ByteDance failed to complete such a divestiture by the initial deadline in 2025, the law’s enforcement theoretically kicked in, leading to a nationwide ban on the service. However, successive executive actions and negotiations ultimately kept the platform alive while buyers were identified and agreements structured.
Critics of the deal have pointed out that while TikTok will now be managed under a U.S.-focused structure, questions remain about the influence of overseas ownership and how much control ByteDance will retain over core technologies, including its recommendation algorithm.
The restructuring could significantly affect technology markets and investor sentiment. Oracle’s stock jumped following the deal news, reflecting expectations of new revenue from cloud services and data infrastructure. Analysts also note that U.S. tech investment may strengthen as confidence grows in domestic oversight and monetization of social media platforms.




