Mohammedia – The US and TikTok formally closed one of the most consequential technology standoffs of the decade on January 22, 2026, finalizing the creation of TikTok US Data Security Joint Venture LLC.
This new entity will own and operate the platform’s US business under majority American and allied control. The agreement ends nearly two years of legal, political, and technical confrontation over the future of the app used by roughly 170 million Americans.
Under the finalized structure, the joint venture is owned 80.1% by US and allied investors and 19.9% by ByteDance, the Chinese parent company, with its stake limited to a financial interest and no operational or governance control.
The ownership design satisfies the requirements of US national security law by removing foreign adversary control over TikTok’s US operations, governance, and data systems.
The business will be overseen by a seven-member, majority-American board including Timothy Dattels, Mark Dooley, Egon Durban, Raul Fernandez, Kenneth Glueck, and David Scott, with TikTok chief Shou Zi Chew serving as the seventh member while continuing as global CEO.
Adama Presser, formerly head of operations, trust and safety, has been appointed chief executive of the new TikTok USDS joint venture.
Operational authority now rests with the American-majority board, while ByteDance retains a minority economic stake without decision-making control.
The deal brings together Oracle, Silver Lake, and a consortium of US-based investors alongside MGX, an Abu Dhabi-backed AI investment firm.
Oracle holds a central role beyond its equity position, serving as the exclusive cloud provider for TikTok’s US data, video storage, and algorithmic computing. All US user data will be hosted on Oracle infrastructure within the US, with security oversight built into the joint venture’s governance.
A defining feature of the agreement is its treatment of TikTok’s recommendation algorithm. Rather than transferring ownership of the technology, which would have violated Chinese export control rules, ByteDance has granted the US joint venture a perpetual license to the algorithm’s source code.
The system will be retrained entirely within the US using only American user data, creating a version of the “For You” feed that is operationally and technically separate from TikTok’s global platform. Oracle will conduct continuous source-code review as part of the security framework approved by US authorities.
A new phase for TikTok in the US
TikTok US will continue operating under the same consumer-facing app, avoiding a forced user migration or shutdown. However, behind the interface, the platform will now function as a distinct digital system with its own infrastructure, data environment, and machine-learning model.
Executive leadership remains in place, with operational management reporting to the US-controlled board and a chief security officer mandated to coordinate directly with US government agencies.
The agreement removes the immediate threat of a nationwide ban and restores legal certainty for advertisers, creators, and businesses that rely on the platform.
At the same time, it formalizes a sharp break between TikTok’s US operations and ByteDance’s global technology stack, marking one of the clearest examples to date of digital localization driven by national security law.
The January 22 resolution follows a turbulent period that began in April 2024, when Congress passed the Protecting Americans from Foreign Adversary Controlled Applications Act.
The law required ByteDance to divest TikTok’s US business or face a distribution ban by January 2025. After failed court challenges and a brief service disruption when the law took effect, enforcement was repeatedly delayed through executive action while negotiations continued.
The final agreement now brings that standoff to a close, reshaping TikTok’s presence in the US and setting a precedent for how governments may assert control over global digital platforms in the AI era.
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