President Donald Trump has further extended the deadline for sales of tickets in the US for 90 days.
The video-sharing app has faced questions on its future, when the US passed a law last year, until the app needs to be banned, until its Chinese original company is sold by the biodens.
MPs said that it raises risks for national security – some ticks refuse.
Trump, who vowed to save Tiktok during his presidential campaign, Signed an executive order On Thursday, who has delayed the date of implementation of the law for the third time.
In a statement, Ticketkok stated that it was “grateful to the leadership and support of President Trump” in keeping the app online for its 170m American users.
“We continue to work with Vice President Vance’s office,” said this.
Trump said in a post on his platform Truth Social that a deal for the sale of Tikok in the US should now reach by 17 September.
Further delays were an expected development in the long -running process to achieve a buyer for Tiktok.
It is believed that officers in Beijing will need to approve any sales or part sales of the app by their original company.
The law was inspired by apprehensions in the US that Tiktok or Bytedance could be forced to hand over data on American users by the Chinese government.
Trump said on Tuesday he hoped that it would be delayed.
White House press secretary Karolin Levitt Said on Wednesday This is another 90-day extension “will ensure that the deal is closed so that American people continue to use Tiktok with the assurance that their data is safe and safe.”
Trump tried to force an American buyer to sell Tiktok in 2020 during his first term in the office.
But last year, he indicated that he had a heart change, saying that the forum had helped him win the 2024 presidential election.
Trump said in December, “I have a warm place in my heart for Tikok, as I won the youth by 34 points in December, although most young voters supported Democratic candidate Kamala Harris.
The law was going to be effective for a second term in the office on January 19, a day before Trump’s inauguration.
Tiktok challenged his constitutionality in courts. The Supreme Court upheld the law before implementing the law.
Intelligence Vice Chairman Mark Warner, the Senate Selection Committee on a Democrat criticized Trump’s decision.
Warner said in a statement, “Once again, the Trump Administration is getting banging the law and ignoring his own national security conclusions about the risks generated by the PRC-controlled Tiktok.”
Warner said, “An executive order cannot reduce the law, but this is what the President is trying to do.”