The weird deal Oracle arranged at the behest of the Trump administration to buy TikTok without actually acquiring it has been permanently back-burnered, according to a new report.
The transaction, which has gone effectively nowhere since it was first announced, is now “shelved,” the ever-popular “people familiar with the situation” told The Wall Street Journal. This move effectively puts an end to a saga that played out over many months and many tweets.
Back in August 2020 (roughly a hundred years ago, it now feels like), former President Donald Trump issued an executive order declaring TikTok and another China-based app, WeChat, to be a “national emergency.” A week later, a second order (PDF) gave TikTok’s parent company, Beijing-based ByteDance, 90 days to divest the app to a US owner or cease operations in the States.
And then it got complicated…
A week before signing the first executive order, however, Trump ordered ByteDance to sell within 45 days to, apparently, Microsoft. Microsoft said at the time it anticipated completing talks with ByteDance by mid-September. Trump at the time said Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella could “try” to sell, adding, “If somebody, whether it’s Microsoft or somebody else, buys it, that’ll be interesting.”
Trump swore he would not extend the deadline for a sale past September 15 and then, very suddenly on September 13, Oracle, not Microsoft, apparently emerged victorious from the talks. However, the Oracle deal proved not to be an actual acquisition, as the administration had supposedly wanted. Instead, the deal produced a vague arrangement that would make Oracle TikTok’s “trusted technology partner.”
TikTok meanwhile filed suit against the Trump administration, arguing that the ban was unconstitutional and politically driven. Groups of users also filed suit. Multiple courts agreed with the plaintiffs and granted injunctions blocking Trump’s bans from going into effect in September and October as scheduled.


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