
TikTok's fate still in limbo as Trump extends deadline to sell platform's US operations
The fate of short video app
TikTok in the
United States remains in limbo, according to analysts, even as the Trump administration gives owner
ByteDance
fresh 90-day extension to find a non-Chinese buyer for the popular platform's operations in the country.
The White House on Tuesday said US President
Donald Trump would sign another executive order this week 'to keep TikTok up and running' in the US.
While Beijing and Washington work on a trade deal, 'the TikTok issue is beyond the scope of traditional trade, as it involves national security, data sovereignty, technological competition and other highly sensitive issues', said Sun Chenghao, a fellow and head of the US-EU programme of the Centre for International Security and Strategy at
Tsinghua University
'Even if there is some easing in the trade area, the prudent attitude towards the [TikTok] issue has not been loosened', he said.
His assessment reflects the uncertainty on whether Trump can – or will – keep extending the ban, as the government continues to try to negotiate a deal for TikTok.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


South China Morning Post
25 minutes ago
- South China Morning Post
Trump muses about appointing himself to lead Federal Reserve in new attack on Powell
US President Donald Trump on Wednesday knocked Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell for what he expected would be a decision not to lower interest rates and said the man he put in the role during his last term had done a poor job. Advertisement Trump, speaking to reporters at the White House, mused about appointing himself to lead the US central bank, based on his dissatisfaction with Powell. 'Maybe I should go to the Fed,' Trump said. 'Am I allowed to appoint myself at the Fed? I'd do a much better job than these people.' Trump has long criticised Powell and sparked market concern earlier this year when he suggested the central bank chief's termination could not come fast enough. Trump has since walked back from that rhetoric, saying he would not fire Powell before his term as chair ends next year, but he has not held back on his broader criticism and has made clear that he will not ask Powell to stay on as the central bank's leader. 03:01 US appeals court allows Donald Trump's tariffs to stay in effect US appeals court allows Donald Trump's tariffs to stay in effect 'What I'm going to do is, you know, he gets out in about nine months, he has to, he gets fortunately terminated … I would have never reappointed him, [President Joe] Biden reappointed him. I don't know why that is, but I guess maybe he was a Democrat … he's done a poor job,' Trump said.


South China Morning Post
3 hours ago
- South China Morning Post
Where is Trump's ‘all-American' phone made? Supply chain analysts say Asia, probably China
The search is on to identify the actual manufacturer behind the US$499 Trump Mobile T1 smartphone, as most supply chain analysts cast doubt on the claim by the US president's family that the device could be 'proudly designed and built in the United States.' China, the world's largest smartphone market since 2011, is also the hub of global manufacturing, with estimates ranging from a low of 60 per cent to a high of 80 per cent of worldwide production. One in three of the 187 disclosed suppliers that provide parts for Apple's iPhones is in China. Trump's T1 phone, encased in gold, features an AMOLED (active-matrix organic light emitting diode) screen that measures 6.78 inches, with a fingerprint sensor that supports facial recognition for unlocking. It has a main camera of 50 million pixels and runs on Google's Android 15 operating system, Trump Mobile said on its official website without naming its chip supplier. The phone comes with a subscription called the 47 Plan, priced at US$47.45 a month, a nod to Trump's as the 45th and 47th US president. Instead of building a new nationwide cellular network, the 47 Plan resells the capabilities of all three major US carriers – T-Mobile, T-Mobile, Verizon Communications and AT&T - for a fee. An iPhone displayed the website for The Trump Organisation's mobile phone service and a Trump-branded smartphone on June 16, 2025 in Miami, Florida. . The problem is, there are no AMOLED producers anywhere outside Asia, and the worldwide shipments are roughly equally shared by South Korean and Chinese manufacturers, said Joy Guo, the principal analyst of Omdia's displays group. There were five AMOLED producers in China that all produced locally, while South Korean plants were within the country and in Vietnam, she said.


South China Morning Post
4 hours ago
- South China Morning Post
China weighs strategic impact, trade ties as US mulls military response in Iran
China is likely to remain cautious about intervening in the escalating Israel-Iran conflict even if the US engages militarily, a prospect that would bring mixed results for Beijing, according to observers. Speculation over US intervention has grown since last Friday, following Israel's most intense strikes on Iran in decades. Washington has since sent an aircraft carrier from the South China Sea and deployed a large number of fighter and tanker aircraft to the Middle East. US President Donald Trump was also reportedly considering military action to target Iran's nuclear facilities. He recently demanded the ' unconditional surrender ' of Iran's supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, calling him an 'easy target'. Play On Wednesday, China's foreign ministry expressed 'serious concerns' over the escalating conflict and urged countries who had 'special influence' over Israel – an apparent reference to the US – to play a 'constructive role' to ease tensions. '[China] opposes any behaviour that violates the purposes and principles of the UN Charter and infringes upon the sovereignty, security and territorial integrity of other countries,' said ministry spokesman Guo Jiakun. 'Further escalation of tensions in the Middle East is not in the interests of any party. Countries that have a special influence on Israel should, in particular, uphold an objective and fair position and assume their due responsibilities, and play a positive and constructive role in easing the situation and preventing spillover of the conflict.' Beijing, which has close ties with Tehran, has also said that it was willing to broker peace between Iran and Israel.