Hey all, itâs Kurt Wagner in Denver. TikTok suddenly has a lot of suitors. But first...Three things you need to know today:⢠Netflix says it [View in browser](
[Bloomberg](
Hey all, itâs Kurt Wagner in Denver. TikTok suddenly has a lot of suitors. But first... Three things you need to know today: ⢠Netflix says it has 40 million subscribers [for its ad-supported service](
⢠Google is boosting [security features for Android phones](
⢠Uber will offer shuttle rides from [concerts and sporting events in the US]( Will anybody actually buy TikTok? Four years ago, when then-President Donald Trump tried to force a TikTok sale, the most likely buyers were also some of the biggest businesses in the world: [Microsoft Corp.](bbg://securities/MSFT%20US%20Equity), [Walmart Inc.](bbg://securities/WMT%20US%20Equity) and [Oracle Corp.](bbg://securities/ORCL%20US%20Equity) Trump ended up losing his reelection bid a few months later, all those potential deals fell apart, and four years later, the video app is more popular than ever and still under the control of its Chinese parent, ByteDance Ltd. But TikTokâs future in the US is suddenly murky for its 170 million American users, and a possible sale is once again on the table thanks to a new law that gives ByteDance roughly one year to divest the business or face a ban in the US because of national security concerns about China. ByteDance didnât take the news well. TikTok is suing the US government to block the law and is [funding a separate lawsuit]( by some of the appâs popular creators. If ByteDance ever does sell TikTok â which [it claims it will not]( â the company would almost certainly withhold some of the key technology that made TikTokâs video feed so darn addictive. All of that means that the chances of a sale feel slim, even with a looming ban on the horizon. But if we imagine a world in which TikTok has a new owner one year from now â and why not imagine it? â it seems less and less likely that one of the global brands we heard about the last time will ultimately win out. Antitrust has become a [major concern]( in the tech industry (hello, Meta Platforms Inc. and Alphabetâs Google!) and ByteDance wonât hand TikTok over to someone even slightly resembling a competitor. Perhaps thatâs why weâve only seen a handful of individual suitors pop up in recent weeks hoping to raise the necessary billions or form a syndicate to buy the TikTok brand. Hereâs the current list: - [Steven Mnuchin](bbg://people/profile/2520929), the former US treasury secretary, says he wants to [corral a group of investors to buy the company]( and rebuild the powerful content recommendation algorithm from scratch. Mnuchinâs advantage is that he was involved in the near-sale four years ago, meaning he (presumably) has some experience here his competitors donât.
- [Frank McCourt](bbg://people/profile/4247820), a real estate mogul who once owned the Los Angeles Dodgers, is also hoping to put together an investment group. Like Mnuchin, heâs not interested in TikTokâs recommendation algorithm, but admitted everything was still in the early stages. âItâs still very noisy,â he told Bloomberg this week.
- Various Saudi investment groups have been linked to TikTok, and Saudi money has backed many high-profile tech companies in the past, including Twitter (now X), Uber Technologies Inc. and Softbank Group Corp. Saudi Arabia has [put money into Mnuchinâs private investment firm](, and the Abu Dhabi-based firm G42, controlled by United Arab Emirates royal Sheikh Tahnoon bin Zayed Al Nahyan, [invested $100 million]( in ByteDance last year.
- [Eric Schmidt](bbg://people/profile/1451572), the former Alphabet chairman and Google chief executive officer, admitted that he had interest in buying TikTok, but now claims that [heâs abandoned that plan](. Still, Schmidt has the kind of tech connections and experience that would make him an attractive partner on any kind of deal should he change his mind. Those names arenât going to resonate with most of TikTokâs young users, but if Mnuchin or McCourt can save the site from a US ban, theyâll certainly qualify as being TikTok famous.â[Kurt Wagner](mailto:kwagner71@bloomberg.net) The big story The race is on in Silicon Valley to profit from advances in artificial intelligence. But will the small AI startups survive or [will Big Tech dominate](? One to watch
[Watch Frank McCourt interviewed on Bloomberg Television about his interest in acquiring popular video app TikTok.]( Get fully charged Cisco gave a forecast that showed business picking up, [pleasing investors.]( Paramount has held talks with Amazon about [expanding their existing business relationship.]( ServiceNow is stepping up its rivalry with Salesforce, this time by hiring away [hundreds of employees](. AI startup Anthropic hired Instagram co-founder Mike Krieger as product head as it pushes its [chatbot to more businesses](. More from Bloomberg Get Bloomberg Tech weeklies in your inbox: - [Cyber Bulletin]( for coverage of the shadow world of hackers and cyber-espionage
- [Game On]( for reporting on the video game business
- [Power On]( for Apple scoops, consumer tech news and more
- [Screentime]( for a front-row seat to the collision of Hollywood and Silicon Valley
- [Soundbite]( for reporting on podcasting, the music industry and audio trends
- [Q&AI]( for answers to all your questions about AI Follow Us Like getting this newsletter? [Subscribe to Bloomberg.com]( for unlimited access to trusted, data-driven journalism and subscriber-only insights. Want to sponsor this newsletter? [Get in touch here](. You received this message because you are subscribed to Bloomberg's Tech Daily newsletter. If a friend forwarded you this message, [sign up here]( to get it in your inbox.
[Unsubscribe](
[Bloomberg.com](
[Contact Us]( Bloomberg L.P.
731 Lexington Avenue,
New York, NY 10022 [Ads Powered By Liveintent]( [Ad Choices](