White House adviser Navarro suggests Microsoft divest China holdings
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[August 04, 2020]
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - White House
trade adviser Peter Navarro suggested on Monday that Microsoft Corp
could divest its holdings in China if it were to buy the Chinese owned
short-video app TikTok.
"So the question is, is Microsoft going to be compromised?" Navarro said
in an interview with CNN. "Maybe Microsoft could divest its Chinese
holdings?"
President Donald Trump has agreed to give China's ByteDance 45 days to
negotiate a sale of popular short-video app TikTok to Microsoft, three
people familiar with the matter said on Sunday.
U.S. officials have said TikTok, under its Chinese parent, poses a
national risk because of the personal data it handles. Trump said on
Friday he was planning to ban TikTok in the United States after
dismissing the idea of a sale to Microsoft.
In an earlier interview with Fox News Channel, Navarro said any
potential buyer of TikTok that has operations in China could be a
problem.
Navarro cited Microsoft's Bing search engine and Skype platform, saying
they "effectively are enablers of Chinese censorship, surveillance and
monitoring."
Microsoft has over 6,000 employees in China and offices in Beijing,
Shanghai and Suzhou.
While the company has been there for decades, business from China
accounts for just over 1% of the company's revenue, Bloomberg reported
Microsoft President and Chief Legal Officer Brad Smith stating at a
conference in January.
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President Donald Trump holds up a map of the United States with
COVID-19 outbreak hotspots marked on the map while participating in
an executive order signing event on "hiring American" in a darkened
Cabinet Room of the White House, with curtains drawn and the lights
low, in Washington, U.S., August 3, 2020. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst
Widespread piracy of Windows and Office once prevented the company's
cash cow from bringing in money.
The company is now pushing its Azure cloud service to customers in
China, via a partnership with local data service provider 21Vianet.
Its crown jewel is arguably a research center in Beijing, which has
produced a number of alumni who have gone on to executive positions
at Alibaba, ByteDance, Xiaomi, and facial recognition unicorns
Sensetime and Megvii.
It also was the site of origin for the so-called "ResNet" paper,
currently the most-cited AI paper according to Google scholar
metrics.
(Reporting by Doina Chiacu, Susan Heavey and Pete Schroeder;
Additional reporting by Josh Horwitz; Editing by Nick Zieminski and
Christopher Cushing)
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