Trump is ready for customs duties with China instead of an agreement on “Tech Tok”

On Wednesday, US President Donald Trump expressed his willingness to customs customs with China instead of approving the operations of the TEK tok platform in the United States.
Trump says “China has to play a role in the tek tok’s activities”, “He can give them something to reduce small rituals or achieve it.” On January 19, under the fine of banning platform in the United States, go on beijing Americans, in the wake of the fear of going to Americans, an American law was allowed to order the American Department to cancel its affiliation with his mother’s “byte dance” with “Bite Dance”.
The law has made it impossible to use the platform for hours in the United States and it has completely disappeared from the application stores. As he considers the presidency on January 20, Trump can freeze the law and extend the 75 -day “byte dance” to sell his American activities. This deadline ends with April 5. At the end of this period, and if it is not sold, the great popular platform in the United States will be banned with 170 million people.
In his first presidency, Trump urged the ban on the tech speech in the United States against the backdrop of national security concerns. Many companies have expressed their desire to buy a tech talk in the United States, which has not shown the purpose of selling their platform.
In March, Trump said, “We are in talks with four different groups and many people are concerned.” The declared goal is to “secure” the Internet, especially by giving customers the ability to control their personal data and eliminate the algorithm recommended algorithm.
In the wake of a trade war with China, Trump has announced a 10 percent increase in customs duties imposed on Chinese imports earlier this month, up to 20 percent since he took office.
By announcing, China has answered 15 percent of customs duties on a group of American agricultural products, including soybeans, pork and wheat. China, the world’s largest steel producer, has pledged to take “all necessary actions to protect its legal rights and interests in response to customs duties imposed by the United States on exports of steel and aluminum.”