U.S. search engine startup Perplexity AI, co- founded by Indian immigrant Aravind Srinivas submitted a bid on Jan.18 to TikTok's Chinese parent ByteDance for Perplexity to merge with TikTok U.S., a source familiar with the company's plans told Reuters.
TikTok faces a U.S. ban starting on Jan.19 if it does not cut ties with ByteDance, although President-elect Donald Trump said on Saturday he would likely give the short-video social-media platform a 90-day reprieve on Jan.20.
CNBC first reported the offer.
Perplexity would merge with TikTok U.S. and create a new entity by combining the merged company with New Capital Partners, the person said.
The new structure proposed by Perplexity would allow for most of ByteDance’s existing investors to retain their equity stakes and would bring more video to Perplexity, the source said, requesting anonymity because the matter is confidential.
TikTok did not immediately respond to requests for comment. New Capital Partners could not be immediately reached.
Perplexity AI believes its bid may succeed since the proposal is a merger rather than a sale, the person said.
Perplexity AI's search tools enable users to get fast answers to questions, with sources and citations. It is powered by large language models that can sum up and generate information, from OpenAI to Meta Platforms' open-source model Llama.
TikTok, which has captivated nearly half of all Americans, powered small businesses and shaped online culture, said on Friday it will go dark in the U.S. on Jan.19 unless President Joe Biden's administration provides assurances to companies such as Apple and Google that they will not face enforcement actions when a ban takes effect.
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