Trump issued an executive order last month that would ban TikTok in the United States as early as Sept. 20 if ByteDance does not comply with a sale
Trump has ordered ByteDance to divest TikTok amid US concerns that user data could be passed to China's Communist Party government
They feel India will still want a local partner-based strategy in which data centres are placed locally within the country
Microsoft loses out; Chinese media stresses American operations won't be sold to any firm
Oracle Corp confirmed on Monday that it was part of a proposal made by TikTok-parent ByteDance to the US government to become a technology partner for the Chinese firm
Microsoft announced Sunday that its bid to buy TikTok has been rejected
Oracle Corp signaled a recovery in client spending as remote work spurred demand for cloud services as well as traditional licensing business, helping it beat expectations for first-quarter results
Oracle argued that the Defense Department unfairly and unnecessarily tailored the minimum contract requirements for Amazon and Microsoft
Some speculations surrounding the sale of TikTok's US operations may soon come to an end as the short video-sharing platform owned by Chinese unicorn ByteDance has reportedly reached a deal.
It can take up to 30 days to obtain preliminary approval to export the technology
Trump ordered ByteDance last week to divest TikTok's US operations within 90 days
The move would represent a strategic departure for Oracle, which caters mostly to corporate customers and generates the bulk of its sales from cloud offerings and software licensing
The American tech giant said its unique dual cloud region strategy enables customers to get disaster recovery services without having sensitive data leave the country
With RIL's market capitalisation crossing the Rs 11-trillion mark on Friday, its chairman and managing director Mukesh Ambani became the ninth-richest billionaire globally
They claim that they were paid on average $13,000 less per year than male Oracle employees in similar positions
Oracle says its cloud infrastructure will help Zoom to continue to deliver flawless service to its customer base
Sikka said that for years the Oracle database has been the heartbeat and lifeblood of every large and significant organisation in the world.
Oracle, which provides a range of technology-led services to various enterprises and government bodies, competes with the likes of IBM, Microsoft and Google in India.
IT Pride awardees included Oracle, Goldman Sachs, SAP Labs, and Intel, among others
Bidding for the huge government contract has attracted more attention than usual, sparked by speculation early in the process that Amazon would be awarded the deal