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US government reportedly debating whether to force Tencent to give up its US-based game holdings

US government reportedly debating whether to force Tencent to give up its US-based game holdings插图

A Financial Times report (via Reuters) says the US government is debating whether Tencent’s holdings in US and Finnish videogame companies pose a national security risk, and whether it should be forced to divest them. Multiple sources said cabinet officials were scheduled to have a meeting on the matter earlier this week, ahead of US president Donald Trump’s scheduled meeting with Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping, but the meeting was postponed due to scheduling conflicts.

Chinese conglomerate Tencent is a major player in the Western games market. It owns Riot Games, Digital Extremes, and Inflexion Games outright, and has significant holdings in Epic, Larian, FromSoft, Krafton, Ubisoft, Remedy, Supercell, and numerous others. The FT report says that’s led to concern in the US government that Tencent could gain access to personal data of US citizens, something that’s traditionally been reserved for the US government and companies. (Like here. And here, and here. Oh, and here.)

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