President Trump's TikTok deal will see TikTok's algorithm - the technology that determines what users see in their feed - copied and retrained on US user data, according to White House officials.
A new recommendation system, which has been viewed as the most valuable part of the app, will be audited by US tech giant Oracle, and operated by a new joint venture involving US investors in order to meet requirements for the app's sale.
Oracle already stores TikTok's American user data on its US-based servers as part of an existing agreement designed to ease lawmaker's security concerns.
But the company will now secure the entirety of the US version of TikTok - inspecting and re-developing its algorithm on content and data shared by US users.
The government believes this is enough to meet the requirements for a sale of the app set out by the 2024 law.
Private equity firm Silver Lake, which has investments in companies including Manchester City football club owners City Football Group, was revealed to also be involved in the deal.
White House officials said the new joint venture controlling the app would be seeking patriotic investors and board members experienced in cybersecurity to oversee its operations.
A huge range of public figures ranging from OnlyFans founder Tim Stokely to star YouTuber Jimmy Donaldson - AKA MrBeast - have been touted as potential investors in the past.
President Trump has said that the plans were approved by his Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping in a call on 19 September.
ByteDance and TikTok have not commented on the deal but in a statement thanked Xi and Trump "for their efforts to preserve TikTok in the United States."