NEW
YORK (AP) — President Donald Trump has ordered a sweeping but vague ban
on dealings with the Chinese owners of social media apps TikTok and WeChat on security grounds, a move China’s government criticized as “political manipulation.”
The
twin executive orders issued Thursday — one for each app — add to
growing U.S.-Chinese conflict over technology and security. They take
effect in 45 days and could bar the popular apps from the Apple and
Google app stores, effectively removing them from U.S. distribution.
China’s foreign ministry expressed opposition but gave no indication whether Beijing might retaliate.
Earlier,
Trump threatened a deadline of Sept. 15 to “close down” TikTok in the
United States unless Microsoft Corp. or another company acquires it.
TikTok,
owned by Beijing-headquartered ByteDance Ltd., is popular for its
short, catchy videos. The company says it has 100 million users in the
United States and hundreds of millions worldwide.
The
Trump administration has expressed concern Chinese social media
services could provide American users’ personal information to Chinese
authorities, though it has given no evidence TikTok did that.
Instead,
officials point to the Communist Party’s ability to compel cooperation
from Chinese companies. U.S. regulators cited similar security concerns
last year when the Chinese owner of Grindr was ordered to sell the
dating app.
In a
statement, TikTok expressed shock at the order and complained it
violates U.S. law. The company said it doesn’t store American user data
in China and never has given it to Beijing or censored content at the
government’s request.
TikTok
said it spent nearly a year trying to reach a “constructive solution”
but the Trump administration “paid no attention to facts” and tried
improperly to insert itself into business negotiations. TikTok said it
would “pursue all remedies” available to ensure the company and its
users are “are treated fairly.”
WeChat’s owner, Tencent, the most valuable Asian technology company, and Microsoft declined to comment.
On
Wednesday, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo announced an expansion of the
U.S. crackdown on Chinese technology to include barring Chinese apps
from U.S. app stores, citing alleged security threats and calling out
TikTok and WeChat by name.
The
Chinese foreign ministry accused Washington of “political manipulation”
and said the moves will hurt American companies and consumers.
“The
United States is using national security as an excuse, frequently
abuses national power and unreasonably suppresses companies of other
countries,” said a ministry spokesman, Wang Wenbin. “This is an outright
hegemonic act. China is firmly opposed to it.”
Wang,
who didn’t mention TikTok or any other company by name, called on the
Trump administration to “correct its wrongdoing” but gave no indication
how Beijing might respond.
Trump’s
orders say the Chinese-owned apps “threaten the national security,
foreign policy, and economy of the United States.” They cite the
International Emergency Economic Powers Act and the National Emergencies
Act and call on the Commerce secretary to define the banned dealings by
Sept. 15.
WeChat,
known in Chinese as Weixin, is a hugely popular messaging app that
links to finance and other services. It has more than 1 billion users.
Around the world, many people of Chinese descent use WeChat to stay in
touch with friends and family and to conduct business in mainland China.
Within
China, WeChat is censored and expected to adhere to content
restrictions set by authorities. The Citizen Lab internet watchdog group
in Toronto says WeChat monitors files and images shared abroad to aid
its censorship in China.
Tencent
Holdings Ltd. also owns parts or all of major game companies like Epic
Games, publisher of Fortnite, a major video game hit, and Riot Games,
which is behind League of Legends.
The
Trump administration already was embroiled in a tariff war with Beijing
over its technology ambitions. Washington has blocked acquisitions of
some U.S. assets by Chinese buyers and has cut off most access to
American components and other technology for Huawei Technologies Ltd., a
maker of smartphones and network equipment that is China’s first global
tech brand.
China-backed hackers have been blamed for breaches of U.S. federal databases and the credit agency Equifax.
In
China, the Communist Party limits what foreign tech companies can do
and blocks access to the Google search engine, Facebook, Twitter and
other social media, along with thousands of websites operated by news
organizations and human rights, pro-democracy and other activist groups.
The Communist Party has used the entirely state-controlled press to encourage public anger at Trump’s actions.
“I
don’t want to use American products any more,” said Sun Fanyu, an
insurance salesperson in Beijing. “I will support domestic substitute
products.”
Leading
mobile security experts say TikTok is no more intrusive in its
harvesting of user data and monitoring of user activity than U.S. apps
owned by Facebook and Google.
“The
U.S. thinking is that anything that is Chinese is suspect,” said Andy
Mok, a senior research fellow at the Center for China and Globalization
in Beijing. “They’re being targeted not because of what they’ve done,
but who they are.”
The
order doesn’t seem to ban Americans from using TikTok, which would be
nearly impossible to enforce, said Kirsten Martin, a professor of
technology ethics at the University of Notre Dame.
“This
is a pretty broad and pretty quick expansion of the technology Cold War
between the U.S. and China,” said Steven Weber, faculty director for
the Berkeley Center for Long Term Cybersecurity.
___
AP
reporters Barbara Ortutay in Oakland, Calif., Mae Anderson in New York,
Frank Bajak in Boston, Joe McDonald in Beijing and Zen Soo in Hong Kong
contributed to this article.
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