Judge halts WeChat download ban in US-China tech battle
A US judge on Sunday blocked the government's ban on
WeChat downloads, hours before it was due to take effect in an ongoing
technology and espionage battle between Washington and Beijing.
The Trump administration had ordered a ban on
downloads of the messaging platform WeChat as well as hugely popular
video-sharing app TikTok, both owned by Chinese companies. Both bans have now
been suspended.
A California court ruling said it granted a
"motion for a nationwide injunction against the implementation" of the
government order on WeChat, with the judge citing concerns over free speech.
The order would have slowed WeChat down and made it
unusable in the United States for video chats with family and friends,
according to experts.
Owned by technology giant Tencent, WeChat has around
19 million active daily users in the United States.
When contacted by AFP, Tencent declined to comment
on the ruling.
The ruling "is a short-term relief for the
plaintiffs, who wanted to be sure that the app was not shut down tonight,"
said Carl Tobias, a law professor at the University of Richmond.
If the government appeals and wins, the plaintiffs
can appeal that decision. "The plaintiffs wanted to just buy time,"
Tobias said. "It may be very soon that the president is no longer the
president."
As President Donald Trump seeks a breakthrough with
voters to win a second term in the November 3 election, he has increasingly put
national security and his aggressive stance toward China at the center of his
campaign.
He regularly accuses Democratic opponent Joe Biden
of weakness toward Beijing.
The president said Saturday that he had approved a
deal allowing Silicon Valley giant Oracle to become data partner for TikTok to
avert a shutdown of that app.
The deal, announced by the companies, includes
Walmart as a commercial partner and would create a new US company named TikTok
Global.
TikTok -- owned by China's ByteDance -- confirmed
the Oracle agreement, which came as companies raced against the Sunday
deadline.
The US Department of Commerce on Saturday announced
it was postponing the ban on TikTok downloads until September 27, due to
"recent positive developments."
Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross on Friday accused
China of using the two apps "to threaten the national security, foreign
policy, and the economy of the US."
WeChat is "mostly used by Chinese visiting or
working here or by Chinese-Americans staying in touch with their
relatives," said William Reinsch of the Center for Strategic and
International Studies in Washington.
That includes several hundred thousand Chinese
students in the United States, who use it for daily online conversations.
Trump has often claimed, without providing evidence,
that TikTok and WeChat are collecting user data for Beijing.
In early August, he gave ByteDance until September
20 to hand over TikTok's US operations to an American company.
TikTok's brand of short, quirky phone videos has
become a global phenomenon, especially among young people, with 100 million
users in the United States alone.
China on Saturday condemned US "bullying,"
saying it violated international trade norms and that there was no evidence of
any security threat.
China also launched its long-expected
"unreliable entities list," seen as a weapon for Beijing to retaliate
against the United States.
The Trump administration has used its own
"entity list" to shut Chinese telecom giant Huawei out of the US
market, in addition to the recent moves against TikTok and WeChat.
US officials have described Washington's crackdown
as essential to safeguard against potential Chinese espionage through the
platforms.
According to the US Treasury, the TikTok deal still
needs to be finalized by the involved companies and approved by a federal
national security committee.



