Imperial Valley Press

Q&A: What’s up with Trump’s orders on TikTok and WeChat?

- Q: WHY IS THE TRUMP ADMINISTRA­TION CRACKING DOWN ON TIKTOK AND WECHAT?

— President Donald Trump has ordered sweeping but vague ban on dealings with the Chinese owners of popular apps TikTok and WeChat, saying they are a threat to U.S. national security, foreign policy and the economy.

But it’s far from clear what the administra­tion intends to actually do when the bans take e ect in 45 days, since the orders are currently blank checks waiting to be filled in. Uncertaint­y also surrounds what e ect the orders will have on the apps’ users, whether the administra­tion will face legal challenges over its authority to ban consumer apps, and what the companies — or China — will do next. Microsoft is in talks to buy parts of TikTok, in a potential sale that’s being forced under Trump’s threat of a ban.

Here’s what’s at stake:

Q: WHAT ARE THESE COMPANIES?

A: TikTok, owned by ByteDance, is an increasing­ly popular video app with 100 million U.S. users and hundreds of millions globally. It has a fun, goofy reputation, full of people lip-syncing, dancing and pulling pranks, and is exceptiona­lly easy to use. Like other social-media companies, it has raised concerns about the privacy of its users and how it moderates content. It has spawned an influencer culture of its own and nurtured music hits; Facebook and Snapchat see it as a competitiv­e threat.

Tencent’s WeChat is a critical communicat­ions and payments service in China and with Chinese emigrants abroad, with 1.2 billion users globally. It doesn’t break out U.S. users, but mobile research firm Sensor Tower estimates 19 million downloads in the U.S. since 2014.

But Tencent is intertwine­d with other major U.S. entertainm­ent brands. It owns Riot Games, publisher of hit video game League of Legends, and has a big stake in Epic Games, the company behind video game phenomenon Fortnite. It also has a streaming deal with the NBA.

Q: WHAT WOULD THE ORDERS DO?

A: The first thing they’ve done is to spread fear, uncertaint­y and doubt.

U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo earlier this week said that “we want to see untrusted Chinese apps removed from U.S. app stores.” The vague wording of the orders, which prohibit “any transactio­n” under U.S. jurisdicti­on with either Tencent or ByteDance, could be interprete­d to support an app-store ban and other measures, experts said. It’s not clear how it would apply to Tencent’s other properties and partnershi­ps.

We’ll presumably know more in 45 days.

It’s driven by concerns over collection of American users’ data and longstandi­ng complaints about Chinese business tactics, according to two White House o cials not authorized to speak publicly about private deliberati­ons. Trump had long taken aim at TikTok but the move against WeChat was an escalation.

But the picture is more complicate­d than just that. Trump’s frustratio­n over the coronaviru­s pandemic and China also drove his actions, the officials said. He has blamed the outbreak on Beijing and questioned whether China’s leaders purposeful­ly failed to contain it to spread economic disaster to other nations. He also has privately raged against China, blaming the nation for hurting his re-election chances and expressing no desire for a further trade deal.

Trump ignored questions about the executive orders from reporters on the tarmac after deplaning in advance of a three-day weekend at his Bedminster club.

Q: ARE THE ORDERS LEGAL?

It would be difficult for the government to stop people from using WeChat and TikTok — there are workaround­s even if they’re removed from app stores — and it’s not clear the president has a legal basis to do so under the powers cited in the orders, experts said. Moreover, civil-rights groups said a ban raises First Amendment concerns.

“Selectivel­y banning entire platforms harms freedom of speech online and does nothing to resolve the broader problem of unjustifie­d government surveillan­ce, including by our own government,” said Hina Shamsi, director of the American Civil Liberties Union’s National Security Project, in an emailed statement.

TikTok says it will “pursue all remedies” and suggested it would sue to ensure the company and its users are “are treated fairly.”

Q: DO I NEED TO DELETE TIKTOK FROM MY KID’S PHONE?

A: Not as a result of the Trump administra­tion’s actions, though you might want to take a closer look anyway.

TikTok, like most other social networks, collects data about its users and moderates what’s posted. It grabs people’s locations and messages they send one another, for example, and tracks what people watch in order to know what kinds of videos they like and how best to target ads to them. U.S.-based platforms do much the same thing, so deleting TikTok but leaving Snapchat, for instance, might not change things much.

 ?? AP PHOTO/NG HAN GUAN ?? A visitor to an Apple store wears a t-shirt promoting Tik Tok in Beijing on July 17.
AP PHOTO/NG HAN GUAN A visitor to an Apple store wears a t-shirt promoting Tik Tok in Beijing on July 17.

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