Santa Cruz Sentinel

US-China tussle over apps heats up

- Cy Joe McLonald

China’s government on Wednesday accused Washington of misusing national security as an excuse to hurt commercial competitor­s after President Donald Trump signed an order banning transactio­ns with payment services Alipay and WeChat Pay and six other apps.

Tuesday’s order escalated a conflict with Beijing over technology, security and spying accusation­s that has plunged U. S.- Chinese relations to their lowest level in decades. It followed confusion in financial markets after the New York Stock Exchange announced last week it would remove three Chinese phone companies and then withdrew that plan Monday.

“This is another example of the U.S.’s bullying, arbitrary and hegemonic behavior,” said a foreign ministry spokeswoma­n, Hua Chunying. “This is an example of the United States over-generalizi­ng the concept of national security and abusing its national power to unreasonab­ly suppress foreign companies.”

Beijing will take unspecifie­d “necessary measures” to protect Chinese companies, Hua said, repeating a government statement made following previous U. S. sanctions announceme­nts. It rarely has been followed by action.

Trump’s order cites unspecifie­d concerns about apps collecting Americans’ personal and financial data and turning it over to China’s communist government.

Hua ridiculed that argument, pointing to U.S. government intelligen­ce gathering.

“This is like a gangster who wantonly steals but then clamors to be protected from robbery,” Hua said. “How hypocritic­al and ridiculous it is.”

Chinese smartphone apps face similar opposition in neighborin­g India, which has blocked dozens of them on security grounds amid a military standoff over a disputed section of border between the two countries.

Trump in August issued orders banning dealings with the popular Chineseown­ed video app TikTok and the WeChat messaging app.

Those and this week’s order take effect after President- elect Joe Biden is due to be sworn in Jan. 20, leaving open the question of whether the government will go ahead with it.

A representa­tive for Biden’s office did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

Alipay is part of the empire of billionair­e Jack Ma, founder of e-commerce giant Alibaba Group and financial platform Ant Group. WeChat Pay is operated by rival tech giant Tencent. The others named in the order are CamScanner, QQ Wallet, SHAREit, Tencent QQ, VMate and WPS Office.

The Trump administra­tion also has imposed curbs on access to U. S. technology for Chinese telecom equipment maker Huawei and some other companies. A November order bans American investors from buying securities issued by companies deemed to be linked to China’s military.

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 ?? NG HAN GUAN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? The app for Alipay, the mobile payments service operated by Ant Group, is seen on a smartphone in Beijing.
NG HAN GUAN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE The app for Alipay, the mobile payments service operated by Ant Group, is seen on a smartphone in Beijing.

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