The Oklahoman

Ban delayed

Judge agrees to delay US gov't restrictio­ns on WeChat

- By Stan Choe

NEW YORK — A judge has approved a request from a group of U.S. We Chat users to delay looming federal government restrictio­ns that could effectivel­y make the popular app nearly impossible to use.

In a ruling dated Saturday, Magistrate Judge Laurel Be el er in California said the government' s actions would affect users' First Amendment rights as an effective ban on the app removes their platform for communicat­ion.

WeChat is a messaging-focused app popular with many Chinese-speaking Americans that serves as a lifeline to friends, family, customers and business contacts in China. It' s owned by Chinese tech giant Tencent.

The group of WeChat users had requested an injunction after the U.S. Commerce Department said Friday it would bar We Chat from U.S. a pp stores and keep it from accessing essential internet services in t he country, beginning Sunday night at 11:59 p.m.

The Trump administra­tion has targeted WeChat and another Chineseown­ed app, TikTok, for national security and data privacy concerns in the latest flashpoint in the rising tensions between Washington and Beijing. The administra­tion contends that the data of U.S. users collected by the two apps could be shared with the Chinese government.

On Saturday, President Donald Trump said he supported a proposed deal that would have TikTok partner with Oracle and WalMart to form a U.S. company. There is still a chance that TikTok could be banned in the U.S. as of Nov. 12 if the deal isn' t completed, under the restrictio­ns put in place by the Commerce Department.

However, a restrictio­n to bar TikTok from app stores in the U.S., similar to what WeChat f aced, was pushed back a week to Sept. 27 after Trump backed the latest TikTok deal.

On Sunday, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo told Fox News that the government will ensure that under the TikTokOrac­le-WalMart deal no American's data ends up in the possession of the Chinese government.

In the We Chat case, the users had argued the moves targetin gt he all-in-one a pp with instant-mess aging, social media and other communicat­ion tools would restrict free speech.

In the ruling, the court said that a WeChat ban “eliminates all meaningful access to communicat­ion in the plaintiffs' community ,” and that an in junction would be in public interest.

The U.S. government had earlier argued that it is not restrictin­g free speech because WeChat users still “are free to speak on alternativ­e platforms that do not po sea national security threat.”

Specific evidence about WeChat posing a national security threat was also “modest,” according to Judge Beeler.

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