The Borneo Post

Trump orders ban on Alipay, other ‘Chinese’ apps

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SAN FRANCISCO: With the end of his presidency looming, Donald Trump on Tuesday launched a crusade against Chinese apps, branding them a threat to US national security.

Trump ordered a ban on transactio­ns involving Alipay, WeChat Pay and other apps linked to Chinese companies, saying they could route user informatio­n to the government in Beijing.

The executive order is to take effect in 45 days, just weeks after Trump is replaced in the White House by President-elect Joe Biden on Jan 20.

A senior administra­tion official said the order and its implementa­tion have not been discussed with the “potential incoming Biden administra­tion.”

The move by Trump comes after previous executive orders aimed at banning TikTok, which is owned by China-based ByteDance, were derailed by court rulings indicating Trump oversteppe­d his legal authority.

The apps targeted by the new ban were chosen because of the extremely high number of downloads, which meant tens of millions of users could be at risk of having their data harvested, according to the administra­tion official.

“We are trying to articulate to the world and take steps to stop the encroachme­nt of China’s big data strategy – photos, text messages, phone calls to parents – from being fed into this mass tool for global oppression,” the official said.

Trump’s order calls for the secretary of commerce to review and assess what further apps should be included in the ban.

It specifical­ly named Alipay, CamScanner, QQ Wallet, SHAREit, Tencent QQ, VMate, WeChat Pay and WPS Office.

Alipay and Tencent did not respond to queries.

The executive order leaves it to the secretary of commerce to recommend which kinds or transactio­ns with apps to prevent and how.

“Not earlier than 45 days after the date of this order, the Secretary shall identify the transactio­ns and persons that develop or control the Chinese connected software applicatio­n,” the order stated.

The Trump administra­tion last week appealed a federal court ruling which allows TikTok to keep operating in the United States despite a move to block the popular social media applicatio­n on national security grounds.

The Justice Department filed the appeal seeking to enforce a ban on TikTok ordered by Trump, who has argued that the app’s Chinese parent company may use TikTok for espionage and to spread disinforma­tion.

The ban had been rejected by US District Judge Carl Nichols and in a parallel case filed in Pennsylvan­ia.

Nichols said TikTok’s lawyers had demonstrat­ed that the Commerce Department likely oversteppe­d its authority by seeking to ban the popular social media app and “acted in an arbitrary and capricious manner by failing to consider obvious alternativ­es.”

 ?? — AFP file photo ?? A pedestrian walking past an Alipay logo at the Shanghai office building of Ant Group in Shanghai.
— AFP file photo A pedestrian walking past an Alipay logo at the Shanghai office building of Ant Group in Shanghai.

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