Qatar Tribune

Wechat Ban Is Just A MAGA Wall In Cyberspace

The US’s move to clamp down on free flow of informatio­n in the name of national security smacks of authoritar­ianism

- TIM CULPAN TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE

HAVING failed to complete a huge wall along the S southern border, President Donald Trump’s administra­tion now seems desperate to build one in cyberspace for similar spurious reasons.

Whereas the bogeyman four years ago was a supposed influx of drugs and criminals from Mexico, the S announced early Friday that Tencent Holdings Ltd’s instantmes­saging app WeChat will essentiall­y be shut down in America from September 20 because of some vague notion that it poses an immediate threat.

In announcing the move, which also includes a ban on ByteDance Ltd’s TikTok to go in effect on November 12 unless it resolves its pending issues, Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross made it sound as if there was incontrove­rtible evidence of their nefarious nature.

The Chinese Communist Party (CCP) has demonstrat­ed the means and motives to use these apps to threaten the national security, foreign policy, and the economy of the S.

That’s not quite true. There’s no doubt that Beijing, its governing Communist Party and the nation’s military and intelligen­ce services have waged sustained cyberoffen­sives against the S and dozens of other countries. This year alone, two Chinese hackers were accused of attempting to pilfer coronaviru­s research across 11 countries, while more than 100 targets are thought to be among victims in a sophistica­ted infiltrati­on scheme outlined by the S this week.

But the evidence against WeChat is lacking. The app offers services that are roughly akin to an amalgam of Facebook, Venmo, Instagram, Twitter and Postmates. Its core feature is messaging, similar to Whatsapp. And yes, it collects data. Reams of it. As does Facebook Inc., Alphabet Inc’s Google, Microsoft Corp and even Oracle Corp.

In the S, WeChat is largely used by the Chinese diaspora. And it’s quite probable that a small segment of those users oppose the S, its democratic system of government and maybe even communicat­e their plans over chat. In truth, an even bigger risk to the freedoms for which the S stands is that Chinese dissidents in America might use the app and Beijing most likely tracks them. A third concern is that the Communist Party’s increasing­ly heightened censorship regime is being deployed on WeChat at the expense of American citizens (largely of Chinese ethnicity) entirely within S borders.

And yet, any such manipulati­on or data infiltrati­on pales in significan­ce to that already perpetrate­d against entirely American institutio­ns like Facebook and Twitter.

Instead of stamping out any threats posed by the Chinese government, which do exist, the S administra­tion has simply handed Beijing another item to add to its folio of propaganda that paints the S as a belligeren­t and hypocritic­al regime.

ust as Chinese officials can use examples of S police officers killing unarmed black men as a counter to Washington’s allegation­s of human rights abuses in Hong Kong and against ighurs, they now have this unnecessar­y WeChat ban as proof that the S isn’t an open freedomlov­ing nation after all.

The predictabl­e reaction from Beijing will also be hypocritic­al. It’s true that thousands of Chinese in the S will struggle to communicat­e directly with friends and family back home once WeChat access is shut off. But that’s only because more ubiquitous options in the S Whatsapp, Facebook Messenger and Twitter have already been banned by China.

A S move to shut WeChat still pales in comparison to the Great Firewall that Beijing has had in place for more than a decade.

And that’s why this move will prove to be so desperate and ineffectiv­e. It won’t stop teams of state-sponsored hackers from infiltrati­ng corporate and government networks, nor prevent manipulati­on of America’s open internet and independen­t media. But it will provide fodder for the growing belief that the S truly is no better than any authoritar­ian state seeking to clamp down on the free flow of informatio­n in the name of national security.

Like that barrier along the Mexican border, this virtual wall against China will have untold costs and little benefit.

(Tim Culpan is a Bloomberg

Opinion columnist covering technology)

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