The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

U.S. could also be hurt by WeChat ban

- By Tali Arbel, Kelvin Chan and Joseph Pisani

President Donald Trump plans an executive order to shut down the app that connects many to families.

For millions of people in the U.S. who use the Chinese app WeChat, it’s a lifeline to friends, family, customers and business contacts in China.

That lifeline is now under attack by an executive order from President Donald Trump that could ban the app in the U.S. as early as mid-September, potentiall­y severing vital relationsh­ips.

“It’s the first thing I check in the morning,” Sha Zhu, who is Chinese and lives in Washington, says of WeChat. It’s how she talks to her mother and old friends from China, which she left in 2008, and how she communicat­es with her colleagues as a public relations manager for a Chinese-owned consulting company. It’s where she stores Chinese currency in her virtual wallet.

Most important, it’s where she keeps videos and audio clips of her father, who died four years ago.

In China, WeChat, or Weixin as it’s known, is critical infrastruc­ture — texting, social media, cab-hailing, payments and more, all wrapped into one app. Many Chinese businesses don’t even take credit cards anymore, just WeChat. It has over a billion users, owner Tencent says, mostly in China. Mobile app firms have varying estimates for U.S. downloads — in the range of 19 to 26 million.

People in China have little choice but to use it because the country’s communist rulers block access to Google’s search engine, Facebook, Twitter and other social media, along with many other foreign websites and online services.

For people in the U.S., WeChat has less functional­ity than it does in China. But it’s what connects immigrants and students from China to their pasts and to each other. Chinese restaurant­s in the U.S. use it to take food orders. Businesspe­ople in the U.S. that have work in China rely on it as well.

Kurt Braybrook, who spent 22 years doing business in Shanghai before moving back to the U.S. in 2017, says the app is irreplacea­ble for him and his China-born wife. He could lose roughly 500 WeChat contacts, few of which he could reach without the app.

“If they banned it entirely, it will wipe out connection­s to my wife’s family, all our friends and my network of business contacts I built over 22 years,” says Braybrook, who now lives in Grand Rapids, Michigan.

Trump’s Aug. 6 order, released after hours without additional explanatio­n, purportedl­y aims to ban all “transactio­ns related to WeChat.” Trump simultaneo­usly issued a nearly identical order aimed at the popular, Chinese-owned video app TikTok. Both orders have thrown users into confusion, leading some to begin moving to alternativ­e services. But that’s especially difficult for regular users of WeChat.

Executives of more than a dozen U.S. multinatio­nals pushed back against the Trump order on WeChat in a conference call with White House officials, the Wall Street Journal reported Thursday. Some feared the order might prevent their subsidiari­es in China from using the app, which could place them at a competitiv­e disadvanta­ge.

The day after Trump’s order, Zhu got dozens of queries from friends, family members and colleagues, asking if they should switch to messaging options such as Telegram, WhatsApp or Signal. Those offer secure messaging and aren’t Chinese-owned.

She still doesn’t know if she’ll be able to access her money, or what she’ll do with all those stored memories of her father. “We can’t make a plan,” she says. She blames politician­s, especially

Trump, for her current stress: “We’re the pawn that they can manipulate to put anywhere on the chess board.”

Some U.S. users are trying to reassure each other that they already have the app, and the U.S. government can’t ban it entirely, because that’s their free speech — a right guaranteed to them in the U.S. but not in the country they left behind.

WeChat users are censored by the government in China. It’s not quite the same for internatio­nal users who registered their accounts outside China, but the Citizen Lab internet watchdog group in Toronto says WeChat monitors documents and images shared abroad to aid its censorship in China. WeChat’s parent, Tencent, said earlier this year that “all content shared among internatio­nal users of WeChat is private.”

Many users who see it as a necessity aren’t particular­ly concerned about privacy.

The Chinese-American Planning Council, a New

York Asian American social services agency that works with 60,000 New Yorkers a year, relies on WeChat to share informatio­n with community members, says spokeswoma­n Carlyn Cowen. This year, for instance, the agency has messaged its members about participat­ing in the U.S. Census, since the government’s in-person door-knocking for the Census has been truncated, or where COVID-19 tests are available.

“I can’t say I’ve thought deeply about personal data concerns because that’s not really how we use it,” she says.

If there’s some kind of ban on WeChat, it’s not clear what the agency will do instead — perhaps use other apps more if Chinese-Americans do that. “We haven’t really thought through what that looks like.”

Indianapol­is college student Seth Workman was introduced to WeChat last year while studying abroad in China, where he used it to chat with coworkers at a hotel where he worked.

But when Workman returned to the U.S. last fall, he started using it to order $6 lunches from a local Chinese restaurant that took orders from a group chat of about 60 people. A van would show up on campus with the orders, typically boxes filled with rice, vegetables and meat.

“The food is really good,” says Workman. “If WeChat was banned, I would be a little bit upset.”

For millions of people in the U.S. who use the Chinese app WeChat, it’s a lifeline to friends, family, customers and business contacts in China.

 ?? JACQUELYN MARTIN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Sha Zhu, of Washington, uses the app WeChat to keep in touch with family and friends in the U.S. and China.
JACQUELYN MARTIN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Sha Zhu, of Washington, uses the app WeChat to keep in touch with family and friends in the U.S. and China.

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