WeChat ban urged by US gets skeptical review by appeals court | Tech News

WeChat ban urged by US gets skeptical review by appeals court

The Trump administration’s attempt to reinstate US restrictions on the Chinese-owned WeChat app was met with skepticism by a judicial panel

By:BLOOMBERG
| Updated on: Aug 21 2022, 14:17 IST
The judges took the government’s appeal under submission without indicating how they would rule.
The judges took the government’s appeal under submission without indicating how they would rule. (AP)
The judges took the government’s appeal under submission without indicating how they would rule.
The judges took the government’s appeal under submission without indicating how they would rule. (AP)

The Trump administration's attempt to reinstate U.S. restrictions on the Chinese-owned WeChat app was met with skepticism by a judicial panel.

The U.S. Court of Appeals in San Francisco signaled Thursday it was largely skeptical of efforts to overturn the decision of a federal magistrate judge, who last year granted a preliminary injunction to WeChat users in the U.S. who said the government restrictions amounted to an outright ban in violation of their right of free speech.

Circuit Judge Ryan D. Nelson, a Trump appointee, expressed concern that the restrictions are intended to make the app disappear completely in the U.S., providing no good alternative for millions of Chinese-Americans who communicate with friends, family, and business partners in China. The U.S. says the social media platform, owned by Tencent Holdings Ltd., poses a national security risk.

Read more: Trump orders ban on transactions with more Chinese apps

“If the government's goal was to shut down WeChat completely, what other alternatives are there?” Nelson asked the administration's attorney. “WeChat is so popular in China because there are no other alternatives.”

Why Tencent and WeChat Are Such a Big Deal in China

Circuit Judge Jay Bybee, a George W. Bush appointee, asked whether, in addition to free-speech concerns, the court shouldn't also determine if the administration overstepped its authority under the emergency-powers law is invoked. A federal judge in Washington last year blocked the administration's similar ban on TikTok, another Chinese-owned social-media app, on those grounds.

The judges took the government's appeal under submission without indicating how they would rule.

The case is U.S. WeChat Users Alliance v. Trump, 20-16908, U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit (San Francisco).

 

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First Published Date: 15 Jan, 12:40 IST
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