US President to act firmly against China's social media apps: Trump's aide
A top White House official said he expected President Trump to act firmly against the TikTok and WeChat social media apps, prompting an angry response from China on Monday
SAN FRANCISCO: A top White House official said he expected President Trump to act firmly against the TikTok and WeChat social media apps, prompting an angry response from China on Monday.
China dismissed White House trade advisor Peter Navarro's comments as "ridiculous and narrow-minded", and slammed the United States as "the world's real hacker empire" amid rising tensions between the two superpowers.
"For a long time now, it (the US) has carried out indiscriminate and illegal cyber attacks, surveillance and theft of secrets on a global scale," said Chinese foreign ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying at a routine briefing.
"The US continues to have strong values, but why is it so scared of a fun video-sharing social media network loved by young people?"
Trump last week had said he is considering banning the wildly popular TikTok app as a way to punish China over the coronavirus pandemic.
In an interview with Fox News on Sunday, Navarro argued that "what the American people have to understand is all of the data that goes into those mobile apps that kids have so much fun with... goes right to servers in China, right to the Chinese military, the Chinese Communist Party."
He said these apps can be used to steal intellectual property. "So expect strong actions on that" by Trump, Navarro warned.
TikTok belongs to the Chinese group ByteDance and has nearly one billion users worldwide.
It has sought to distance itself from its Chinese owners, pointing out it has an American CEO and consistently denying allegations that it shares data with Beijing.
WeChat, owned by Tencent, is a versatile app with more than one billion users in China who use it for text messaging, mobile payments and social media.
Navarro also accused TikTok's new boss Kevin Mayer, former head of Disney's streaming platforms, of being a puppet.
On Friday, Amazon said it mistakenly sent workers an email telling them to dump the TikTok mobile application from their cell phones because of security concerns.
An Amazon spokesperson later told AFP "there is no change to our policies right now with regard to TikTok."
Democratic campaign teams for the US presidential election have been asked to avoid using TikTok on personal devices and, if they do, to keep it on a non-work phone.
The research firm eMarketer estimates TikTok has more than 52 million US users, having gained about 12 million since the outbreak of the coronavirus pandemic. TikTok is especially popular with young smartphone users.
-
Canada, China lock initial trade deal on ‘EV,Canola’ to strengthen ties: What to expect Next?
-
Florida woman’s alleged bid to bribe police ends in unexpected discovery
-
Japan launches the world’s first trial to extract rare earth elements
-
UN warns of 10-year worst hunger crisis in Nigeria after massive aid cuts
-
Insurrection Act of 1807: All you need to know about powerful US emergency law
-
Elon Musk backs Donald Trump to invoke Insurrection Act amid Minnesota protests
-
Fire causes power outage on Tokyo train lines, thousands stranded as ‘operations halted’
-
Taiwan, TSMC to expand US investment: A strategic move in global AI chip race