The US ban on Chinese-owned apps WeChat and TikTok sets up a pivotal legal challenge on digital free expression with important ramifications for the global internet ecosystem. President Donald Trump’s administration cited national security concerns, claiming the popular applications could be “subject to mandatory cooperation with the intelligence services” of Beijing. Critics said that while the security risks were unclear, the sweeping ban of popular online platforms raises concerns about the government’s ability to regulate free expression under the US constitution’s First Amendment. “It’s a mistake to think of this as (only) a sanction on TikTok and WeChat. It’s a serious restriction on the First Amendment rights of US citizens and residents,” said Jameel Jaffer, director of the Knight First Amendment Institute at Columbia University. Hina Shamsi of the American Civil Liberties Union agreed that the order poses constitutional questions and called it an “abuse of emergency powers” by Trump that creates more security issues than it solves by blocking app fixes and updates. Limited functionality The ban set to take effect Sunday prohibits downloads of TikTok, a popular video-sharing app with some 100 million US users, and WeChat, a Chinese super-app used for messaging, shopping, payments and other services, with some 19 million users in the United States. Officials said WeChat’s functionality would be affected immediately after the ban takes effect, even though some services might still work. TikTok is expected to function through November 12, the deadline set under an executive order by Trump, but users would not be able to download updates to the video app. The move ratchets up the pressure on TikTok parent firm ByteDance to strike a deal with a US partner that would allay Washington’s data security concerns, with Silicon Valley tech giant Oracle in talks to be part of a group that would put TikTok in American control. Internet fragmentation The latest ban, critics say, could create more cracks in a fragmenting global internet system by allowing governments freer rein in blocking services. “Trump’s decision is likely further to splinter the internet,” said Darrell West, director of the center for technology innovation at the Brookings Institution. “It will encourage other countries to retaliate against American companies and raise their own security concerns against foreign firms. The result could be several different internets based on the country of origin.”