Texas has just blocked state workers from using popular shopping apps like Shein and Alibaba on government computers and phones. Governor Greg Abbott announced the sweeping ban on January 26, 2026, targeting 26 Chinese-linked companies over worries they could spy on Texans or steal sensitive information.
The ban means if you work for the state of Texas, you can’t browse Shein for clothes or shop on Alibaba using your work computer anymore. But it goes way beyond shopping apps, the list includes everything from Wi-Fi routers to security cameras to AI technology.
Why Texas Made This Move
The decision came after Texas Cyber Command took a hard look at potential security threats. This new state agency, which launched in June 2025 with $135 million in funding, is run by retired Navy Vice Admiral TJ White. Their job is basically to figure out which technologies might put Texas at risk.
Governor Abbott didn’t mince words about the reasoning. “Rogue actors across the globe who wish harm on Texans should not be allowed to infiltrate our state’s network and devices,” he said.
The concern is that these companies could be forced to hand over data to the Chinese government or even allow backdoor access to Texas systems.
Texas Cyber Command is now the go-to agency for spotting risky tech, especially as artificial intelligence becomes more widespread and sophisticated.
What’s Actually Banned
The banned list reads like a who’s who of Chinese tech companies. On the consumer side, you’ve got Shein (the ultra-cheap fashion app), Alibaba (China’s answer to Amazon), and Temu (the bargain shopping platform that’s everywhere on social media). The TV and electronics maker Hisense is on there too.

But the list gets more technical from there. Popular router brand TP-Link is banned, along with phone maker Xiaomi and TV manufacturer TCL. If your office uses security cameras, brands like Uniview are now off-limits.
The restrictions hit some surprising industries, too. CATL, a major electric vehicle battery maker, is banned, as is drone company Autel Robotics. Several Chinese AI companies made the list, including facial recognition firms like SenseTime and Megvii, plus the search engine giant Baidu.
Even NucTech, which makes security screening equipment for airports and borders, got added to Texas’s no-go list.
What This Actually Means for State Workers
If you’re a Texas state employee, here’s what changes: you can’t use any of these companies’ products or services on your work devices or while connected to state networks. No checking Shein during your lunch break on your work laptop. No connecting that TP-Link router to the office network.
The good news? This only applies to work stuff. State employees can still use all these apps and products at home on their personal phones and computers. Texas isn’t telling anyone what they can do on their own time.
There is one exception built in. Law enforcement agencies can get special permission to use some banned technologies if they need them for investigations. But they have to get approval from their agency bosses first.
This might sound extreme, but Texas is actually following a trend. The state already banned TikTok from government devices back in 2022, and lots of other states did the same thing. Concerns about the Chinese-owned video app collecting user data sparked bans across the country.
Why Texas Just Blocked Entire Categories of Chinese Technology
What makes this new ban different is how much bigger it is. Instead of just one social media app, Texas is blocking entire categories of technology, from the shopping apps on your phone to the router connecting your office to the internet.
Other states have rolled out similar restrictions on Chinese tech companies, and the federal government has been taking action, too. There’s widespread worry in government circles about whether Chinese companies might be required to share American users’ data with Beijing.
So what’s really going on here? State governments handle tons of sensitive information; think employee personal details, taxpayer data, law enforcement records, and more. Texas officials worry that Chinese-made technology could give foreign actors a window into all that information.
By creating the Texas Cyber Command and funding it with serious money, the state is treating cybersecurity as a major priority. As our lives and governments become more digital, protecting against hackers and foreign surveillance becomes more important.
Whether you think this ban is necessary protection or government overreach probably depends on how seriously you take the threat of foreign surveillance. But one thing’s clear: Texas is drawing a hard line on which companies it trusts with government data, and a lot of Chinese tech firms didn’t make the cut.




