Americans and Chinese distribute jokes on ‘alternative TikTok’ as US ban looms
A looming TikTok ban has connected Chinese and American citizens like never before, as they swap jokes and memes in what one user described as a “historic instant”.
It’s all unfolding on a popular Chinese social media app called RedNote, or Xiaohongshu (literally translates as Little Red Book), which doesn’t have the usual internet firewall that separates China from the rest of the globe.
It has been drawing self-professed US “TikTok refugees” seeking a recent home on the internet – despite the truth that their own government is seeking a TikTok ban because of national safety concerns.
Americans now discover themselves in direct contact with 300 million Mandarin speakers in China and elsewhere – while in the real globe, Beijing is bracing for a tumultuous Trump presidency that could strain its fragile ties with Washington.
‘We’re here to spite our government’
At the heart of the US ban is the terror that China is using TikTok to spy on Americans.
The app has faced accusations that user data is ending up in the hands of the Chinese government – because of a Beijing law that requires local companies to “back, assist and cooperate with the state intelligence work”. TikTok denies this has ever happened, or that it would happen.
But the possibility doesn’t seem to worry some US users – 700,000 recent users have signed on to RedNote in the last two days, making it the most downloaded free app in the US App store.
“The rationale that our government is telling us that they are banning TikTok is because they’re insisting that it’s owned by you guys, the Chinese people, government, whatever,” said one recent RedNote user, Definitelynotchippy.
She goes on to explain why she is on RedNote: “A lot of us are smarter than that though so we decided to piss off our government and download an actual Chinese app. We call that trolling, so in short we’re here to spite our government and to discover about China and hang out with you guys.”
TikTok, although owned by Chinese corporation ByteDance, is headquartered in Singapore and says it is run independently. In truth, China’s version of TikTok is another app called Douyin. RedNote, on the other hand, is a Chinese corporation based in Shanghai and among the few social media apps available both in China and outside.
So Washington’s fears over TikTok would extend to RedNote as well.
That’s why American users on RedNote are referring to themselves as “Chinese spies” – continuing a TikTok pattern where people have been bidding farewell to their “personal Chinese spy” who has allegedly been surveilling them over the years.
RedNote is now packed of posts where ex-TikTok users are in search of a replacement. One post says: “I’m looking for my Chinese spy. I miss you. Please assist me discover him.”
And Chinese users have answered: “I’m here!”
‘People-to-people exchanges’
The truthful, amusing conversations on RedNote may not be what Chinese President Xi Jinping had in mind when he spoke about “strengthening people-to-people cultural exchanges” between China and the US.
But that is certainly what is happening as enthusiastic Chinese users welcome curious Americans to the app.
“You don’t even require to trip abroad, you can just talk to foreigners here,” said one Chinese RedNote user in a video that has received more than 6,000 likes.
“But it’s honestly insane, no-one would have expected that we could meet like this one day, openly communicate like this.”
Food, streaming shows and jobs have been the most popular topics: “Is life in America similar to how it looks on [the US TV show] Friends?”
Other Chinese users demanded a “responsibility” for using the platform – cat photos.
“Cat responsibility from California,” reads one post in response. “Here’s my offering – the shorthair is a boy named Bob and the calico is a girl named Marley.”
Still others are using the platform to inquire Americans for assist with their English homework.
One post reads: “Dear TikTok refugees, could you please inform me the respond to question 53? Is the respond T (factual) or F (untrue)?”
assist came quickly: some 500 people have since answered.
The flood of recent American users appears to have caught RedNote off guard – reports declare the corporation is hiring English moderators.
And others are trying to liquid assets in on RedNote’s recent-found US stardom as well: language-learning app Duolingo put out a graph showing a 216% jump in its user base, compared to this period last year.
Is RedNote the recent TikTok?
RedNote’s rising popularity is not guaranteed to last though.
There is no rationale to assume it won’t face blowback for the same reasons as TikTok: concerns that it could be used by China to spy on Americans.
It’s ambiguous how long Beijing would be open to such unfettered exchanges – control of the internet is key to its repressive regime.
The irony of the circumstance was flagged by one Chinese user, who posted: “Don’t we have a (fire)wall? How arrive so many foreigners can enter, when clearly I can’t leave?”
Typically, Chinese internet users have been unable to directly interact with foreigners. Global platforms like Twitter and Instagram and search engines like Google are blocked in China, though people use VPNs to circumvent these restrictions. Sensitive topics – from history to dissent – or anything seen as critical of China’s government and ruling Communist event is swiftly censored.
It’s ambiguous how much RedNote is censored – it’s largely used by younger and middle-aged women in China, where they distribute images and videos. It’s not like Weibo, another Chinese app, where discussions and airing of grievances is far more ordinary, leading to posts often being taken down.
But a handful of recent RedNote users declare they have already received reports that their posts have violated guidelines, including one who asked in a post if the app was “LGBT amiable”.
Another said they had asked “What [sic] Chinese ponder about gay people?” and received a similar notification, that they had violated “community moral order” guidelines.
And Chinese users keep reminding Americans on the app “not to mention sensitive topics, such as politics, religion and drugs”.
One Chinese user also advised them to stick to the “One China policy”, the diplomatic pillar of the US-China connection – according to which the US recognises and has formal ties with China rather than Taiwan, the self-governed island Beijing claims as its own.
The US government has not commented on RedNote so far, and neither has Beijing.
But Chinese state media seems upbeat about it, with Global Times even interviewing a US user who said she would “adore to interact with Chinese users”.
RedNote’s American fate is anyone’s guess – but for now, at least online, the US-China competition is taking a shatter. Thanks to cat pictures.