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TikTok, Xiaohongshu
TikTok refugees are pouring to Xiaohongshu. Here’s what you need to know about the RedNote app
A rare wave of U.S.-China camaraderie broke out online in recent days as “refugees” from the popular short video platform TikTok poured onto a Chinese social media platform to protest a now-delayed ban on the service.
As US TikTok users flock to Chinese app Xiaohongshu, interest in Mandarin rises
China tensions have precipitated a decade-long decline in bilateral people-to-people exchanges. Read more at straitstimes.com.
'Red Note' - the Chinese app being embraced by TikTok refugees
Chinese-owned app Xiaohongshu - or Red Note in English - was recently propelled to the top of the US Apple App Store free downloads chart, as American users facing a potential TikTok ban look for an alternative.
1d
on MSN
Chinese app Xiaohongshu springs to U.S. dominance as TikTok ban takes effect
The Chinese social media platform Xiaohongshu, also referred to as RedNote in English, has sprung to supremacy as the top ...
6h
on MSN
The female Chinese billionaire behind RedNote stands to profit off of the TikTok ban
Qu, 40, is currently president of and owns an estimated 10% stake in the private company; Forbes estimates she has a net ...
4h
TikTok users migrate to RedNote in an unexpected success for Chinese soft power
China has historically been seen as unable to emulate the attractiveness of the world’s more established soft-power bastions.
The Daytona Beach News-Journal
6d
What is RedNote? TikTok 'refugees' surge on different Chinese social media app
On Tuesday afternoon, another
Chinese
app named
Xiaohongshu
, or RedNote in English ... Instagram was 11, newcomer Bluesky was 12,
TikTok
was still there at No. 13, and Facebook was No. 25.
3d
on MSN
Charlwin Mao, the Chinese tech founder welcoming ‘TikTok refugees’
When the Chinese Stanford student Charlwin Mao was thinking of a name for his start-up in 2013, he settled on Xiaohongshu, ...
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