TikTok users are reportedly ditching the Chinese-owned app in droves as a possible US ban approaches, many jumping onto the . But the kicker is that many of them are choosing to jump onto RedNote. Yup, RedNote is Chinese, too.
Apparently, have "recently" left the platform in favour of RedNote, all in protest at the imminent US ban. “Our government is out of their minds if they think we’re going to [[link]] stand for this TikTok ban,” a user called Heather Roberts .
Speaking of the ban, the shizzle there is that the US Supreme Court is expected to . If upheld, the ban would go into effect on January 19—unless, that is, Chinese owner ByteDance sells TikTok's Chinese assets, though ByteDance has said such a divestiture "is simply not possible: not commercially, not technologically, not legally."
: The top chips from Intel and AMD.
: The right boards.
: Your perfect pixel-pusher awaits.
: Get into the game ahead of the rest.
As heartwarming as all that is, it seems a little unlikely that the bonhomie will carry on indefinitely, not least because of similar sentiments shared on the Clubhouse app back in 2021 .
As a non-TikTok user with absolutely no skin in this game, it's all a little baffling. What to make of this "protest" or the fact that users are willingly jumping onto another Chinese app?
It's likewise hard to predict what might happen with the incoming Trump administration. Fair to say the once-again President hasn't been entirely consistent with his attitude to TikTok. But then again, Mao himself said, "Contradiction and struggle are universal and absolute." He got that much right, that's for sure.