RedNote Sees Surge in US Downloads Amid TikTok Ban Concerns

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RedNote Sees Surge in US Downloads Amid TikTok Ban Concerns
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Thousands of TikTok users are turning to RedNote, a Chinese e-commerce and lifestyle app, as a potential alternative in anticipation of a US TikTok ban. The influx has prompted a cultural exchange between American and Chinese users and raised questions about the app's future in the US.

A TikTok creator and advocate wears a button showing support for TikTok. Other users have flocked to alternative apps, such as China -based RedNote. In reaction to—or protest over—the impending U.S. TikTok ban, which will take effect on Sunday if the app is not sold or if the government takes action, thousands of people in the country have joined RedNote.

The latter is a China-based e-commerce and lifestyle app that is also known as Xiaohongshu, Mandarin for “Little Red Book”—which is also a nickname for the famous book of quotations from Mao Zedong. About 300 million people, mainly in China, use RedNote for video and image sharing, shopping and travel recommendations. This week RedNote climbed to the top of the charts on Apple’s and Google’s U.S. app stores. The potential TikTok ban has so far prompted about 700,000 people to join the Chinese app. That’s less than 1 percent of the 170 million U.S. users of TikTok, but the influx has been enough to spawn goofy memes and the occasional misunderstanding: a man in Vancouver who welcomed the new arrivals went viral because people mistook him for RedNote’s chief executive. The rush to this app is an example of the “media substitution hypothesis,” in which people fill a media void with a new platform or network, says, a professor of advertising and public relations at Michigan State University, who studies the psychological effects of social media use. On TikTok, “there is no implicit contract that you have to be anuser,” he points out, unlike arguably more posting-driven platforms such as X (formerly Twitter), Bluesky or Instagram. It’s completely acceptable to passively lurk, scroll and shop on TikTok, and RedNote may be scratching that same itch. “Mix the social with satisfying the need to shop—to buy cheap clothes or exercise equipment—that is the full package, in terms of user experience,” Alhabash says. By purchasing a subscription you are helping to ensure the future of impactful stories about the discoveries and ideas shaping our world today. Although TikTok owner ByteDance is based in China, the English version of its app operates in the U.S. through an American subsidiary. RedNote, meanwhile, has a single app with mostly Mandarin content and is headquartered in Shanghai. One result of the recent migration has been a cultural exchange between new users in the U.S. and veteran ones in China: Some Americans on RedNote, for instance, marveled at, which aren’t sold in the U.S. because of high tariffs. And Chinese students have sought help with their English homework on the app. RedNote’s ownership also means that if the app were to take off in the U.S., it would likely be subject to the same kind of national security concerns over data harvesting and content manipulation that TikTok has faced. RedNote, which did not immediately respond toposts that people would be able to share freely on U.S. platforms. To avoid algorithmic constraints on LGBTQ content, same-sex couples in China typically call themselves “roommates,”, or camouflage their digital communities via unconventional hashtags. (Because interest in #ToddlerFood is stereotypically coded as female, queer and lesbian women in China can use it to avoid “men who only care about themselves,” as a RedNote user told the study’s author.) Whether former TikTok users will migrate from one app to another “in a cultlike manner” is far from certain, Alhabash says. Some people might be convinced to follow their favorite influencers to new platforms, and where those influencers end up could, in turn, be guided by financial prospects or brand support. “There’s more than just an individual decision by the user” at play, he says. For now, on RedNote, there are jokes. One user who had freshly signed up was greeted by a message from their

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