Advertisement
Supported by
THE NEW WORLD NEW
The Chinese Internet corporations and their professionals who paint hard and inventives make products of global elegance, despite Beijing’s evil censorship and oblivion.
By Li Yuan
The Chinese Chinese Networks application is complete of cute and comforting moments after around 500,000 US users who fled there last week to protest opposite to the prohibition of the imminent American Tiktok.
When writing “Tiktok refugees”, those users paid the “Cat Tax” to register in Rednote through the publication of cat images and videos. They talked so many questions about their new Chinese friends: is it true that in rural America, both circle of relatives have a giant farm, a massive house, at least 3 young people and several giant dogs? That Americans will have to occupy two jobs to help themselves? That Americans are horrible in geography and many that Africa is a country? Does that maximum of Americans have two days off both one and in both weeks?
The Americans also asked their new friends questions. “I heard that all Chinese have a giant panda,” wrote an American user in Rednote. “Can you tell me how I can get it?” An answer came here from someone in the eastern province of Jiangsu: “Believe me, it’s true,” imbued with the person, publishing a photo of a panda making the clothes.
I spent hours displacing those calls from cats in cats and I laughed beautiful and serious answers. This is what the Internet intends to do: attach people. More importantly, Rednote has demonstrated how much a random application of Chinese social networks can be competitive from a purely produced point of view.
With an online population of one billion and an army of engineers who paint hard and ingenious, Chinese Internet platforms are global elegance in their design, capacity and delight in users, such as Tiktok and now through Rednote, or Xiaohongshu In Chinese in Chinese in Chinese in Chinese. .
We have recovering the content of the article.
JavaScript turn on in the configuration of your browser.
Thanks for your patience while we review access. If you are in reading mode, leave and attach to your Times account, or subscribe to all the time.
Thanks for your patience while we review access.
Already signed? Connect.
Do you want all the time? Subscribe.
Advertisement
Be the first to comment on "Tiktok, Rednote and Chinese Internet promise"