Summary

Many Americans joining China’s social media platform RedNote are encountering strict censorship uncommon in Western platforms.

One non-binary user had a post asking if the platform welcomed gay people removed within hours.

Posts on LGBTQ+ topics, fitness photos, and sensitive cultural content have been censored, frustrating users unfamiliar with China’s moderation rules.

RedNote is hiring English-language moderators to handle the influx. While some users enjoy cultural exchange, others criticize restrictions.

Analysts see RedNote’s growth among US users as a soft power win for China.

  • @[email protected]
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    3512 hours ago

    This is why I’m against using Rednote myself. Just try searching tiananmen square in Rednote and you won’t get any results.

    • @hark
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      14 hours ago

      Oh, well that makes it completely useless then.

    • Flying Squid
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      3311 hours ago

      Someone here was defending it the other day claiming that China wouldn’t use it for propaganda purposes because politics is banned there.

      They didn’t see the problem with that.

      • @Rhoeri
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        610 hours ago

        Are you seriously suggesting that the bloodbathed atrocities committed by the Chinese government on innocent student protestors in Tiananmen Square never happened?

          • @Rhoeri
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            9 hours ago

            I think that’s splitting hairs and a purposeful distraction from the point that the Chinese government’s murdered innocent people.

            To say- “but it happened near the square, not AT it!” is nothing short of disingenuous.

            And for the record, they said the west “made it up”. Misinformation at its finest.

            • @lennybird
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              19 hours ago

              Leaving aside the fact that nobody questions that Roth was detained for 20 hours by the Chinese government and quite possibly bribed or blackmailed.

            • @kuato
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              -109 hours ago

              Quite a few of the people killed were unarmed military & police, which means that at least some of the “peaceful” protesters were not as peaceful as Western media portray them.

              • @Rhoeri
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                9 hours ago

                Did the Chinese military kill innocent students protestors or not?

                Answer the question without splitting hairs and distractions.

                Did they, or did they not?

                • @kuato
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                  9 hours ago

                  Given that a few hundred people died, I think it’s safe to assume that government agents must have killed at least some nonviolent protesters, yes. I don’t know anyone who’d dispute that.

                  • @Rhoeri
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                    89 hours ago

                    That’s some masterclass side-stepping, bud! I’m done engaging with your attempts to minimize the atrocities of the Chinese government.

                    Case rested.

          • @[email protected]
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            48 hours ago

            Here’s an archive of the link from that CBS page, since it’s broken now: https://web.archive.org/web/20090606124946/https://www.cbsnews.com/blogs/2009/06/04/world/worldwatch/entry5061564.shtml

            It talks about the soldiers shooting people outside Tiananmen Square. This is the event that “the Tiananmen Square Massacre” refers to. The number of people killed ranges from tens to hundreds to thousands, depending on who you ask, plus more wounded, but nobody can deny that there wasn’t a massacre.

          • @Rhoeri
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            29 hours ago

            Now I am quite ready for you to disengage, shut down, and just yell and say I am a crazy person

            Do you see a .ml after my name?

            And if that’s the “normal response” you’re accustomed to, then maybe other people aren’t the problem.

            No, my response is to end this now and to stop engaging in a discussion that is clearly pointless. I’ve said what needed be said on the matter.