from thelucky8@beehaw.org to technology@beehaw.org on 21 Jan 08:05
https://beehaw.org/post/18108095
As TikTok’s future hangs in the balance, Xiaohonghshu, better known as RedNote in English, is trying to capitalize on its newfound popularity by partnering with US influencers who can help promote the company and bring more Americans onto its platform. The Chinese lifestyle and travel app, which has over 300 million mostly monthly active users, surged to the top of US app store charts last week as the TikTok ban approached.
In a campaign brief obtained by WIRED, Solare Global, a New York City-based marketing agency, pitched creators on making sponsored posts for RedNote, featuring videos of themselves telling their followers about the Chinese app’s sudden rise in the US. The brief asked creators to describe “how fun and engaging the app is” and “emphasize its user-friendly design and international appeal.” It also instructed them to share their own RedNote accounts and encourage their followers to join them on the platform.
[…]
The brief viewed by WIRED required creators to turn their videos around on a 24-hour timeline to ensure they went up by January 17, the same day the Supreme Court was going to decide whether the TikTok ban would go into effect two days later. It also stipulated that influencers must leave their videos up for a minimum of six months.
Xiaohongshu was founded in 2013 and has long mostly focused on courting domestic audiences in China, particularly young women who live in major cities. Like TikTok, it revolves around a central algorithm that recommends users an endless stream of posts based on their interests and behavior. But instead of showing people one video at a time, Xiaohongshu presents photo slideshows, text posts, and videos in a grid format.
But perhaps the biggest difference between the two apps is how they handle content moderation. Because it’s accessible in China, Xiaohongshu is required to adhere to strict censorship rules dictated by Beijing. (WIRED previously reported that Xiaohongshu was scrambling to hire English-speaking moderators to help manage the flood of content being posted by Americans.) TikTok, on the other hand, isn’t available in China. Its parent company, ByteDance, operates a separate video app there called Douyin.
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People went there days before the actual ban, but I do wonder how many more came due to those influencers. Would explain why it’s gotten kinda meh since sunday.
Here is a video by Matt Brown analyzing RedNote.
Chinese RedNote App Exposes Sensitive User Data — (18 min, here is an alternative Invidious link)
TLDR: It’s sending most of the app data in cleartext HTTP instead of TLS, while some of the TLS are not done in a secure way. It is true that other social media apps send data back to the servers, but here it appears to be less safe, enabling attackers to do so in transit.
Wow. Just wow. All those thousands of kids realising the clips of Megan dancing at her 13th birthday party were sent over clear text http instead of TLS.
Come on man, no one threat models this. this isnt NASA evaluating a new space app.
Threat modelling for a possible future is different from threat modelling for today.
The Netherlands kept good records of which religion a person belonged to in the 1930s, to be able to swiftly fulfil any possible religious requirements on burial services. A nice service.
The nazis thought so too, a few years later.
What an unbelievably ignorant thing to say. Why are you downplaying this?
Privacy concerns with a Chinese social media app. Shocker.
The kids don’t give a rats ass.
Pointing out flaws in end to end encryption isnt changing that.
@zante@slrpnk.net
This new comment is even more ignorant. But feel free to comment what you suggest instead of downplaying this analysis.
Yeah, it’s been said before and it didn’t add much to the conversation the first time.
Skills