It's an unexpected union bought on by the looming TikTok ban thanks to a social media app that doesn't even officially have an English name.
With the fate of TikTok up in the air in America, social media users have flocked to another Chinese-owned app called Xiaohongshu - and users are bonding as they adapt to the platform.
The name of the social media app, which translates to Little Red Book, has been shortened by US users to RedNote and has been so popular it surged to the top position on Apple's US App Store this week.
As per CNN, as of Wednesday, the hashtag 'TikTok refugee' had nearly 250 million views and over 5.5 million comments, referencing the thousands of American users that had downloaded the app.
The swift migration to the new platform has led to users coming together, as Chinese users assist their American counterparts in translating and understanding the interface.
'I downloaded the app and checked it out and it's currently thousands of people from America and China all laughing and meme-ing together,' one user wrote on X, formerly known as Twitter.
They went on to say, "Chinese users will share a meme of a cat that says, 'I'm taking your cat's data!' and then they'll chuckle and exchange cat pictures among themselves."
Even language app Duolingo chimed in, with a sarcastic post saying: 'Oh so NOW you're learning Mandarin.'
View pictures in App save up to 80% data.
View pictures in App save up to 80% data.
In a popular post that went viral, a Xiaohongshu user sought assistance from new American users for their English homework, garnering more than 2,000 likes.
"One comment said, 'Imagine me recounting to my grandkids the story of how the government used to push propaganda against the Chinese, and how, in the end, we forged a friendship through memes and English assignments.'"
"I wish I could have an American friend," another Chinese user commented.
"This is the vision the internet was meant to fulfill. People coming together and discovering that the true adversaries are those who fear losing their influence as we recognize our strength in numbers," expressed one enthusiastic user.
"Last night, I became a member, and generally speaking, they primarily seek our respect for their culture. They're genuinely thrilled to have a platform where we can connect and communicate," added another American user.
On X, one user humorously stated, "Prohibiting TikTok might just be the most significant move towards world peace in the entire history of humanity."
"Forget about TikTok; we're busy bringing countries together, one meme at a time," chimed in another.
Another X user, AI expert Olivia Moore, described the American migration to RedNote as the 'craziest accidental cultural exchange ever.'
View pictures in App save up to 80% data.
View pictures in App save up to 80% data.
View pictures in App save up to 80% data.
View pictures in App save up to 80% data.
View pictures in App save up to 80% data.
View pictures in App save up to 80% data.
View pictures in App save up to 80% data.
View pictures in App save up to 80% data.
"Countless users found themselves using an app that wasn't available in their native language. Just a day later, it became seen as impolite to not provide subtitles for videos in that language," she shared on social media.
Founded in Shanghai in 2013, RedNote merges features from Instagram, TikTok, and Pinterest, enabling users to share lifestyle-related content, product evaluations, and brief video clips.
RedNote enables users to broadcast video clips in real-time and includes built-in e-commerce functionalities, allowing individuals to make purchases straight from the app.
While TikTok focuses on short-form videos, RedNote还包含图像、评论和社区讨论。.
Boasting more than 300 million monthly active users, it has emerged as a popular alternative to TikTok, particularly in light of worries regarding a possible ban on the app in the United States.
A US law mandates that ByteDance must divest its ownership of the widely-used social media platform by January 19, or it risks being banned due to national security concerns..
Noel Francisco, a lawyer representing TikTok, stated that finalizing a sale of the popular short video app, which has 170 million users in the United States, would be unfeasible by that deadline. He warned that the platform would likely go offline rapidly, effectively leading to its shutdown.
TikTok argues that the ruling would infringe upon the free speech rights of its millions of American users across the country.