casinyeam TikTok users brace for ban: ‘More sad than shocked’
Updated:2025-01-20 04:58 Views:109This photograph in Paris on January 15, 2025, shows logos of Chinese-owned mobile applications Xiaohongshu (L) and TikTok. In the days leading up to a proposed United-States government ban on the social media platform TikTok, US users have turned to another Chinese-owned app, Xiaohongshu. (Photo by Anna KURTH / Agence France-Presse)
SAN FRANCISCO, United States — “I almost, like, don’t know how to define myself without TikTokcasinyeam,” content creator Ayman Chaudhary sighed, reflecting the consternation of millions over US authorities’ scheduled banning Sunday of the hugely popular app.
After months of legal tussles, the US Supreme Court on Friday upheld a law that would ban the video-sharing platform – used by 170 million Americans – in the name of national security, unless its Chinese owners reach an 11th-hour deal to sell it to American buyers.
“I’m more sad than shocked,” the 24-year-old Chaudhary told Agence France-Presse. “But still, it’s sad and disappointing that the US government has come together to ban an app instead of banding together to adopt a law that matters about health or education.”
Article continues after this advertisementREAD: Biden won’t enforce US TikTok ban – official
FEATURED STORIES TECHNOLOGY AI antivenom shows 100% success rate against lethal cobra venom TECHNOLOGY Accounting technicians can boost Philippine economy – group TECHNOLOGY Ransomware incidents increased by 11% in 2024, says Check PointIt remains uncertain whether TikTok will turn out the lights on Sunday, January 19 – for a single day or forever. Potential buyers exist, though TikTok’s owner, Chinese tech company ByteDance, has systematically refused to part with its crown jewel.
President-elect Donald Trump, just days from his second inauguration, said Friday that he “must have time” to decide whether to enforce the high court’s ruling. He promised a decision “in the not too distant future.”
Article continues after this advertisementUntil then, Ayman and countless other content creators have been left gloomily contemplating a future without TikTok.
Article continues after this advertisement Mandarin ‘out of spite’?“I started five years ago in 2020 during (the COVID-19) quarantine, and I’ve been employed, like, through TikTok, and now it just feels like suddenly I’m unemployed,” said Ayman, an avid reader who offers book recommendations on the platform, earning enough from ads and sponsors to pay her bills.
Article continues after this advertisementLike thousands of other worried TikTok users, she has protectively created a profile on Xiaohongshu (“Little Red Book”), a Chinese social media network similar to Instagram.
Nicknamed “RedNote” by its American users, it was the most downloaded app on the American Apple Store this week.
Article continues after this advertisementPeople are turning to RedNote, Ayman said, as “kind of a protest, because it is a Chinese-owned app, and TikTok is being banned because it’s, like, Chinese-owned.”
READ: A possible US TikTok ban is just days away. A list of other apps available
The language-teaching app Duolingo made a clear pitch to people looking for life after TikTok.
“Learning Mandarin out of spite? You’re not alone,” Duolingo posted on X. “We’ve seen a 216% growth in new Chinese (Mandarin) learners in the US compared to this time last year.”
On TikTok, many American creators have published videos combining their favorite moments on the app with farewell messages urging fans to follow them to other platforms, including Xiaohongshu – while openly mocking the concerns of American lawmakers.
This photograph taken in Paris on January 15, 2025, shows logos of Chinese-owned mobile applications Xiaohongshu (L) and TikTok. In the days leading up to a proposed United-States government ban on the social media platform TikTok, US users have turned to another Chinese-owned app, Xiaohongshu. (Photo by Anna KURTH / Agence France-Presse) TikTok ‘micro-influencers’“Most students don’t buy the narrative that there’s Chinese spies that are controlling the algorithm” on TikTok, said Chris Dier, a history teacher who shares educational videos on TikTok and uses them as well in his classes.
He said students “think that the United States government is not a fan of TikTok because… the government can’t easily control it.”
Xiaohongshu, which is entirely in Mandarin, would not appear to provide a realistic long-term alternative for frustrated American users.
slotslights comREAD: What will happen to TikTok on Apple, Google app stores on Jan 19?
The benchmark PSEi fell by 1.50 percent, or 112.73 points, to close at 7,424.52 while the broader All-Shares index slipped by 1.08 percent, or 44.05 points, to settle at 4,033.36.
Speaking to reporters, ADB country director for the Philippines Pavit Ramachandran said the Manila-based multilateral lender was targeting to green-light the first round of financing under a multi-tranche loan to bankroll the Laguna Lakeshore Road Network project later this year.
Popular even before the pandemic, TikTok exploded among young people living in quarantine, and became a must-have resource for many small companies and start-ups.
“It’s a scary time for a lot of smaller creators, because I think TikTok is one of the very few platforms on the internet where micro-influencers can really thrive,” said Nathan Espinoza, who has more than 550,000 subscribers on the app.
Indeed, the social network has built its success not so much via personal recommendations as through its ultra-powerful algorithm, which lets it rapidly identify users’ interests and funnel content of particular interest to them.
“I’m a more YouTube-centric creator now,” Espinoza said.
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“But I wouldn’t be where I am today without TikTokcasinyeam, because that first viral video showed me that it’s possible, and there’s an audience for the type of videos that I make.”
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