this post was submitted on 18 Jan 2025
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Summary

Many Americans are migrating to RedNote, a Chinese-owned app based in China, raising significant privacy and security concerns.

Experts warn that RedNote, based in China, is subject to Chinese laws, including the Personal Information Protection Law and Data Security Law, which grant the government rights to request data and cooperation with intelligence operations.

Enforcement of these laws is often opaque. Analysts highlight risks of data collection, algorithm manipulation, and censorship on RedNote.

Critics argue the U.S. lacks comprehensive privacy laws, driving users to platforms like RedNote that may pose even greater risks than TikTok.

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[–] Sir_Kevin@lemmy.dbzer0.com 55 points 1 year ago (10 children)

Boo hoo! The US can't spy on it's people anymore because everyone got wise and switched to foriegn apps.

This has nothing to do with the security or privacy of the people. They're pissed because they're losing power over them.

On a side note, everyone that has joined REDnote is waking up to the lifetime of propaganda the american government has been feeding them. This past week has been wild.

[–] spujb@lemmy.cafe 44 points 1 year ago (4 children)

there’s genuinely been some class consciousness getting into play

i saw some users from both countries compare prices of eggs and vegetables, and they even did the necessary math of accounting for average wage and cost of living. the chinese users are not allowed to talk about their politics (sadly; this is a bad thing) but they are allowed to talk about foreign politics and they are probably bigger fans of Luigi Mangione even than i have seen in English speaking social media. there are candid discussions of queerphobia as well in its different social (and for the US, political too) manifestations between countries.

[–] SoftTeeth@lemmy.world 40 points 1 year ago (3 children)

The funny thing is at any point the US government can ban the collection of personal user data. It could just be illegal for any company to do this in the US.

But like you said, it's just about the US wanting to spy on its own citizens but not wanting other countries to.

[–] RyeBread@feddit.org 7 points 1 year ago

Look at the companies with the highest market cap in the US and just start counting how many make money from selling personal data. The US will never implement wide sweeping privacy laws. To the detriment of everyone.

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