The Taiwan region's decision to ban mainland-based social platform RedNote for one year has drawn sharp criticism from Beijing, with officials warning the move harms residents' fundamental rights and cross-strait understanding. Chen Binhua, spokesperson for the State Council Taiwan Affairs Office, stated on December 10, 2025 that the prohibition 'exposes the Democratic Progressive Party authorities' fear of truthful information exchange.'
Over 3 million users in Taiwan, predominantly under age 35, have lost access to the Shanghai-developed app known for lifestyle content and cultural exchange. Chen emphasized the ban particularly impacts young residents' ability 'to comprehend the mainland's authentic development' while undermining digital entrepreneurship opportunities.
The spokesperson accused DPP leadership of maintaining an 'information echo chamber' through content restrictions, asserting that RedNote's organic user interactions had become 'an antidote to deliberate misinformation campaigns.' Analysts suggest the dispute reflects broader tensions as Beijing pushes for enhanced digital connectivity across the Taiwan Strait.
With RedNote serving as both social network and income source for many Taiwan residents, economic concerns compound free speech debates. The mainland's response signals increased scrutiny of Taipei's tech governance decisions amid ongoing discussions about digital sovereignty in cross-strait relations.
Reference(s):
RedNote ban undermines freedom, harms interests of Taiwan people
cgtn.com








