Something for semi-private (group or 1:1) chats (rather than public posts), with English-language support, perhaps like Telegram, WhatsApp, etc. Ideally run by a Chinese company (not a US company doing business there or one with US partners like TikTok) with servers, domain etc. in China. I was looking at QQ a while ago but I think their international app version was no longer offered. Wechat is currently closed to registration. Thanks!

  • Gucci_Minh [he/him]
    ·
    3 years ago

    Unfortunately WeChat is probably your best bet despite closed registrations. If you can find someone with an account they can register you by scanning their QR code, which is the only way you can register as a foreigner without a Chinese ID card I think. Once you have an account you can register anyone else you want to talk to through the same method. WeChat is mostly a domestic chat service and the international version is mostly used by the diaspora to talk with friends and family back home, so they don't really expect or necessarily want people outside this demographic to use WeChat. If security or privacy is what you're looking for, sorry, but even if you use some esoteric open source p2p encrypted chat service with a userbase of 3, google/apple can still know everything.

  • PorkrollPosadist [he/him, they/them]
    ·
    edit-2
    3 years ago

    You can run your very own Matrix homeserver anywhere, including on a VPS located in China (though this comes with the responsibility of maintenance, and I don't know any Chinese ISPs to recommend offhand.).

    There are probably some public homeservers already running there too, though I'm not familliar with any.

  • fixtheloginsystem [he/him]
    ·
    3 years ago

    Why do you want a Chinese-based one?

    If you’re trying to pierce the firewall, iMessage and WeChat work, and just VPN-ing is easy enough.

    If you’re looking for security, Telegram is probably the best bet. If it’s used by Nazis, ISIS, and BLM, it’s probably good enough for you. Chinese stuff isn’t really designed for a threat profile of dissidents in foreign states.

    • ancom20 [none/use name]
      cake
      hexagon
      ·
      3 years ago

      Because China won't hand over user data to American govt/corporations or help them out ("information sharing", MLAT, etc.). US also won't invade/hack China. Just to have as another non-US based communication option.

    • prismaTK
      ·
      edit-2
      10 months ago

      deleted by creator