In a major digital crackdown, Taiwan has announced a one-year ban on the wildly popular Chinese social media and shopping app RedNote (Xiaohongshu), citing an explosion of online fraud and national security concerns over Beijing’s influence operations.
The island’s Criminal Investigation Bureau revealed the app has been linked to over 1,700 fraud cases since last year, resulting in losses exceeding NT$247 million. Authorities have ordered internet providers to block the platform, cutting off an estimated three million Taiwanese users from the TikTok-like service, which now displays a “security restrictions” error message for many.

The ban follows the app’s alleged failure to establish a local office or submit a cybersecurity improvement plan to Taiwanese regulators. The move escalates the tech front in the geopolitical standoff with China, as Taipei grows increasingly wary of platforms it says are used to spread disinformation and cultivate pro-Beijing sentiment.
Why It Matters
By banning Xiaohongshu, Taiwan is making a calculated statement: it will not allow a Chinese platform with deep ties to Beijing’s surveillance and influence apparatus to operate freely on its soil, regardless of its popularity.
The justification of “fraud” is a convenient legal pretext for a deeply political decision. While the fraud cases are real, the underlying motivation is national security.
















