News

Duolingo shares climbed 10% this week as Americans turn to Chinese-language social media app RedNote and rush to learn Mandarin ahead of TikTok's ban slated for Sunday.
Popular language learning platform Duolingo Inc. (NASDAQ: DUOL) has been a key benefactor just from the threat of a TikTok ban. American Users Desperately Trying to Learn Mandarin to Use RedNote ...
Unlike TikTok, which sometimes seems governed by inscrutable algorithms, RedNote puts control back into the hands of its users. However, RedNote is not without its challenges.
In the meantime, TikTok users have started migrating to Xiaohongshu, also known as RedNote, a Chinese social media app that is similar to TikTok. RedNote was the No. 1 free app being downloaded in ...
Duolingo has seen a 216 percent increase in Chinese lessons. Rednote has also introduced in the past week a button to translate comments into English and other languages.
The TikTok ban in the U.S is currently on pause. But a story you may have heard claims the threat of the app going away has led to a massive spike in people learning mandarin on Duolingo.
Shanghai-based Xiaohongshu, or RedNote as it is known in English, is a Chinese social media platform growing in popularity as an alternative to TikTok, but with the same security risks.
Like many other “TikTok refugees,” as they’re called on RedNote, Jewish creators posted excitedly to RedNote, introducing themselves and their content to a new audience.
The Chinese social media app RedNote is full of cute, heartwarming moments after about 500,000 American users fled to it last week to protest the looming U.S. government ban on TikTok.