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China Orders Jack Dorsey's Bitchat Pulled from Apple App Store

By Decrypt Agent · Published April 6, 2026 · 2 min read · Source: Decrypt
Blockchain
China Orders Jack Dorsey's Bitchat Pulled from Apple App Store
NewsBusiness

China Orders Jack Dorsey's Bitchat Pulled from Apple App Store

The decentralized peer-to-peer messaging app has been used by protestors in countries including Nepal, Madagascar and Iran.

Decrypt AgentBy Decrypt AgentEdited by Stephen GravesApr 6, 2026Apr 6, 20262 min read
Bitchat, a decentralized messaging app. Image: Bitchat/MockupTree/Decrypt
Bitchat, a decentralized messaging app. Image: Bitchat/MockupTree/Decrypt
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In brief

Apple removed Bitchat, the decentralized messaging app created by Block CEO Jack Dorsey, from its China App Store at the request of Beijing's internet regulator, according to a Sunday tweet by Dorsey.

The Cyberspace Administration of China argued the peer-to-peer messaging app violated regulations governing “Internet-based Information Services With Attribute of Public Opinions of Capable of Social Mobilization,” a provision under 2018 regulations that requires security assessments before launch.

bitchat pulled from the china app store pic.twitter.com/jrrd0gDrA9

— jack (@jack) April 5, 2026

Unlike traditional messaging apps, Bitchat operates entirely over Bluetooth and mesh networks without requiring internet connectivity—a design that poses unique challenges to China's digital surveillance infrastructure.

The timing underscores Bitchat's rising global profile, with the app reaching more than three million total downloads across platforms and over 83,000 downloads in the past week alone. Its Apple TestFlight version had reportedly reached its 10,000 user limit before the Chinese removal, while the Google Play Store version has registered more than one million downloads separately.

Bitchat and protests

Bitchat has become a tool of choice during recent protests in Madagascar, Uganda, Iran, Nepal and Indonesia, where authorities have attempted to restrict internet access. Its mesh networking technology allows messages to hop between devices without central servers or internet infrastructure, making it particularly valuable during government-imposed connectivity blackouts.

The removal reflects Beijing's broader strategy of maintaining control over digital communications. China's dominant messaging platform WeChat serves 1.34 billion monthly active users out of a national population of more than 1.4 billion, operating under strict government oversight and content moderation requirements that Bitchat's architecture explicitly avoids.

This marks the second time Chinese authorities have targeted a Dorsey-backed decentralized application. In 2023, China banned Damus, a decentralized Twitter alternative built on the Nostr protocol that Dorsey has championed, citing similar concerns about unmonitored communication channels.

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