Apple delists Jack Dorsey’s decentralized messaging app Bitchat in China

Apple has taken down Bitchat, the decentralized me

Apple delists Jack Dorsey’s decentralized messaging app Bitchat in China

Apple delists Jack Dorsey’s decentralized messaging app Bitchat in China

Apple has taken down Bitchat, the decentralized messaging application built by Bitcoin advocate Jack Dorsey, from the China App Store after the Cyberspace Administration of China (CAC) flagged it for non-compliance with local regulations.

Dorsey confirmed the action in a statement on X.

The CAC, operating under China’s central cyberspace authority, is responsible for regulating online content and cybersecurity, coordinating content management, and approving internet news services. The CAC also acts as the main enforcement body and manages licensing for news and foreign-related financial information services.

In a notice shared by Dorsey, authorities said Bitchat violated Article 3 related to services capable of influencing public opinion or mobilization. The app continues to be available outside China, but access and testing within the country have been suspended.

What the takedown order actually says

Article 3 mandates that internet service providers perform security assessments and assume responsibility for outcomes when key risk conditions arise.

These include adding or launching features tied to public opinion or mobilization, important changes to new technologies, or rapid user expansion that alters influence. It also covers cases where existing controls fail to stop harmful content or when authorities explicitly demand an assessment.

The takedown reflects the conflict between China’s strict content controls and tools built to operate outside standard censorship systems. Because Bitchat is decentralized and relies on peer-to-peer technology, it drew the attention of Chinese authorities.

The app still works in China

The removal does not make Bitchat inoperable in China.

Because the app’s core functionality runs over local Bluetooth connections rather than the internet infrastructure, existing installations continue to work.

Users who already have the app can still communicate through mesh networks without degradation of service.

The constraint is purely distributional: new users in mainland China can no longer download Bitchat through Apple’s ecosystem. Android users can still obtain the app through Google’s Play Store or directly from the project’s website, though Google’s services are themselves largely inaccessible behind China’s Great Firewall without circumvention tools.

Bitchat has been described as a “weekend project” that evolved into an open-source tool with real-world applications in protest movements and disaster scenarios where conventional communications infrastructure is unavailable or compromised.

The app’s architecture draws philosophical inspiration from Bitcoin’s anti-censorship principles: decentralize the infrastructure, remove trusted intermediaries, and make the protocol itself resistant to single points of failure.

Disclosure: This article was edited by Vivian Nguyen. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

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