Apple has removed Jack Dorsey’s decentralized messaging app Bitchat from its China App Store after it was given an order from Beijing, highlighting the growing friction between censorship-resistant technologies and state-controlled digital ecosystems.
Dorsey shared a screenshot from the Apple App review team where he was given the notice that Bitchat had been removed from the App Store in February, with the app's TestFlight beta also being disabled in the country following a request from the Cyberspace Administration of China (CAC).
The regulator said the app violated rules governing online services with “public opinion or social mobilization capabilities.”
CAC's Allegations
The CAC argued that the app had violated rules governing online services with "public opinion or social mobilization capabilities, a rule that dictates that any platform that has the ability to influence public discourse and enable coordinated activity must first undergo government clearance before its launch.
Apple reiterated that developers are required to comply with local laws in every jurisdiction where their apps are distributed, reinforcing its role as an enforcer of regional regulatory frameworks.
The move underscores China’s broader approach to digital governance, where communication tools are subject to strict oversight if they fall outside state-monitored infrastructure. Offline architecture puts Bitchat at odds with censorship regimes
Bitchat’s core functionality is what makes it both unique and controversial. The app operates entirely through Bluetooth and mesh networks, allowing users to communicate without an internet connection. This design makes it effectively immune to traditional shutdown tactics such as firewall filtering or network blackouts.
That capability has driven adoption in regions facing political unrest or connectivity restrictions. Bitchat has been used during protests in Madagascar, Uganda, Nepal, Indonesia and Iran, where authorities attempted to curb dissent by limiting internet access.
However, the same censorship-resistant architecture presents a direct challenge to tightly controlled environments like China, where the government maintains extensive oversight of online communication. In this context, Bitchat’s inability to be monitored through conventional channels likely accelerated regulatory intervention.
Global growth continues despite China ban
Despite its removal in China, Bitchat remains available in other markets and continues to gain traction. The app has recorded more than three million downloads across platforms, including over one million installs on Google Play, with tens of thousands of new users added in recent weeks.
The clash reflects a broader structural tension between decentralized technologies and national regulatory systems. As peer-to-peer and offline-first applications gain momentum, they are increasingly testing the limits of jurisdictional control—particularly in regions where digital communication is treated as a matter of state security.
For Apple, the episode once again highlights the balancing act between maintaining access to key markets like China and navigating the growing adoption of censorship-resistant technologies built outside traditional platform controls.