China’s Cyberspace Administration has ordered Apple to pull Jack Dorsey’s Bitchat from its China App Store, citing regulations that require apps with “social mobilization” capabilities to pass a government security assessment before launch.
- The Cyberspace Administration of China told Apple to remove Bitchat from its China App Store and TestFlight beta, effective February 2026, a ban Dorsey disclosed publicly on April 5
- The CAC cited Article 3 of its regulations governing apps with “public opinion or social mobilization capabilities,” which require a mandatory security review before deployment
- Bitchat, which runs entirely over Bluetooth mesh networks with no internet required, has surpassed three million downloads globally and was widely used by protesters in Iran, Uganda, Nepal, and Indonesia to bypass government shutdowns
Block CEO Jack Dorsey confirmed on X that his decentralized messaging app, Bitchat, was pulled from China’s App Store in February 2026 at the direct request of the Cyberspace Administration of China. As crypto.news reported, the CAC cited Article 3 of its regulations covering online services with “public opinion or social mobilization capabilities,” a provision that has been in force since 2018 and requires a state security assessment before any such platform can launch. Both the App Store listing and the TestFlight beta version are now unavailable in China, though the app remains accessible in all other markets.
Why Bitchat Became a Target
Bitchat’s core design is what put it on Beijing’s radar. The app operates entirely over Bluetooth and mesh networks, requiring no internet connection. That architecture makes it functionally immune to conventional government filtering and firewall blocking — the same tools China relies on to manage digital communication.
That design has given Bitchat an outsized role during political unrest. Protesters in Iran used it to communicate as authorities attempted to restrict connectivity during the ongoing conflict. As crypto.news documented, Bitchat also surged in Uganda ahead of the 2026 general elections, where opposition leader Bobi Wine actively urged supporters to download it in preparation for expected internet blackouts. Authorities in Nepal, Madagascar, and Indonesia have also seen surges in Bitchat adoption during periods of restricted connectivity.
Apple’s review team delivered a pointed message to Dorsey alongside the removal notice: “We know this stuff is complicated, but it is your responsibility to understand and make sure your app conforms with all local laws.”
Three Million Downloads and Still Climbing
Despite the ban, Bitchat’s global reach continues to expand. Chrome download statistics show the app has surpassed three million total downloads, with over 92,000 recorded in the past week alone. The Google Play Store reports more than one million installs. Regional breakdowns are not publicly available.
Dorsey first launched Bitchat in beta via Apple’s TestFlight in July 2025, framing it as a weekend experiment in Bluetooth mesh networking. The app encrypts messages using AES-256, stores all data only in device memory rather than on central servers, and supports Bitcoin transactions natively. Billionaire fund manager Bill Ackman publicly called it a practical tool for censored environments like Iran.
The App Store as the Only Lever
What makes China’s move notable is the mechanism chosen. Bitchat has no central servers to pressure, no user accounts to surveil, and no phone number requirement. Its decentralized design gives regulators virtually no conventional chokepoint to target. Forcing an App Store removal is one of the few available tools — and it does not affect the app’s operation for users who already have it installed or access it through other means.

