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Many Chinese people now prefer to manage their contacts using a proprietary mobile messaging and social networking application called WeChat (ćŸźäżĄ WÄixĂŹn). If you frequently meet them, you might be tempted to set up your own WeChat ID for their convenience.âThis can however lead to some quite ephemeral contact sharing (e.g. someone you met on a bus adds you but later deletes you).âSince I found very little English documentation about how this manifests itself, I experimentally confirmed the following in 2015:
Other partyâs action - Result on your side
Delete conversation - No immediate effect.âIf you send further messages, a new conversation is started on the other device, but it still looks like one continuous conversation on yours.
Clear chat history - Similar to âDelete conversationâ above
Delete and Leave (in a group chat) - Deletes *their* copy of the chat history and removes them from the group.âThe group continues to exist, and is not notified of their departure unless other members actively re-read the membership list.â(WeChat version 8 added an option to *really* shut down a group; earlier versions required the administrator to remove each member.âEven then, each member continues to keep a copy of the group chat history for the time they were a member, until they delete it themselves or reinstall etc, although at least some versions of WeChat will delete their copy of the history if they accept an invitation to *re-join* the group.âFor larger groups there is also a limit to the number of members displayed in âChat infoâ, leading to some members being âinvisibleâ unless you tap the words âAll membersâ below the list, the Chinese of which is æ„çć šéšçŸ€æć which is more obviously a âcommandâ than the English in WeChat Version 7, which was clarified to âView All Membersâ in Version 8.)
Block (ć ć „ jiÄrĂč é»ćć hÄimĂngdÄn) - No immediate effect unless you check their Album (Moments), which behaves as if theyâd selected âDelete contactâ (below).âBut if you send further messages, you are told âThe message is successfully sent but rejected by the receiverâ and the other party is told nothing.â(The word âreceiverâ here evidently means the receiving *account*, not the receiving *device*âthe ârejectedâ text still appears even if the other partyâs phone is powered off at the time.)âThey can still send *you* messages.âNote also that if you send a âbroadcast messageâ (矀çŒ, for some reason located under Me / Settings / General / Features in WeChat 7 and Me / Settings / General / Tools in WeChat 8), you are not told which recipients reject it; you must send *individual* messages to be told.
Delete contact (ć é€ shÄnchĂș) - No immediate effect unless you check their Album (Moments), which will be blank if theyâve turned off âPublic Momentsâ in the privacy settings (but this could also mean theyâve seleted âDonât share my momentsâ with you, or simply havenât ever posted anything for non-Tagged contacts); if they have âPublic Momentsâ turned on then you will see the message âOnly 10 posts of this user are visibleâ (the Chinese version of this message begins ânon good-friendâ which was lost in translation prior to 2019âthe English version has since been updated to âOnly the last 10 Moments are shown because you arenât friends on WeChatâ), and the options to Like or comment on the posts are not displayed (but some versions of WeChat still let you âLikeâ the album âcoverâ).âNot to be confused with the message âOnly 3 days of Moments are viewableâ (which happens if they set Settings / Privacy / Set a time limit for Moments viewable by others)â*that* one applies whether or not youâve been deleted, and still lets you comment if not.
If they deleted you and you try to send further messages outside the Album, you are automatically put back through the process of adding yourself to their contacts: if theyâve turned on âfriend confirmationâ, youâll see â(Person) has requested friend verification.âPlease send a friend request to chatâ with a link to do it; otherwise your message goes through immediately and they are given the message along with the option to add you.âPrevious conversations are deleted from their side but not from yours.ââBroadcast messagesâ are silently dropped as above.
If you attempt to create a group chat via â+â / âNew chatâ (which lets you select up to 39 people) and select 2 or more: if *none* of the people you select have you in their contacts (or if all the ones who do are blocking you), you get the message âUnable to start group chatâ with âhasnât added you as a friend yetâ (you can then press Cancel and review the selection); if *some* have you in their contacts (and are not blocking you) then the group chat *will* be created but youâll get a message at the top saying which ones were not added.âDo not do this just to test though, as anyone who has their account set not to be automatically added to groups will be sent an immediate invitation (some websites claim nobody is notified about a group until you send the first message, but thatâs inaccurate).âThe invitation is automatically declined by anyone who has you as a blocked contact, and you get told about this action, but those who have not blocked you might see an invitation.
Incidentally it may be worth knowing that the Chinese version of âMomentsâ is, not çć» piĂ nkĂš as the English word might suggest, but æćć pĂ©ngyouquÄn âcircle of friendsâ (sometimes colloquially abbreviated to ç„šć piĂ oquÄn because ç„š has the âpâ and the âyâ sound).âBut Iâve seen it used with the measure word æĄ tiĂĄo (strip), which suggests at least some users still think of æćć pĂ©ngyouquÄn as referring to *the list of posts* rather than the people to whom theyâre attributed.
Block *and* delete contact - Behaves exactly like Delete contact alone, since deleted contacts are also removed from the Blocked List
æé» LÄ hÄi (æèż lÄjĂŹn é»ćć hÄimĂngdÄn) - As far as I can tell, these are not actual WeChat options but are colloquial terms for the above âblockâ or âdeleteâ operations, probably carried over from other software.âHowever I have not tried *every* version on *all* platformsâthere might be variation in terminology between WeChat versions.
Report (æèŻ tĂłusĂč) - In 2021 I submitted a real one as a contactâs account was taken over by someone who used it to send me dirty pictures.âI was asked to choose messages to send as evidence; WeChat responded with âViolation confirmedâ and âUser handled with Temporary Blockâ and the person was no longer listed on my Chats or Contacts view but was still findable on Search and on Me / Settings / Privacy / Blocked List (so, blocked for me, but also prevented from logging in to WeChat).
Uninstall the WeChat application - No effect.âTheyâre just offline until they reinstall.âI donât know how long it takes for an unused account to expire.
Delete account - Contact is greyed out and marked âAccount deletedâ; selecting it says âaccount deleted by other userâ and presents a Delete button which, if pressed, also deletes the conversations; otherwise any attempt to send more messages is met with âThe other user cannot receive messageâ
Spontaneous âDelete contactâ is also possible.âThis is when WeChat deletes one of your contacts, resulting in the person and all previous chats disappearing without trace, as if youâd deleted it yourself.âSince âDelete contactâ takes 5 screen taps, it cannot easily be blamed on an overly-sensitive touch-screen, and since I was unable to reproduce it, I can only conclude itâs either a race-condition bug or else a user action available only in the China version of the software and/or to an administrator.â(Please donât âgaslightâ me: I *know* that contact existed before it disappeared!âOn 7th August 2015 a *Shanghai Daily* reporter used the sentence âThe woman vanished from Wangâs WeChat contacts afterwardâ, which might imply a âcompletely disappear from the other partyâs contactsâ function somehow being available in China, unless the word âvanishâ was here used metaphorically.)
In early 2021 WeChat started to display the Chinese-only error message èŻ·ć èźŸçœźæćæé when you try to add a contact.âThis message was displayed too fast for me to read and it could not be copied: I had to screen-shot it and use OCR to find out what it saidâitâs basically âplease set friend permissions firstâ and refers to a new setting at the bottom of the Add screen (you might have to scroll down if youâre in large print on a small device) that lets you choose whether or not to also share your âMomentsâ with this person.âIt might have been better if the developers had set it to *focus* those controls when this happens, but at least we now know.â(In particular, this message *doesnât* say the person is refusing your Add request.)
After a few months, sharing Moments seemed to be always set by default, so that message was no longer an issue.
In 2020 it was pointed out to me that the standard WeChat âsmileâ emoji (the one that can be produced by typing [Smile] or [ćŸźçŹ] in your text, or selecting the closed-mouth smile from the menu) is seen by some as mocking rather than happiness, and it is now safer to use [Chuckle] ([ć·çŹ]), [Grin], [Joyful], [Laugh] or the Unicode emojis U+1F600, U+1F601 or U+1F604 (Iâm not sure where the older U+263A fits into this).
A related issue is âstickersâ (called âemoji packsâ in the Chinese version)âsome youngsters have sticker-packs with seizure-inducing strobic flashes.âI have contacted Tencent urging them to implement a âdisable animationsâ option and I suggest you do the same (they might notice if more people ask); meanwhile if you have photosensitive epilepsy youâd better stay out of any chat that might include young people, in case in their innocence they post one of those or (even worse) a whole series of them and accidentally give you a seizure.â(In 2022 some people also had Chinese New Year greeting stickers that strobed, and sent these to all their contacts, unaware that the flashing can create problems.)
If someone tries to send you a âred packetâ, the funds they deposited will be returned to them if you donât open it within 24Â hours.
WeChat used to allow non-Chinese accounts to open âred packetsâ and later forward the balance to other Chinese friends (it could not be spent outside China), but in 2019 they began to require a China bank card for any transactionâand the app takes you through a lengthy âreal-name confirmationâ process before it even tells you this requirement.
For a time starting in late 2021, WeChat had a partially-translated message whenever any non-Tencent URL is tapped: âThis webpage may not be provided by Weixin/WeChatâ with a button 继ç»èźżéź that means âcontinue visitingââthat âmay notâ could be less ambiguously translated *might* not (itâs not a âsite blockedâ message).âThese âexternalâ pages are now opened in a browser that lacks the WeChat-specific Share controls, although any pages previously shared in the âWeChat linkâ format (i.e. without a visible URL) could still be re-shared as such (this is likely a bug to be fixed later).âA 2022 update removed the warning message.
WeChatâs dominance in China was perhaps assisted by the companyâs good relationship with that countryâs network police, with its mobile operators (SIM cards with WeChat-specific data allowances are not unheard of), and with integrated shopping and payment services and âportalsâ to local facilities.âOutside China, WeChat tends to lack these advantages, but many mainland Chinese visitors and immigrants keep using it anyway due to their existing network of contacts, and due to the convenience of WeChatâs automatic contact-exchange facilities.âScanning a QRÂ Code seems to have become the most popular method (this wasnât introduced to WhatsApp until mid-2020).âA WeChat update in mid-2017 prevented the generation of QRÂ codes while offline: if you expect patchy signal coverage, you now have to prepare by taking a screenshot of your QR code while connected.âFor most of 2017 it seemed these codes needed re-generating every 4Â weeks, but in 2018 one of mine still worked after 28Â weeks.
The network effect does not appear to be very much diminished by the need for their data to be sent through Chinese servers (which, apart from anything else, can be slow when youâre outside China), nor with the âvanishing contactsâ issue or WeChatâs limited functionality on the desktop.âAt least its sound compression ratio is reasonable, and Version 7 made a dark mode available (although not on the desktop version) and improved the range of font sizes under Settings / General (Version 8 fixed some layout issues this caused on small screens).
Sometimes theyâll accept an alternative installed alongside WeChat for use while theyâre in the UK.âMy current recommendation is Telegram Messenger, which is run by a non-profit, can be set to larger fonts, has a good range of desktop clients, etc.âBut not everyone even understands what it *means* to install a different application.âSome of the older generation I met evidently had it installed by the manufacturer, a shop, or a friend or relative, and donât know what I mean by âinstall something elseâ.âAdditionally, some older devices (e.g. iOS 4.x) cannot run recent versions of many applications, so it would be necessary to find an old version and somehow âside-loadâ it, or risk an OS replacement.
As with any form of messaging, itâs probably best not to accept an âaddâ if you donât know who it is, especially if you actually *visit* an Asian country: con artists have reportedly tricked victims into going to a particular location for a âfirst meeting in personâ, only to be held to ransom by gangsters on arrival (this crime is easier to commit in small countries like Singapore).âIn June 2016 my WeChat ID (which I had given only to selected Chinese people I met in Cambridge) suddenly received an âaddâ request claiming to be from Malaysia and not giving me any clue who it was; to give them the benefit of the doubt I wrote âApa khabar?â but received no reply and the next day eight other anonymous âMalaysiansâ had tried to add me.âI find this highly suspicious.âMy ID could have been found via brute-force search, most likely of QQ numbers: I had my old QQ number linked to the account, but disabled âfind by QQ IDâ after this incident because I believe none of my genuine earlier contacts who had my QQ number are still likely to use it to find me.â(I later discovered that QQ number was stolen so I unlinked it from the WeChat account completely.)
On iOS, a pre-6.2.6 version of WeChat was infected by malware due to its developers having accidentally downloaded âXcodeGhostâ instead of Xcode.âAdditionally, we donât know what Tencent itself does with the information WeChat can read, so itâs probably best to avoid storing things like company-confidential documents on the same device, just in case.
The notes on this page are provided in the hope that they are useful, but they are not official instructions and may contain mistakes.âYour use of them is at your own risk. All material © Silas S. Brown unless otherwise stated. QR Code is the UK registered trademark of Denso Corporation. Telegram is a trademark of Telegram Messenger LLP. Unicode is a registered trademark of Unicode, Inc. in the United States and other countries. WeChat is a trademark of Tencent Holdings Limited. WhatsApp is a trademark of WhatsApp Inc., registered in the U.S. and other countries. Any other trademarks I mentioned without realising are trademarks of their respective holders.