HONG KONG—Beijing’s censors appeared to slam the door on Clubhouse, Silicon Valley’s latest social-media hit, after a frenzied week in which the audio-only chat app helped spark a rare outpouring of freewheeling debate on taboo topics in the Chinese-speaking world.

On Monday evening, Clubhouse users from Beijing to Shenzhen said their chats—some of which touched on the plight of China’s Uighur Muslims or the Tiananmen Square protests of 1989—were disconnected mid-conversation, replaced by an error message.

Thousands then quickly swamped newly created Clubhouse chat rooms to confirm the blockage after climbing back in using a virtual private network to circumvent China’s internet firewall.

Some said new user registrations were impossible because text messages with access codes were no longer being sent to phones.

After comparing notes, they concluded that Chinese censorship was the likely culprit. Many Clubhouse users in China had been anticipating a crackdown on the app in the week since the invite-only app began gathering large numbers of new users in the country.

This post first appeared on wsj.com

You May Also Like

Get £200 FREE credit in Virgin Media TV and broadband sale – ends SOON

If you’re on the hunt for an all-in-one TV and broadband package,…

Robot chef Flippy can flip up to 300 burgers a DAY and cook the fries

A robot chef named Flippy, designed to cook 300 burgers a day,…

Check your iPhone NOW as thousands of apps set to vanish – as Apple says 2.8MILLION have been banned from App Store

APPLE is binning thousands of apps from its App Store as part…

Ingenious and bizarre way the US Government is preventing a rabies outbreak: Planes drop bait laced with vaccines for racoons to munch on

American health officials are preventing an outbreak of rabies by dropping vaccines…