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October 06, 2014

FireChat Helps Hong Kong Protesters Overcome Traffic Jam

By Lulu Yilun Chen and Jake Rudnitsky 
October 05, 2014 11:13 PM EDT

Photographer: Tomohiro Ohsumi/Bloomberg

Demonstrators use their mobile devices in their tent outside the Central Government Offices in Hong Kong, on Oct. 5, 2014.

Hong Kong (700) pro-democracy demonstrators finding it difficult to communicate over congested mobile-phone networks are downloading the application FireChat about 100,000 times a day in an effort to stay connected.

Open Garden Inc.’s FireChat, which gained popularity during protests this year in Iraq and Taiwan, allows users to send messages using Bluetooth or peer-to-peer Wi-Fi, which is optimal for places where cellular networks are congested.

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Protesters massing in Hong Kong’s Admiralty, Causeway Bay and Mong Kok districts are overwhelming wireless carrier networks, making applications such as Tencent Holdings Ltd.’s WeChat and WhatsApp Inc. difficult to use. Demonstrators are fueling the 100,000 downloads of FireChat per day among Hong Kong’s 7 million people, said Stanislav Shalunov, chief technology officer of Open Garden.

“The speed with which it was adopted in Hong Kong surprised us, and apparently was just due to word-of-mouth,” Shalunov said. “FireChat is becoming the de facto standard for any activist organizing protests.”

Pro-democracy protesters allowed civil servants to enter Hong Kong’s government offices as the demonstrations that had paralyzed parts of the city for 10 days thinned after the start of talks with student leaders. The move followed an ultimatum from the city’s leader to open the site where 3,000 people work by today or face possible police action.

Finding Demonstrators

FireChat has attracted 5 million global users, according to San Francisco-based Open Garden’s website. The free app allows users to join different chat groups and create their own after turning on Bluetooth or Wi-Fi on their mobile phones. It works best if the phones are within 10 meters (33 feet) of each other.

“I use FireChat for the sake of finding my friends,” said Rainbow Wong, 21, a student at the University of Hong Kong participating in the protests. “Even if there are 100 people in the chat room, it works.”

The tool could be useful in circumventing controls by oppressive regimes, Shalunov said. Users have experienced difficulties in using the app in China, where the government censors the Web by blocking pornography, gambling and content critical of the ruling Communist Party.

“Mainland China’s government is not our biggest fan right now,” Shalunov said.

FireChat isn’t content with just being a communication tool for protesters. Shalunov said the app also helps people without Internet communicate with each other.

“There are some 5 billion people off the grid, either without access to Internet or who can’t afford it,” Shalunov said. “They are our market, not just revolutions -- which don’t happen all that often.”

One hurdle exists, though. All messages posted on FireChat are open to the public, making it unlikely for users to conduct private conversations.

“I think I will only use it in times of crisis,” Wong said. “It’s difficult to find a specific friend, and I don’t want to make my messages public.”

To contact the reporters on this story: Lulu Yilun Chen in Hong Kong atychen447@bloomberg.net; Jake Rudnitsky in Moscow atjrudnitsky@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Michael Tighe atmtighe4@bloomberg.net Garry Smith

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