Posts, DMs, group chats, photos — from the people who actually matter to you. No platform. No algorithm. No ads. No strangers in your feed.
It became an advertising network with your friends sprinkled in for flavour. An algorithm decides what you see. Strangers pile into your feed. Your attention gets sold to the highest bidder.
You logged on to see what your sister was up to. Twenty minutes later you've watched three videos from people you've never heard of, four ads, and one post your sister wrote — if you're lucky.
Sociamail is the social feed you've been waiting for — the one with just your real people in it. You open the app and see posts, photos, and chats from the friends you actually know. Nothing else gets in.
No platform sits between you and your people. No company decides what shows up in your feed. No advertiser pays to interrupt you. Friends post, you see it. You post, your friends see it. That's the entire model.
The engine running underneath is the most reliable communication channel humanity has ever built — the one you've been using since the day you got your first computer. You don't need to know how the engine works to enjoy the ride.
We're not trying to replace your feeds. We're trying to give you back the part of social media that was always supposed to be there.
Use Instagram when you want to watch reels. Use TikTok when you want to laugh. Use X when you want to argue with strangers. Those apps are entertainment.
Use Sociamail when you actually want to talk to your friends. When you want a feed full of your people, not the ones an algorithm picked for you.
Privacy isn't a feature we added. It's the entire architecture.
Sociamail has no central server. There's no Sociamail database holding your messages, your friends list, or your credentials. Everything lives on your device, sent directly between you and the people you communicate with.
If we got hacked tomorrow, the attackers would find a download page and a marketing site. Nothing about you. Nothing about your friends. Nothing about what you've ever posted, messaged, or thought.
| Other platforms | Sociamail |
|---|---|
| Data on their servers | Data on your device |
| Algorithm decides what you see | You decide what you see |
| Anyone can be pushed into your feed | Only people you chose can post to you |
| Behavioural tracking everywhere | Zero tracking. Zero pixels. |
| Ads are the product | You're not the product. There isn't one. |
We don't moderate, filter, censor, rank, or recommend. You decide who's in your feed by deciding whose messages you accept.
The same rules that have worked on email for thirty years apply here. Don't accept messages from people you don't know. Don't promote unknown senders to friends. That's the entire safety model.
There are bad actors in every channel. The mitigation is not a platform deciding for you. The mitigation is education and the simple act of choosing who you let in.
There's no platform here. No central feed. No company in the middle of your messages. So there's nothing for regulators to ban, and nothing for outages to take down.
When governments ban a social media platform, what they're really banning is the company that runs it. Sociamail has no company sitting between you and your friends. It's a piece of software you download.
When regulators eventually notice, they'll have to admit it: this is what social was supposed to look like. No algorithm gaming kids. No engagement-maximising recommendation engine. No data harvesting. Just people talking to people.
Your friends. Your feed. Your call. No ads, no strangers, no algorithm.
Free · No account · No data leaves your machine