I'm building a small welcome screen for my website libreantisocial.com — a space for radical anonymous writing — because I realized something important:
Since it’s not a social network, people don’t immediately understand how it works.
There are no profiles. No likes. No followers. No trending topics.
And in today’s world, that creates confusion.
Why a tutorial?
Because LIBRE doesn’t look like anything we use every day. It doesn’t invite you to build an audience or protect your image.
It’s a place to release, not retain.
And that needs context.
What does the tutorial explain?
A short, clear, visual onboarding that helps new visitors understand the core values behind the platform:
✨ Radical anonymity
No one follows you, no one knows who you are. Your identity doesn't matter — only your thought does.
🚫 No social validation
No “likes,” no followers, no public comments. The only interaction: release your message (a bottle), and if someone finds it, they can reply — just as anonymously.
🗣️ Pure freedom of expression
Write whatever you want, without fear of judgment, without social pressure. It’s your space to let go — expecting nothing in return.
🌍 Unexpected human connection
Your message can reach anyone, in any country, at any time. It’s an act of faith in humanity — and randomness.
🧼 No history, no reputation
Forget the past. There are no profiles or image-building here. Every message is an isolated moment, with no previous or future context.
🔒 Antidote to overexposure
A quiet refuge from hyperconnectivity, social pressure, and the need for constant approval.
🧭 Safe and respectful space
Even in anonymity, respect is the baseline. No hate, no violence, no discrimination allowed.
🎲 Zero algorithms, zero manipulation
No feeds, no trending topics, no personalization. Everything is random. Everything matters equally.
What am I working on?
A 2 or 3-screen modal or maybe a few lightweight tooltips, shown only on the first visit.
The real challenge:
👉 How do you explain this without breaking the mystery?
👉 How do you inform without turning it into “just another social app”?
I'm trying to solve that through design, words, and minimal friction.
If you're building something that goes against the grain, or exploring new kinds of interaction — I’d love to hear from you.
Sometimes the hardest part isn’t coding the platform…
It’s unlearning what a “network” is supposed to be.
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