A Public Commitment Platform – Not Legal, But Still Something You Can Call Out Later
I’ve been thinking about a lightweight “Symbolic Agreement” platform — a place where people can make small, informal promises to each other, and have them recorded in a visible, timestamped way.
Key points:
Not legally binding — purely symbolic.
Public visibility creates social/reputation pressure to keep promises.
If someone doesn’t deliver, there’s a public record: “See? You said you would…”
Potential uses:
Borrowing/lending small items
Micro freelance tasks
Community collaborations
Safeguards:
Clear disclaimer: “This agreement is symbolic and carries no legal enforceability.”
Platform rules to discourage spam or harassment
Why this might matter:
It’s not a replacement for contracts — you can’t take someone to court — but it offers a public commitment that can:
Reduce misunderstandings
Provide reference evidence in community disputes
Create gentle but effective social pressure to honor promises
P.S. I came up with this idea after seeing online communities arguing endlessly about “who promised what” and “who didn’t deliver.” This would at least settle the what was promised part.
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