Jeremy24k

You're right, the purpose might be similar. The difference lies in the experience. On Lemmy or Reddit, even if the topic is the same, you're still in a forum: there are comments, votes, user history, and that changes how you feel about posting. My idea is to remove all of that. No direct community, no pressure, no threads. Just a button to drop the post, and that's it. I'm not trying to compete with those spaces, just offer something more minimal and quieter.

muchas gracias por tomarte el tiempo de responderme, si mi sitio hipotetico seria algo mas como un lugar para desahogarse y publicarlo si quieres mas como un diario personal digital o asi lo pense al menos, pero gracias por tu feedback me sirve mucho para replantearme la idea

A therapeutic idea I wanted to share

1mon 3d ago in keepwriting

That's the whole point and where this is totally different from Reddit or Lemmy.

On those sites, when you post something personal, you're stepping into a social arena. You risk someone cracking a joke, leaving a mean comment, or just making noise. Plus there's the whole dopamine trap — upvotes, downvotes, karma, notifications pulling you back in.

My site is meant to be a sanctuary, not a forum:

No comments — people can read your "message in a bottle," but they can only react with a silent emoji (like a hug). No judgment.

No profiles — you can't click on someone's username to see their past posts. Every post stands alone, totally anonymous.

Optional self-destruct — you can have your post disappear from the server after 24 hours. It's about letting go, not building an archive.

Lemmy is great for debating ideas. This is for when your chest feels heavy and you just need to quiet your mind.

Totally agree, a physical notebook is great, and writing by hand has its own magic that software can't copy. But there's a real difference between writing in a private diary and venting anonymously to the world. When you share something online:

The "letting go" feeling — like throwing a message in a bottle into the ocean. You're actually getting it out of your system and sending it away.

Knowing you're not alone — reading something from a stranger who felt the exact same way hits different. That shared experience is something a blank notebook just can't give you.

I'm not trying to replace paper diaries. I just want to make a digital option for when you feel alone and need to yell into a void where other people quietly listen.

Yep You're right, trusting a server with personal stuff is the hardest part. For the first version, I'm not doing client-side encryption because I just want to test if the idea works. But to earn trust from day one:

I'll open source everything on GitHub so anyone can check the code.

No email, no name, no signup. Just a text box. No account, no IP linked — so even if there's a leak, the text is anonymous.

A script will wipe everything from the server every few hours. Zero trace.

I know it still takes some faith on the server side, but as a solo dev, I want to start transparent and simple. If people find it useful, I'll add better security later.

You're totally right. That's why I don't want to make another social network. The idea is more like a personal diary with an option for anonymous venting. The key difference: it's private by default, no public profiles, no followers, no post history. Each post is an anonymous island. And there would be a self-destruct option, like 'write and burn'. Just to let go of the weight, no likes, no digital identity. With that kind of extreme privacy, do you think it would make more sense?