Bond, a new social media platform, wants to use AI to help you kick your doomscrolling habit
Legacy social media sites have been designed to keep us hooked to our devices, eyes glued endlessly to retina-frying feeds of memes and dumb videos in order to create more engaged platforms for s. In recent years, however, a swell of companies have sought to capitalize on users’ burnout, pushing users to engage in IRL experiences, or offering products without addictive features like endless scroll.
Bond, which officially launched on Tuesday, is one of those sites.
Dino Becirovic, Bond’s co-founder and CEO, says that his site offers an AI-powered solution to Americans’ screen addiction. The site works like this: Much like a normal social media platform, users post about what they’ve been up to lately. Bond allows users to update their profiles, posting what it calls “memories,” via a variety of mediums, including pictures, video, and audio files.
Experiences stored within Bond become fodder for its AI system, which then gets trained on what kind of personalized, event-based recommendations to make to the user, Becirovic says. For instance, if you’ve been posting a lot about how much you like pho and how you haven’t had it in awhile, Bond’s system might recommend a nearby Vietnamese restaurant that is getting good reviews.
The more you post about your experiences, the more the system can feed you better recommendations, Becirovic says.
The layout looks a little bit like Instagram, although there is no actual feed. Instead, user profiles are presented in a kind of cluster formation.
Clicking on a profile brings up the user’s current stories.
These stories disappear from your public-facing profile after 24 hours, Becirovic said, but they then get stored in your private profile. Users can search through their own archive of memories whenever they want. Bond’s team includes people who previously built major social media apps, including TikTok, Twitter, and Facebook, the company says. Becirovic previously worked at Kleiner Perkins and Index Ventures, while Bond’s founding researcher, Arthur Bražinskas, co-led integration of user signals at Google Gemini. What is the revenue path for a company like this? Most social media sites are just giant vehicles for advertising — and that’s where they make the lion’s share of their revenue. Bond doesn’t have ads, so how’s it going to turn a buck?
“The idea behind this licensing model is that you can monetize your memories,” he said.
“Our users would opt into this experience.
If we are able to do this, we believe we could capture some value from the transaction with merchants by enabling a better user experience, driving conversion, and/or increasing throughput,” Becirovic told TechCrunch in an email.
” He added: “Users can also delete their profile if they are not getting value from Bond.
” Becirovic said Bond will improve its encryption over time, though he is a little vague about the platform’s current protections: “E2EE encryption is a priority for us in the near-future after launch.
At the moment, Becirovic seems mostly focused on making Bond cool.
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