Half the content on major platforms is synthetic now. I built a social network that forensically proves every post is human.

The Dead Internet Theory used to be a fringe idea. Meta putting AI personas in feeds as a feature made it corporate policy. I spent six months building a social media app that goes the opposite direction. SocialHuman forensically verifies every post before it goes live. Seven analyzers: EXIF forensics, moire detection, sensor fusion, keystroke dynamics, video forensics, audio validation, and C2PA attestation. The app has no gallery picker. Camera-only capture. The text field blocks paste and rejects input that doesn't match human typing patterns. Every verified post gets a trust score and a shareable proof receipt.

What I've learned building this: the technical verification is actually the easy part. The hard part is the cold-start problem. You're building a social network from zero, and the value proposition only works when there's enough content to make a feed worth opening. It's a chicken-and-egg situation where the eggs need to be forensically verified. Still early. Still small. But it works and the verification pipeline catches everything I've thrown at it. Built solo in Helsinki. EU-hosted. Free with a premium subscription tier. No ads.

Comments

The_Fawlty_Piffle3 months ago2
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"No AI, by AI" should be your slogan.

plazebology3 months ago2

Easily the best choice you could make today is to ignore OP’s attempt to get you to use his AI coded slop-site that he claims he spend 6 months on

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SystemicCharles3 months ago1

This is pure pseudoscience.

Individual-Trip-14473 months ago1

That’s a really interesting direction. The tech sounds solid, but yeah the cold-start problem is brutal for anything social.

Also feels like there’s a tradeoff, the stricter you make it, the harder it is for normal users to casually participate. Most people are used to low-friction posting.

But I do think there’s a growing segment that actually cares about “is this real or not,” so it’ll be interesting if that trust angle is strong enough to pull people in early.

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