News: 0180560528

  ARM Give a man a fire and he's warm for a day, but set fire to him and he's warm for the rest of his life (Terry Pratchett, Jingo)

AI-Powered Social Media App Hopes To Build More Purposeful Lives (msn.com)

(Saturday January 10, 2026 @05:34PM (EditorDavid) from the what-could-go-wrong dept.)


A founder of Twitter and a founder of Pinterest are now working on "social media for people who hate social media," [1]writes a Washington Post columnist .

"When I heard that this platform would harness AI to help us live more meaningful lives, I wanted to know more..."

> Their bid for redemption is [2]West Co . — the Workshop for Emotional and Spiritual Technology Corporation — and the platform they're testing is called Tangle, a "purpose discovery tool" that uses AI to help users define their life purposes, then encourages them to set intentions toward achieving those purposes, reminds them periodically and builds a community of supporters to encourage steps toward meeting those intentions. "A lot of people, myself included, have been on autopilot," Stone said. "If all goes well, we'll introduce a lot of people to the concept of turning off autopilot."

>

> But will all go well? The entrepreneurs have been at it for two years, and they've scrapped three iterations before even testing them. They still don't have a revenue model. "This is a really hard thing to do," Stone admitted. "If we were a traditional start-up, we would have probably been folded by now." But the two men, with a combined net worth of at least hundreds of millions, and [3]possibly billions , had the luxury of self-funding for a year, and now they have [4]$29 million in seed funding led by Spark Capital ...

>

> [T]he project revolves around training existing AI models in "what good intentions and helpful purposes look like," explained Long Cheng, the founding designer. When you join Tangle, which is invitation-only until this spring at the earliest, the AI peruses your calendar, examines your photos, asks you questions and then produces "threads," or categories that define your life purpose. You're free to accept, reject or change the suggestions. It then encourages you to make "intentions" toward achieving your threads, and to add "reflections" when you experience something meaningful in your life. Users then receive encouragement from friends, or "supporters." A few of the "threads" on Tangle are about personal satisfaction (traveler, connoisseur), but the vast majority involve causes greater than self: family (partner, parent, sibling), community (caregiver, connector, guardian), service (volunteer, advocate, healer) and spirituality (seeker, believer). Even the work-related threads (mentor, leader) suggest a higher purpose.

The column includes this caveat. "I have no idea whether they will succeed. But as a columnist writing about how to keep our humanity in the 21st century, I believe it's important to focus on people who are at least trying..."

"Quite possibly, West Co. and the various other enterprises trying to nudge technology in a more humane direction will find that it doesn't work socially or economically — they don't yet have a viable product, after all — but it would be a noble failure."



[1] https://www.msn.com/en-us/technology/software/a-new-approach-to-living-a-good-life-comes-from-a-most-unlikely-place/ar-AA1TSu0Q

[2] https://west.co/

[3] https://www.forbes.com/profile/evan-sharp/

[4] https://www.ft.com/content/6a33af09-99a3-49c2-be50-4cc47656903f



That's not what I asked for (Score:2)

by Powercntrl ( 458442 )

The problem with social media is that it has become enshittified with algorithmically promoted content from people I don't follow. I actually thought Facebook was kind of nice back when it was just posts of things my friends and family were sharing, but now that's all buried underneath a mountain of engagement bait and insipid short format videos.

So, if you want to fix social media, bring back the option of only showing content from people you follow.

And no, I don't want any AI features in my social media.

Re: (Score:3)

by sinij ( 911942 )

AI, which is incapable of deriving meaning or even determining relevance, is going to tell us humans how to build purposeful life. This is peak idiocy.

Re: (Score:2)

by sinij ( 911942 )

In case you haven't heard [1]John Vervaeke talk on What AI Can Never Be [youtube.com], it is good use of your time.

[1] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HAJclcj25uM

AI powered pets.com (Score:2)

by sinij ( 911942 )

Whatever they are doing, I am not buying. Actually, the opposite - I am sitting all in cash, waiting for the bubble to pop.

"More Purposeful Lives" (Score:1)

by greytree ( 7124971 )

Yep, bit of sick in my mouth now.

If they also mention "lived experience" and "equity", I'm gonna need a bucket.

Tough audience to sell to (Score:2)

by marcle ( 1575627 )

If I hated social media (and I do), whyever would I be interested in a social media app? It would be like selling meat to a vegetarian.

The arrogance of tech bros has no limits (Score:2)

by Arrogant-Bastard ( 141720 )

I picked my handle here because I have my own streak of arrogance - - but over the years, now decades, since someone labeled me as such I've had a lot of lessons in humility. These guys haven't, and instead of putting their fortunes into actually helping people by paying for medical care or helping them afford housing or paying off student loan debt or making sure they have enough food to eat, they're burning it on a ludicrous effort that's doomed to fail.

The solutions to the problems they enumerate are

On a normal ascii line, the only safe condition to detect is a 'BREAK'
- everything else having been assigned functions by Gnu EMACS.
-- Tarl Neustaedter