Loops is a federated, open-source TikTok

(joinloops.org)

137 points | by Gooblebrai 4 hours ago

23 comments

  • AuthAuth 6 minutes ago
    I do not know how to phrase this politely. I like the platform and the concept is interesting. But the people on it are just so far away from what me (and men my age) deem interesting and seem to be hostile to anything that doesnt fit their very restrictive ideals.

    You'll never find sports, guns, cars, comedy and a lot of other mainstream content on these platforms even though there is nothing inherently offensive about it. I havent used Loops but im assuming its the same crowd as on Mastodon.

  • b00ty4breakfast 19 minutes ago
    this is like using an "ethically produced" brick to smash your foot with; The method of manufacturing the brick isn't the problem.

    These formats are designed for a specific purpose; maximizing engagement to extract value.

    so we've remove the incentive to extract value but we leave the predatory design that maximize engagement? You working in a different milieu but you are bringing the worst parts of the previous milieu along for the ride.

    Please, anybody working on this kind of alternative social platform, we need to rethink how we interact online; decentralization leaves the worst parts of modern social media completely unaddressed.

    • blackcatsec 10 minutes ago
      One of the unspoken parts of the open source social media movement is to put the 'social' back in the 'social media'. There has been a fine line between true user-driven content and centrally-controlled (and often authoritarian-lite) algorithms; with major players (advertisers, oligarchs, governments) putting their thumb on the latter half to ensure that everyone stays isolated, divided, and pacified.

      Everything you called out is a symptom of that control: engagement baiting, algorithmic manipulation, censorship and suppression. Absent these items, social media can be an incredible force for good and a hopeful longer term future of more peace.

  • gempir 1 hour ago
    Good that they have a web version.

    But the most basic functionality of going to the next video is only available via scroll (no keyboard arrow down?) and it has a really long animation and delay?

    Just feels awful to use.

    I feel if you wanna win in this space, especially with people who prefer more "free" platforms, then the non-app version should be a bigger priority IMO.

    • pear01 23 minutes ago
      It's open source? Make a PR.
  • weezing 2 hours ago
    This form of content is bad regardless of platform.
    • CharlesW 1 hour ago
      The problem with TikTok isn't the form, which is effectively StumbleUpon for short-form video (or Dave Winer's "river of news" in video form, if you prefer).

      There's brainrot content on all platforms, but there's also ArtTok, BookTok, CraftTok, EduTok, FoodTok, GardenTok, HistoryTok, MathTok, MusicTok, PoliTok, ScienceTok, TechTok, and lots more.

      • Zak 48 minutes ago
        Here's a study showing an immediate negative impact on prospective memory from switching context repeatedly on short-form video platforms: https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/10.1080/09658211.2025.252107...

        Unlimited skipping until a video is sufficiently stimulating had a negative impact regardless of the content, while people limited to ten skips in ten minutes did not experience a negative impact. This suggests that the format itself has harmful cognitive effects.

      • wolvoleo 1 hour ago
        The problem I find with it is that it's such a monoculture. Everyone is copying everyone else.

        As an example: there's this stupid skit going around. Someone asks a waiter "Could I ask you about the menu please?". The waiter comes really close and goes like "The men I please is none of your business".

        It's an ok joke but I've seen literally 20 different people doing the same skit in the last two weeks and it gets so damn annoying. And it's not just this one. There's always one that is viral and everyone copies it.

        • kelipso 1 hour ago
          Yeah that’s what memeing is. What is this, 2000s internet and we start discovering what memes are or something.
          • saghm 58 minutes ago
            Obviously meme formats from when I was younger (images and text) are fine, but meme formats that are newer (video and text) and brainrot. Or maybe it's just the same thing every generation does where they think the generations before them were hopelessly out of touch but the kids nowadays have no taste...
          • jatari 1 hour ago
            You can use youtube and never come across a "meme" like that.
          • wolvoleo 58 minutes ago
            Memes were usually funny though. And just pictures so easily ignored if they weren't. I feel like this is just attention seeking.
            • panick21 52 minutes ago
              Most memes and most application of memes were not that funny. Scrolling reddit 10 years ago is not that different from TikTok just with pictures instead of videos.
            • amarant 49 minutes ago
              Weren't memes always just that? I think we're just old
            • girvo 50 minutes ago
              Eh. They really weren't. "I'm firin' mah lazer" wasn't funny and yet for a while it was ubiquitous. I'd wager in fact that most memes weren't inherently funny: their purpose is in-group signalling for the most part.
        • jeron 11 minutes ago
          >The problem I find with it is that it's such a monoculture. Everyone is copying everyone else.

          congratulations on discovering mimesis

        • bmlzootown 59 minutes ago
          They've made it into an actual skit now? I remember when it was just a regular old meme.
      • Avicebron 1 hour ago
        I'm pretty sure BookTok is just porn for women who really like the plot of 50 shades of grey..

        edit: which is to say I'm not positive the format isn't the problem.

        • CharlesW 1 hour ago
          > I'm pretty sure BookTok is just porn for women…

          Those aren't the kinds of book-related videos that I see, so at some point The Algorithm must've decided I wasn't interested in porn for women (not that there's anything wrong with that).

        • amelius 1 hour ago
          Is that also short form?
          • Avicebron 1 hour ago
            How would I know? I don't use tiktok, this is second hand from an ex
      • ajam1507 1 hour ago
        Short form video is the brainrot.
    • runako 45 minutes ago
      I'll come at it from another angle. Some of the most popular podcasts (and YouTubers) produce hours of long-form video (an acceptable format) daily. Without naming names, some of those convey less information in 2-3 hours of video than some short form creators do in 2-3 minutes.

      The medium influences the message, but the channel still matters.

      (And some messengers, especially public intellectuals, are not doing the long form video/audio at all. One prominent TikTok poster has a $$$$$ job as a public intellectual and outside of short form, the other options to consume his content involve $$$ subscriptions or $$$$ in-person events. I'll take his 5-minute videos over those alternatives.)

      Separately, I am chuckling at people saying TikTok is "all X" or "nothing but Y" or "overrun with Z." Do people still not know that statements like these are confessions?

    • WD-42 1 hour ago
      This. If people are looking for freedom, the thing to do is to stop using TikTok or anything like it, not to make a federated version of it.
      • amelius 1 hour ago
        A federated version could provide a path away from addictive and polarizing content, and endless viewing.
        • CharlesW 1 hour ago
          Exactly, BlueSky demonstrates that it's not the form, but the engagement-at-any-cost feed algorithms without user-controllable knobs.
          • WD-42 1 hour ago
            Bluesky proved no such thing. Merge bluesky with truth social and you’d be back to the same thing again. Both platforms are just full of people retreating into smaller bubbles, the underlying issues are still there just less common.
    • ahartmetz 32 minutes ago
      This seems like (probably) harm reduction, the approach to dealing with drug addiction. It's not great, but better than at least some alternatives.
    • hnthrowaway0315 55 minutes ago
      This. It is just mental drug.
      • cagenut 42 minutes ago
        so is love

        this level of reductive thought termination goes nowhere

    • micromacrofoot 25 minutes ago
      Sure but there are like 5 layers of bad with tiktok, this undoes at least 2-3 of them
    • pizza 1 hour ago
      Why?
      • flawn 58 minutes ago
        https://jmarriott.substack.com/p/the-dawn-of-the-post-litera...

        This is a great writeup on why short-form content is overall a net negative for us with a human brain.

      • sodapopcan 1 hour ago
        I feel justified turning this around on you and asking what is good about it? It's disposable media. In and out of brain in seconds. There are any number of better ways to waste time let alone ones that don't show you ads.
        • SpecialistK 1 hour ago
          Better ways to waste time.

          If I'm on the toilet not having a fun time, pardon me for wanting to see some cat videos instead of solving a Rubik's Cube, I guess?

          • sodapopcan 1 hour ago
            You're pardoned, but I have much more fond memories of magazine baskets in bathrooms. Today you should at least have a Switch in there ;)

            But also, of course people aren't just using these apps in the bathroom, they are using them everywhere. If they didn't exist, you wouldn't miss scrolling the bathroom.

            • SpecialistK 53 minutes ago
              The Economist app and Inoreader are higher on my front page than Instagram is, so I am being slightly tongue in cheek.

              But I do maintain that there is a place for mindless time killing. Life is stressful, I'm constantly switching between different projects and responsibilities, and a few minutes of mindless scrolling is nice.

              But it is very addicting and can very easily vacuum up many hours of time I can't get back.

            • cwillu 33 minutes ago
              Magazines are exactly the same type swipe-every-few-seconds crap.
  • ftchd 1 hour ago
    I want this to be succesful so much, but almost nothing works in the mobile app

    Needed 2 tries to sign up, and uploading a video from the camera roll failed (5-7 tries)

    • nagaiaida 1 hour ago
      yeah, there's a consistent pattern of overpromising across this and other projects by the same person
  • evolve2k 43 minutes ago
    Great to see this progressing. Tried it out just now after last testing it over 6 months ago.

    I’d say the main “feature” id want to see added is a mandatory field on upload to tick if it’s AI content. Then a tag on videos that are Ai and at the account level to filter out AI content.

    Otherwise it’s going to be a slops fest.

  • throawayonthe 1 hour ago
    how good is the For You feed? the tiktok secret sauce is the creepy algorithm, who's clamoring for "crack but not addictive?"
    • binary132 44 minutes ago
      It sounds like you’re suggesting federated crack…
      • throawayonthe 9 minutes ago
        is it really a tiktok alternative if there's no crack?
  • TensorToad 1 hour ago
    This is actually pretty exciting. Excited to see how this turns out. But I am wondering how to keep it financially possible to operate the platform. Also, 95+% of the users probably don't care that much about censorship and privacy enough to switch platform.
    • zahlman 1 minute ago
      I would have thought that the point of federation is not to require centralized servers that cost a lot to operate.

      But sure, something like this probably requires a fundamentally different revenue model. Maybe even the one where people donate to server operators.

  • slipheen 2 hours ago
    I didn't deep dive into this, but just for context and comparison, here are some other tools which are building TikTok like tools on Bluesky-

    https://techcrunch.com/2025/02/01/here-are-the-apps-battling...

  • umairnadeem123 2 hours ago
    the format isn't inherently bad, it's the algorithm optimizing for engagement over everything else that's the problem. short video is actually great for tutorials, explanations, behind-the-scenes stuff. i make AI-generated video content and the short form works well for documentary-style clips where you're mixing stills with selective animation.

    the real question is whether federation changes the incentive structure enough. if the recommendation algo is still optimized for watch time, you just get tiktok with extra steps. if instances can tune their own ranking, that's actually interesting.

    • Pulcinella 2 hours ago
      Counterpoint: The format is bad. The constant stream of videos, skipping between videos at (relatively) your own pace, the anticipation about the next video; it's similar to electronic gambling machines.
      • logicchains 1 hour ago
        >electronic gambling machines.

        Gambling is bad because it wastes people's money. Short-form videos just waste people's time, the same as the hours of television that older generations spend watching every day but with more diversified propaganda.

        • jonplackett 1 hour ago
          At least you have to go a casino for gambling. Short form video wastes your entire life away.
        • em-bee 1 hour ago
          "just" is doing a lot of heavy lifting here. people wasting time staring at screens is the prevalent problem of today. with TV it was not as bad because there was/is only one in a room so it becomes shared experience. phones are worse.
        • Pulcinella 1 hour ago
          Go a little further. Think about "how." How do slot machines get people to waste their money for hours-on-end? How does TikTok use short-form video to get people to scroll for hours-on-end? What is the mechanism?
        • Almondsetat 1 hour ago
          "just" waste people's time? their most valuable resource?
      • dangus 1 hour ago
        To use the analogy of other vice industries like gambling or alcohol, would you rather buy those products from shady unregulated vendors or more transparent regulated entities?

        That’s the type of analogy we might make in this case.

        Obviously many people (literally billions) like this format and use it in relative moderation to unwind and kill time. Hell, I’ve even gotten productive helpful information out of the format on occasion.

        It’s also taken a critical role in journalism and current events.

        Unless you’re advocating prohibition, the cat is out of the bag.

        Being able to find a short form video alternative that isn’t owned by commercial/government interests is a positive thing.

    • WD-42 1 hour ago
      Question: how many people do you think would watch your short form ai videos if they had to actually seek them out and choose to watch them? The reason why the format is problematic is because it feeds off the dopamine hit of scrolling to the next piece of unknown content.

      It’s well known that if people need to be intentional about what they consume they consume far less. Something tells me 15 second AI videos aren’t at the top of most people’s lists.

    • qudat 54 minutes ago
      There’s a reason why we don’t want to show kids fast pace videos with cuts that are less than 4s: it’s not good for the brain. The format is just not good for us
    • nosrepa 2 hours ago
      The less ai generated video I see the better.
    • folgoris 1 hour ago
      It's not just bad, it's the worst format that could exist, if radio and TV have already ruined the attention span this one seems to have the aim of doing just that by showing short content with almost no effort to understand it, a lot of context switching every 10-15 seconds and videos designed to attract as much attention as possible.
    • OrangePilled 1 hour ago
      [dead]
    • shooly 1 hour ago
      > if the recommendation algo is still optimized for watch time

      "people don't want to watch my AI slop, it's the algorithm's fault!!"

  • HelloUsername 2 hours ago
  • gnarlouse 27 minutes ago
    "Everything you love about short-video"

    Ha

    haha

  • dangoodmanUT 1 hour ago
    I can appreciate the effort, but the UI is indistinguishable from tiktok.
  • wolvoleo 1 hour ago
    I like the app but it really needs a mute function (ideally an option by default).
  • throwa356262 2 hours ago
    Congrats. All that remains now is spending $$$ on some D-level celebs to lure in the users...
  • cogman10 1 hour ago
    It's interesting, I doubt it'll ever be successful.

    Look, the reason a lot of content makes it's way to Youtube, tiktok, and twitter, etc is because the creators can earn money from the platform. On youtube and tiktok, you can send gifts to your favorite creator. That incentivizes creators to create content.

    loops will never have that feature. It's really hard to legally distribute money like that. But further, the decentralized nature of it means that you'll never know if your funds ends up in your creator's account or the instant account.

    Without any sort of path to make money, the only content on the platform will be works of passion. Maybe that's a good thing, but it means these people will ultimately burn out.

    But on the plus side, it means you probably won't end up with an endless stream of AI slop.

    • wolvoleo 1 hour ago
      Instagram pays hardly anything. I don't know anyone doing it for that reason. It's more advertising for their other services. Like onlyfans, selling physical stuff, lectures, events etc.

      And of course the people who do it for fun, usually the best content. It doesn't matter they'll eventually stop. There's always new ones.

      I'm not sure about tiktok, but I doubt they pay much more than insta.

  • jmyeet 1 hour ago
    For 20+ years World of Warcraft has dominated the MMORPG genre. There have been a host of challengers and they've all miserably failed. In fact, there have only been a handful of successes (eg UO, EQ, FF14).

    And what do almost all of these challengers have in common? Some version of "the PvP is going to be amazing". Why do these companies like PVP? Because it's essentially user-generated content. It increases time spent in game without having to create content, which is expensive.

    Thing is, players of this genre don't want PVP. Even in WoW, I'd be surprised if 10% of the playerbase actively engages in PVP activity. So, by focusing on PVP, you're actually cut your potential market by 90%. Before you've written a single line of code or created any artwork. Put another way, you're spending valuable development effort on features only a tiny minority of players care about or even want.

    I'm reminded of this whenever somebody on HN talks about federation. The only people who care about federation are... other people on HN. It does literally nothing for users. It greatly complicates the implementation. The last successes of federation are POTS and Email. It's quite literally never succeeded since. And the problems with federation that POTS and Email continue to have to this day should be an object lesson in why it's a bad idea.

    Choosing federation from the start is choosing to lose. I'm sorry but it's true.

    • rrr_oh_man 50 minutes ago
      This didn’t go where I thought it would. You made me chuckle. Thanks!
    • fsflover 35 minutes ago
      > The only people who care about federation are... other people on HN. It does literally nothing for users.

      Until enshittification happens. Example: the fall of Freenode.

    • wiredpancake 24 minutes ago
      [dead]
  • Aeroi 1 hour ago
    two hardest problems for a platform like this.

    1. users and initial flywheel. 2. content moderation.

  • blueboo 1 hour ago
    Open source meth is still bad in absolute terms even if it’s better than the alternative meth
  • Almondsetat 2 hours ago
    "Open-source TikTok" is like reading "open source slot machine". Not something you should be proud of, no matter how much you sugarcoat it with "All the fun of short-form video, none of the corporate control"
    • avidruntime 2 hours ago
      Short form content is a medium that isn't going away. Short form content is not inherently harmful, although short form content replacing or displacing other important mediums arguably is. When I think about the issues stemming from short form content, I don't think about the inherent medium, I think about the providers and their capabilities to use the sum of all consumed content by a user in the name of a ulterior motive at scale. While I haven't investigated it too deeply, Loops seems to be an effort in patching that. Is your objection in the marketing language or in the inherent technology?
      • Almondsetat 1 hour ago
        Short form user generated content being served in our faces in a constant and ever updating feed fucks up our brains. It does not matter if it's proprietary or FOSS or non profit.

        >Is your objection in the marketing language or in the inherent technology?

        I think saying it's like an open source slot machine is pretty much self-explanatory

  • SilverElfin 1 hour ago
    There have already been some TikTok alternatives that have become popular after it got bought by the Trump / Oracle / Silver Lake group of buyers.

    One alternative I’ve heard of that apparently became popular is Skylight: https://techcrunch.com/2026/01/26/tiktok-alternative-skyligh...

  • deafpolygon 2 hours ago
    We do not need another tiktok.
    • brody_hamer 2 hours ago
      Censorship.
      • sheiyei 1 hour ago
        No, health advocacy (societal and mental). Better formats exist
        • ftchd 1 hour ago
          This format is present on all video platforms, an "open" version is definitely a step in the right direction
        • logicchains 1 hour ago
          A small minority of loud neurotics shouldn't get to dictate what social media other people use. I don't know a single person who feels like social media has affected their mental health; it seems to be a uniquely American leftist thing.
          • poolnoodle 14 minutes ago
            The anxious generation is a best-selling book for no reason then.
          • Almondsetat 1 hour ago
            Small minority? What about all the studies and statistics both from third parties and from the social networks themselves showing a direct effect on the _majority_ of users? Not that I expected a better argument from someone that crams in "leftists" as an unwarranted snide remark
  • aaurelions 1 hour ago
    [dead]