Fridge lets you connect with friends, family, strangers you just met, co-workers, soon to be acquaintances, etc... around specific events, relationships, or groups.
Don't have to add anyone as friends or worry about privacy or permissions. Clustered social graphs mimic how you meet and interact with your real life network.
Some of these may work on FB but many topical, time and event based relationships would not work within the FB friend request structure.
> Some of these may work on FB but many topical, time and event based relationships would not work within the FB friend request structure.
Could you explain why they wouldn't work with a public group, or a public event page, where there is no need for friend requests? And for the sake of argument, could you also say why I should trust you with my data instead of Facebook?
Public groups or events on FB could work but they suffer two things:
- people not invited, not involved, or random people start to get messages about the event and it becomes noise and adds to the clutter. Interactions around specific and esoteric groups, events or interests in a public forum isn't really the best way to spur real conversations.
- be yourself: post, message, comment, heart what you want in the confines of that topic, event, group. Fridge takes permissions and privacy around access to profiles, pictures out of the picture and lets you post and share what you want with exactly the right people
it all comes down to social context and not having a one size fit all hierarchy of relationships.