Why we build Monnett

Six months ago, we started building Monnett, a European social network, made for the world.


Not another app, not another “community.”


A space that belongs to its people, not to an algorithm.

We did it because the internet has quietly become the opposite of what it was meant to be.


Every click is tracked, every emotion profiled, every conversation analyzed for profit.


And we’ve started to accept it as normal, that everything we do online is recorded, stored, and used to shape what we think next.

Monnett exists because we think that’s unacceptable.

We don’t need AI pretending to be people.


We don’t need systems that decide what’s relevant for us.


We don’t need to be constantly observed to participate in public life.

We need a space where people can simply talk again. Freely, safely, and on their own terms.

Monnett is built on a simple idea: control belongs to the us.
You decide how much the algorithm helps you discover new content, or not at all.


You choose how far your posts travel.


You own your feed, your data, your attention.

It’s not anti-technology. It’s pro-human.


It’s about putting the digital world back under human control, before it stops resembling one.

Monnett launches early access tomorrow, from Europe.


Because if we still believe in privacy, in freedom, and in the idea that democracy depends on open communication: building our own platforms is no longer optional.

It’s necessary.