Your content lives on your own devices. When a friend wants to see what you've shared, their device connects to yours and copies it over. No sign up, no feed, no algorithm deciding what you see, no server that owns your data. People connecting to people, directly.
You are the key. The first time you use Wild, your device creates your identity: a cryptographic key only your devices hold. Nobody issued it, so nobody can reset it, suspend it, or hand it to someone else.
Everything is a file. Notes, photos, posts, your profile, just files in folders, arranged however you like. Private files stay on your devices, always. Public files go to your contacts.
One ticket makes two contacts. Hand a friend a ticket. They redeem it and you're each other's contacts. Both directions, one step. No follower counts, no pending requests. Either you're in each other's lives or you aren't.
All your devices are you. Pair your phone and your laptop and they keep each other up to date on their own. Edit the same note in two places? They compare and agree, nothing silently vanishes. Want to be reachable while you sleep? Set up a mirror: an always-on copy that serves your files.
Wild is honest about the trade: sharing is giving — once a contact fetches your files, they have them. Deleting means "stop showing," not "make everyone forget." And if you lose every device and have no mirror, your identity is gone — no reset email, no support line.
Wild is a small FREE app made by Hungry, Foolish people.