Yuvoice gives karma only for verified real-world actions – a $2M bet that rewiring social incentives can actually change behavior.
ENTRY ANGLES
Alternative social media platform with algorithm surfacing ideas instead of outrage · White-label service helping brands communicate values to customers with minimal effort · Rewards system incentivizing real-world good deeds as engagement mechanism
VERTICALS
CAPABILITIES
Algorithm design for prosocial content curation, Brand partnership and account management, Community management and user engagement mechanics
YUVOICE FOUNDER
“People kept asking me which [kinder] social network I could recommend instead of Twitter, Facebook, or Instagram,”
The premise behind Yuvoice is quietly radical: what if a social platform rewarded users not for likes and shares, but for verifiable real-world good deeds? That’s the core of the company’s bet – a reward system where karma can only be earned through actions that produce a positive real-world outcome.
The founders believe that traditional social media is broken. Journalists chase sensationalism and sponsored coverage. Feed algorithms reward outrage because angry comments drive engagement. Online communities turn toxic because anonymity removes the social cost of bad behavior. And all of this is plastered with advertising that serves nothing particularly uplifting.
Surface-level, the Yuvoice app looks like any other social platform. One tab for reading and commenting on articles, another for participating in community discussions.
The algorithm personalizes article feeds to each reader's interests. But the point of the communities isn't just conversation – it's coordinated action toward a meaningful real-world goal, whether local or global in scope.
Users earn karma points from the platform. But this karma works differently from likes and upvotes. On conventional social platforms, points reward virtual activity – posts, comments, shares. On Yuvoice, karma can only be earned for a real-world good deed, and that deed must be verified in some way.
One path to earning karma is participating in a Yuvoice community project. The startup says all communities are moderated by professionals, though the "Create Community" button is available to any user. In practice, Yuvoice vets anyone who wants to run a community before granting them that status. Based on the community's goals and scale, the platform allocates a corresponding pool of karma. The moderator then distributes that karma to members based on their contributions.
This structure reduces an amorphous "do good" mandate into a manageable hierarchy – Yuvoice deals only with vetted moderators, who in turn work with their own communities.
What can users actually do with their karma? The platform will feature an internal marketplace where karma points can be exchanged for products or discounts from partner brands.
Partners can also sponsor specific communities and participate more actively in their work. For brands, Yuvoice becomes another marketing channel – a way to reach a new audience segment aligned with their values.
The app hasn't launched yet, with a release planned later this year. Nonetheless, Yuvoice has already closed $2M in initial funding.
There's an old saying that "goodness needs muscle to back it up." Whether or not that's true, goodness definitely needs a business model. In other words, effective do-gooding requires a cynical foundation beneath it. And Yuvoice seems to have built that foundation.
As the founder puts it: "Everyone wants to change the world but thinks it's difficult and thankless. Our startup makes it possible – and rewarding." The simplicity comes from community projects anyone can join at whatever level fits them. The reward is karma redeemable for something tangible.
"People kept asking me which [kinder] social network I could recommend instead of Twitter, Facebook, or Instagram," the founder adds. "So I built one myself." In choosing Twitter and Facebook as its competition, Yuvoice is betting big.
The founder believes the day will come when people measure status not by follower counts but by good deeds done. Her goal: a billion such people within the next ten years.
The future of Yuvoice, though, depends heavily on brands and retailers choosing to become partners. Without them, karma points have nowhere to go and the reward loop collapses. So what's the incentive for brands?
The data is there: 84% of people say they want to buy from brands that share their values. And 60% of Gen Z forms its first impressions of people based partly on which brands they use – not for luxury or fashion signals, but for value alignment. "Is this my kind of person?"
One major study places shared values as Gen Z's second most important purchasing criterion after price – beating both social media frequency and peer recommendations by a factor of two.
This shift puts brand marketers in a tough spot: how do you articulate and demonstrate values to an audience that will soon be the dominant consumer force on the planet? Yuvoice offers a mechanism to do exactly that.
Just showing up in Yuvoice signals that a brand stands for something beyond profit. Actively sponsoring communities signals even more specific alignment with whatever values those communities champion.
And brands can obviously amplify those achievements beyond the platform into broader public channels – press, social, advertising. The setup is win-win: the platform gets partner revenue, partners get a steady stream of verifiable proof points for their stated values, achieved largely by others' hands.
A conceptually similar startup, Roar Social, raised $10M in its first round in 2023 under the banner of "social media for social good" – a [related review](/review/bablo-pobezhdaet-zlo) covered it. The site is still up, but the startup appears to have shut down.
But the idea clearly has legs. Failed executions are common; they're not evidence that an idea is wrong. Startup success depends on execution, not on being first with a concept.
Two directions emerge from this.
Social media genuinely needs fixing. Current feed algorithms are demonstrably engineered to amplify anger and hostility. Research consistently shows that posts people strongly disagree with generate the most comments, so algorithms surface exactly those posts. Paul Graham tweeted a few years ago that someone should build a different kind of Twitter – one with a constant stream of new ideas rather than a constant stream of outrage. That product still doesn’t really exist.
The adjacent opportunity is in helping brands communicate their values to potential and existing customers, since this turns out to be such a powerful purchase driver.
The challenge is building that in a way that requires minimal effort from the brand beyond writing a check. Brands already have too many competing priorities – opening a dedicated do-gooder division isn't going to happen. But partnering with an outside service that handles it for them? That they'll do.
Yuvoice is trying to solve both problems in a single product. One option is simply to build something comparable. Another is to look at the underlying opportunity and come up with a novel angle – because the space, while unexpected, looks genuinely promising.