Local Feed
Your town, your county — not the whole internet. Celebrations, achievements, and events from Houses near you. Positive reactions only.
Local friends, real playdates, zero strangers. On AnLog, kids lead the discovery and parents govern the access — every connection, every playdate, every time.
● Kid's screen — Maya, age 10
● Parent's screen — House Bellweather
← the whole idea, in one moment
AnLog isn't a smaller version of grown-up social media. It's a community catalogue — a place to find the kids on your street, the club that bakes on Saturdays, and the quest your whole House can win together.
Your town, your county — not the whole internet. Celebrations, achievements, and events from Houses near you. Positive reactions only.
Games built for teaming up, not zoning out. Win together with friends your parents already know.
Plan the real thing — a bake-along, a bike ride, a board game afternoon. Scheduled in the app, approved by both sets of parents.
Holidays, traditions, local history, food. Quests that send Houses out into their own town — and into each other's kitchens.
You're not a username — you're House Bellweather of Mapleton. Family identity, monogram avatars, no child photos anywhere.
Other platforms give you a settings page. AnLog gives you a seat at the table. Your child proposes; you decide. And when the AI moderator steps in, it steps in before a message is delivered — not after the damage is done.
● What your kid sees
● What you see
your week, as a ledger — not a mystery ↑
The feed is where it starts — the kitchen table is where it ends up. Playdates go from idea to approved plan without a single group-chat between grown-ups.
● Maya plans it
● The parents seal it
We're pre-launch, so we won't show you big numbers — we'll show you the machine itself. Every step below is a structural fact of how AnLog is built. None of it can be switched off.
A kid can pick a nickname, an age, and a town. Then nothing else happens until a parent takes over. There is no child-only account state.
A guardian verifies their identity, founds the House, sets age-tier permissions, and signs the Values Pledge. COPPA compliance is the architecture, not a retrofit.
Every connection requires two parent approvals — yours and theirs. Kids propose; parents complete the handshake. Strangers have no path in.
Moderation runs on every message before it's delivered, not after. It nudges the child toward kindness first and escalates to parents when patterns repeat.
When something goes wrong, involved children get a pause, not a public shaming — a temporary lockout that only a parent can lift.
Parents see every post, chat, connection, and playdate. Visibility is standing, not a report you have to request.
Every line above is enforced in code, not in policy PDFs.
Every House on AnLog — every parent, every kid — signs the same pledge before the feed ever loads. It's short on purpose:
Kids show up as part of a family, not as a personal brand chasing followers. Reputation belongs to the whole House.
Monogram avatars mean no one is judged by a photo. Quests celebrate the cultures already living on your street.
No infinite scroll, no engagement traps. The good feeling comes from the badge your House earned together.
Found your House, sign the pledge, and give your kid a social world you can actually stand behind. Kids initiate. You govern. Everyone wins.
PRE-LAUNCH · MAPLETON PILOT · A DESIGN GARDEN PRODUCT