They decided to open-source . Anyone could host their own version. A university in Finland launched one for its poetry department. A co-op in Detroit used it to organize a community fridge. A group of widows in Melbourne built a Circle to share recipes and grief.
She refused.
End.
Mira received a call from a venture capital firm offering $200 million. The catch: add a feed. Add likes. "Just a few small tweaks to maximize engagement."
She receives a "Ripple" from a stranger in rural Wyoming: "My dad hasn’t spoken to me in three years. We found each other on a Clone. Today, he sent me a photo of his garden. Thank you." FBClone
Then came the smear campaign. Anonymous blog posts accused of being an "elitist echo chamber." A news story suggested it was a front for data mining (it wasn't; data was encrypted and user-owned). Daily active users dipped. Investors pulled out.
Mira gathered her tiny team in a cramped conference room. On the whiteboard, she had written the original Facebook mission from 2004: "Give people the power to build community and bring the world closer together." They decided to open-source
In the heart of Silicon Valley, a modest startup called Nexus was preparing to launch a platform they’d codenamed . The pitch was simple yet audacious: take the original 2004 Facebook—the clean, intimate, college-only network—strip away the ads, the influencers, the algorithmic doom-scrolling, and rebuild it as a sanctuary for genuine connection.
"Twenty years later," she said, "the world isn't closer. It's just louder. We don't need to win. We just need to exist." A co-op in Detroit used it to organize a community fridge
The founder, Mira, was a former Facebook engineer who had left after a crisis of conscience. "I helped build the monster," she often said. "Now I want to build the antidote."