
Uplifty App Helps 10,000 Students Connect Offline
A new encrypted app is helping nearly 10,000 university students organize real-world meetups instead of endless scrolling. Uplifty AI focuses on building actual community through events like climate protests and volunteer work.
While most social media apps compete for your attention, one new platform is doing the opposite: getting students off their phones and into the real world.
Uplifty AI has already connected nearly 10,000 university students across the United States through a radically different approach to social networking. Instead of algorithm-driven feeds designed to keep you scrolling, the encrypted app helps students organize and attend in-person events.
The activities range from climate action protests to beach cleanups to visits with seniors at aged care homes. Students use the app not to consume content, but to find opportunities to take action and meet face-to-face.
Founder Scott Amyx calls it a "post-social media cultural response" and a blueprint for "a radical reset of the internet." His team built the platform from scratch with privacy at its core and an algorithm designed to build community rather than exploit attention.
The app arrives at a crucial moment. Youth-led movements have transformed the world in recent years, from protests that toppled governments in Bangladesh, Nepal, Bulgaria and Madagascar to political rallies across the United States. Most of these movements organize through traditional social media platforms that prioritize engagement metrics over genuine connection.

The Ripple Effect
The shift from screen time to face time could transform how young people experience community. By focusing on real-world gatherings instead of virtual interactions, Uplifty AI is showing that technology can support human connection rather than replace it.
The app's early success with 10,000 students suggests a hunger for something different. These digital natives, who grew up with social media, are choosing a platform that helps them log off and show up.
Privacy protections add another layer of appeal in an era when data breaches and algorithmic manipulation have eroded trust in big tech. Students can organize activism and build friendships without worrying about surveillance or having their behavior monetized.
Other universities are already watching to see if this model can scale beyond its initial test markets. If it does, we might be witnessing the beginning of a broader shift in how technology serves community building.
For now, thousands of students are proving that the antidote to social media isolation might be an app that helps you put your phone away.
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Based on reporting by South China Morning Post
This story was written by BrightWire based on verified news reports.
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